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Different Shades of Pain

For more than half my life as a doctor, I’ve been confronted with pain and suffering almost every day. It has become my daily mission to alleviate that pain, but getting here took an immense amount of effort. The journey being a doctor involved years of grueling academic training, long working hours, and dealing with inadequate working conditions and facilities. And once the academic hurdles were cleared, a life of personal sacrifice began. But despite our best efforts, do we always win against pain and suffering?

The answer is, unfortunately, no. No matter how hard we try, there are times when we fail. Despite applying all the science, knowledge, and judgment at our disposal, patients are lost. Death is a battle we cannot always win. It is the ultimate boundary to our efforts, a limit we cannot surpass. And when death strikes, what haunts me first is the pain—not just the pain of witnessing the grief of those who have lost someone they love, but the painful doubt that creeps into my mind: “Did I miss something?”

Death is a universal truth—inescapable. Much has been written about it, and countless philosophies surround its mystery. Scientifically, I understand its inevitability, but it still brings pain. It stirs self-doubt, making me question the decisions I made, the steps I took. Even knowing the finality of it, I find myself re-analyzing my choices, searching for ways to improve for the next patient. This doubt I face with each loss, rather than discouraging me, pushes me to become a better doctor.

Today, I find myself reflecting on this familiar sense of pain after finishing a book. It’s the story of a retired IAS officer, a man who had an honest and illustrious career. The book delves into his inner conflict—how he grappled with being right in his convictions yet forced to take politically correct steps. Every time a decision didn’t lead to the desired outcome, doubt would creep in, and he would sometimes blame himself, even though he knew his choices were limited by factors beyond his control.

His self-doubt and blame felt deeply familiar to me. As I read, it felt as if the author had tapped into my own emotions, as though someone finally understood what I feel. The shared experience of that kind of pain, the uncertainty, connected me to the author in a profound way. I realized that nothing binds people together quite like shared pain.

I’ve been fortunate to have many friends in my life. Once, someone asked me how I would define a close friend, and without hesitation, I answered, “Someone I can call and cry to without feeling embarrassed.” It’s easy to share happiness—we hand out sweets to everyone we know, even acquaintances, when we’re celebrating. But when we’re in pain, we only reach out to a select few. Pain, unlike joy, is something we share only with those who are truly close. The ability to share pain reveals the depth of our relationships.

In this way, I find pain to be strangely fascinating. It’s uncomfortable, but it can be inspiring. It hurts, yet it connects. We should never leave someone to suffer alone because pain can also be the beginning of something beautiful—lifelong, meaningful relationships.

– Amit.

24 thoughts on “Different Shades of Pain”

  1. Omg, omg , what a write up Dr. Amit …..
    Superb it is, very thought provoking & philosophical.

    You are so much empathetic about your patients (at the time of pandemic I had personally experienced and witnessed it) & at the same time you are equally passionate about your profession. I find it very unusual because Empathy and Passion marching hand in hand especially in your profession has become a very rare phenomenon these days 😃

    This blog & your entire personality resonates to the tune “वैष्णव जन तो तेणे कहीये, जे पीड पराई जाणे रे”

    And then there comes self doubt, asking questions, taking a relook at the steps taken, choices made , reanalyzing it – for the next patient – for betterment – for improvement – this is awesome …..
    that’s humbleness – that’s self realisation….. taking you to new heights ……..

    Instead of “different shades of pain” I am renaming the title as “different shades of a doctor” 🙂

    Kudos
    Kudos to you 🙏🙏

  2. Beautifully you have described Pain. The line in your story- “nothing binds people together quite like shared pain” is just so true……

  3. Amit – loved reading the honest portrayal of your thoughts as a physician. Being vulnerable is a rare quality – kudos to you.
    I am sending this to other doctors who I know are striving to better doctors. Like you, they also struggle with their pain.

  4. खूपच भावनाशील, खूप छान! वेदनेच्या गावातली गोष्ट

  5. Very well conveyed… indeed pain; in different forms has the capacity to expose your most vulnerable self. But it makes us stronger and more mature in dealing with life.

  6. “It hurts yet connects”, this stands so true and am fortunate enough of having experienced this in life at personal level. Pain for me is a much deeper emotion than love or happiness and something which takes different forms either a strong memory , or a lesson, a connection, a milestone, turning point of life , a forever frozen tear, a scar deep in heart, a foundation that ultimately lead to joyful experience ..
    thanks for sharing this !!

    1. Dada,
      Nicely penned pain and people around pain. No doubt death is inevitable but when doctors like you have empathy for patients, this is the most important thing. An honest doctor is a moral support for the family whose patient is critical. Doctor becomes God when patient is out of danger. You have mentioned here a book. I haven’t read that but I can certainly tell that that book will relate and deal with every reader. Your OPD with library and liability will certainly make a difference in this medical field. Warm regards.

  7. Along with that, I like to suggest please read below story

    “Two monks, one senior and one junior were returning to their monastery after a day of alms. It was the rainy season, and the path was muddy with a fast-flowing rivulet they had to cross.

    At the riverbank, they saw a young woman looking anxious, unable to cross the swollen stream. Without hesitation, the senior monk picked her up, carried her across the river, and gently set her down on the other side. She thanked him and went on her way.

    The younger monk was troubled but stayed silent. After walking for hours, he couldn’t hold back and asked, “We are not supposed to touch women. Why did you carry her?”

    The senior monk smiled and said, “I left her on the other side of the river, but you’re still carrying her, brother.”

    Which teaches us how often we carry things—resentments, anxieties, or judgments—that we should have let go of long ago. True freedom lies in acting with clarity and letting go of the weight we create in our minds…..

  8. You’re right—pain has a unique way of exposing our most vulnerable selves, and in the process, it creates unbreakable bonds. Experiencing pain demands courage, trust, and love. Your definition of a close friend is one of the most profound I’ve ever heard; it truly captures the essence of what a real connection means.…

  9. Words like pain, doubt, uncertainty has different perceived meanings. When you know that the pain will result in something good it has a totally different perception like the pain of exercising or childbirth or academic training. When pain is pointless or because of silly mistakes like carelessness or accidents it weighs more. Nyways volumes can be written on this. Will leave some words and phrases for you to ponder.
    Inevitable
    Repentance
    Justifiable
    Something better than nothing
    Self pain and discomfort as compared to pain and discomfort of a loved one.

  10. Difference between good and great person is empathy one can show towards others. Only someone with abundance of innate empathy could write like this. One of your best write ups so far . Keep it up!

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