Reply
  • Jerry Seinfeld

  • Apr 11, 2023
    ·
    1 reply

    If you want there to be

  • Apr 11, 2023

    Nope

  • Apr 11, 2023
    Jowe Buddew

    If you want there to be

    "value" "pain" "experience"

  • Apr 11, 2023

    Think without language. Re asses based on what you discover

    Experience -> Language

    Forget what experience is also.

    Pain.

    Value.

    Forget these concepts.

  • Apr 11, 2023

    If you can learn from them sure if not no

  • Apr 11, 2023
    Stanky

    I agree. Expound

    An evolutionary perspective would say we (humans) are uniquely suited to use pain to advance our species, because we can communicate across generations. Example, I jumped a high distance and broke my leg, so will tell my kids not to and they won't.
    So any painful experience is simply an experience which is to be avoided, with stronger pain indicating that avoidance is more important

  • Apr 11, 2023

    Ask people that are into “sounding”.

  • Apr 11, 2023

    Yes, just listen to Honestly, Nevermind once

  • Nort 💫
    Apr 11, 2023
    Stanky

    What do you find valuable ? Cheers

    incredibly broad question, unsure how to approach it.

  • Apr 11, 2023
    Stanky

    Requesting expoundation. Thanks

    It's just basic survival instincts at its core.

    But I can't get fully behind the quote though. A painful experience can also be a traumatic experience... which left unaddressed can cause lifelong harm.

  • Apr 11, 2023
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    edited
    ·
    2 replies
    JaeRell

    If you touch a hot stove, you won't touch it again.

    We're still the kids we used to beeeeee,
    yeah, yeah
    I put my hand on the stoooooooooove,
    to see if I still bleeeeed

  • Apr 11, 2023
    Julio Caesar

    This would be under the assumption that each individual handles these experiences the same. You can find value out of any experience if you want, you could just as easily suppress them if you want

    /thread

  • Apr 11, 2023

    The counter would be, if someone has experience the situation then there is no need for others to, i.e, we know stoves will burn your finger. Beyond logically knowing this we've probably seen it. But until you've experienced it, you behave differently because your brain is constantly judging priorities. A painful experience keeps higher priority than knowing something is painful

  • Apr 11, 2023
    CreamyGuy45
    · edited

    We're still the kids we used to beeeeee,
    yeah, yeah
    I put my hand on the stoooooooooove,
    to see if I still bleeeeed

    I don't know bro. You might be self harming

  • Apr 11, 2023
  • Apr 11, 2023
    ·
    1 reply
  • Apr 11, 2023
    ·
    1 reply

    Pain is neurological. It's how you don't die..

  • Apr 11, 2023
    CreamyGuy45

    We're still the kids we used to beeeeee,
    yeah, yeah
    I put my hand on the stoooooooooove,
    to see if I still bleeeeed

    Insane chorus because how in the f*** are you bleeding

    Shawty holding onto the stove till she blister like Freddy Krueger

  • Apr 11, 2023
    ·
    1 reply
    CreamyGuy45

    Pain is neurological. It's how you don't die..

    It's more than that

  • Apr 11, 2023
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    1 reply
    Jowe Buddew

    It's more than that

    Pain and emotion are intertwined but mostly just in humans

  • Apr 11, 2023

    depends. going through some heartbreaks, a couple difficult jobs, some hard financial difficulty early in life, etc. can build some resiliency, but I'd say generally no. I find "what doesn't kill you makes you stronger" is more of a maxim you need to adopt to get over tragedy, rather than it being a given reality.

  • Apr 11, 2023
    CreamyGuy45

    Pain and emotion are intertwined but mostly just in humans

    How does pain express itself on a universal level. Beyond species. What did its modern interpretation manifest from?

  • Apr 11, 2023

    Sexual

  • plants 🌻
    Apr 11, 2023
    VAGABOND02

    @plants @lx2mEWy14

    copy pasting my reply last time a thread like this was made, although they were asking about stressful experiences rather than pain the answer is basically the same imo

    --

    when people tell you to hit the gym they are telling you to purposefully put yourself under stress, physical stress, which leads to benefits of the mind and body

    when you practice a breath technique like wim hof you are purposefully putting your body under stress that similarly leads to benefits

    the same goes for cold exposure, heat exposure, uncomfortable social situations, learning a new skill, and many more

    of course it makes sense to seek out stressful situations