Wear discomfort like your favorite sweater

Images: cueljs

We‘ve been taught to avoid discomfort, whether by taking shortcuts, deflecting challenges onto others, or ignoring them altogether. This mindset makes us believe that discomfort should be avoided rather than embraced.

Unfortunately, this can lead to a society where those with more resources or power pass their challenges onto those with less creating a dynamic of exploitation. That affects, among other relationships, also the ones between parents and children, partners etc.

Finding comfort in challenges, seeing them as opportunities for growth, and adapting to them

However, if everyone dealt with their own challenges – no matter how big or small – this could pave the way for true equality to flourish in our society and diminish any existing hierarchy.

Embracing discomfort as a natural part of growth and development can build personal resilience and deepen self-understanding. Instead of avoiding discomfort, we can confront it head-on, using it as a catalyst for positive change and self-improvement.

So, wearing discomfort like your favorite sweater means finding comfort in challenges, seeing them as opportunities for growth, and adapting to them.