
Pain Flare Days - How to Cope When Nothing Helps (Without Losing Yourself)
- Content advisory: This episode briefly mentions emotional distress and the 988 Suicide & Crisis Lifeline as a support option.

- If you are in immediate danger or thinking about harming yourself, please reach out to a trusted person or local emergency/crisis services right away.
In The Support & Kindness Podcast (Season 1, Episode 4), Greg Shaw and Rich talk honestly about pain flare days- those moments when you’ve tried your usual tools, and the pain still won’t let up.
This isn’t a polished blueprint. It’s a real conversation between two people who understand the mental load of chronic pain—and who keep coming back to one core truth:
- You deserve compassion on your hardest days.
This episode shares personal reflections and is not a substitute for professional advice.

In this episode, you’ll explore:
- How language shapes a pain day (“nothing helps” vs. “nothing seems to help”)
- Coping tools that can actually feel doable: venting, distraction, lowering expectations
- Why self-compassion isn’t “soft” — it’s survival
- How kindness and connection can interrupt the spiral
When the title itself feels heavy: the power of language on flare days

Rich starts by naming what many people feel right away:
"We’re already almost starting from a… point of defeat or exhaustion… when you’re feeling like giving up." — Rich
Greg agrees—and they gently reframe the prompt. Not “nothing helps,” but:
“What do you do when nothing seems to be helping?”
That shift matters. Because on flare days, even a small sense of possibility can be a lifeline.
Venting is real: expressing pain without spilling it onto everyone else

Rich doesn’t sugarcoat flare days.
“When nothing seems to help… What do you do? You vent.” — Rich
He also reflects on how, when he was younger, pain sometimes came out sideways—snapping at roommates or family—until he learned not to take pain out on others.
This matters for readers because the guilt spiral is real:
I hurt → I snapped → I feel worse → I isolate.
Here’s the gentle takeaway the episode points toward:
Venting isn’t “bad.” It's a pressure release.
What matters is where it goes and how safely it’s expressed.
Venting is information, not a moral failure.
Distraction therapy: not denial, but a temporary life raft

Greg shares something a therapist recommended: distraction therapy—videos, hobbies, games, coloring—anything that helps pull attention away from pain (even briefly).
He also mentions a tough-to-follow therapy idea:
“Do the opposite of what you want to do.”
(Example: if you don’t want to go out, go out.)
And he’s honest: on a flare day, that can feel impossible.
The episode offers realistic examples of distraction tools that fit different energy levels:
- Rich: fantasy football with friends and family (for fun, not money)
- Greg: adult coloring books, beading
- Both: online jigsaw puzzles, video games
- Also mentioned: audiobooks, naps
Rich describes why fantasy football helps:
“It keeps me busy… it distracts me… I’m not paying any attention to how my back feels.” — Rich
Hive question:

What’s your "Low-Energy distraction" on a pain day—something you can do from bed, the couch, or in short bursts?
“Give yourself grace to hurt”: self-compassion when plans fall apart"

One of the strongest moments in this episode comes from Rich sharing a conversation with his wife about pain and flare days:
“Giving yourself grace… excusing yourself to give yourself grace to hurt.” — Rich
They talk about how easy it is to become:
- self-critical
- depressed
- angry at yourself
- ashamed for canceling plans
Greg reframes it clearly:
Go easy on yourself.
You’re not a failure.
You’re not broken or defective.**
And Greg shares a reflective insight:
“When we suffer from chronic pain… when we’re not in pain, we really can appreciate the… gold in that.” — Greg
Not everyone will connect with that exact framing—and that’s okay. But the permission underneath it is powerful:
You are allowed to be where you are today.
Kindness as a coping skill: why helping can help you too
Rich shares that even when he’s struggling, he sometimes likes to care for others. Greg responds with a supportive reminder:
“There’s a lot of science… that kindness and being kind to other people helps us so much…” — Greg
Greg mentions ideas like:
- “helper’s high”
- oxytocin (“love hormone” language)
- the fact that even watching kind acts can help
And the emotional point lands even without the science:
Kindness can be a coping tool.
Not because it “fixes” pain—but because it can reconnect you to meaning, warmth, and humanity.
On flare days, kindness can be small:
- sending one supportive text
- leaving an encouraging comment
- letting someone help you
- offering yourself gentleness instead of insults
Asking for help (and getting specific): “don’t suffer in silence”

This episode closes with a message worth repeating:
“Ask for help and don’t give up because it’s really easy to suffer in silence.” — Rich
Greg adds practical clarity: it’s okay to ask a spouse, friend, doctor, nurse, home health aide—and:
Try to be specific.
The more specific you can be, the better help you can get.
Greg also reminds listeners that if they’re in distress, 988 is available in the United States:
“Even if you’re not suicidal, you can call and say… I need someone to talk to.” — Greg
Key Takeaways

- Words matter on flare days: reframing can reduce hopelessness.
- Venting is valid—choose safe containers so pain doesn’t spill onto others.
- Distraction isn’t denial—it can be a temporary life raft.
- Self-compassion is a skill: give yourself grace to hurt.
- Kindness can support the giver too through connection and meaning.
- Ask for help—and be specific. You don’t have to do this alone.
Resources & Links Mentioned

- 988 Suicide & Crisis Lifeline — 24/7 crisis support in the U.S. via call/text/chat:
https://988lifeline.org - U.S. Pain Foundation — chronic pain education, advocacy, and support resources:
https://uspainfoundation.org - Podcast website (KindnessRX) — more episodes + topic suggestions:
https://kindnessrx.org
Closing

Pain flare days can shrink your world down to minutes, inches, and survival. But this conversation reminds us that coping doesn’t have to look heroic—it can look like grace, distraction, honest venting, and one small reach toward connection.
If this episode resonates with you, share (only what feels safe) in the comments:
What helps you get through flare days?
Your answer might be exactly what someone else needs today.
Join Our Weekly Virtual Support Groups (KindnessRX)

We host free online support groups every week. Each group offers a safe, confidential space to connect with people who understand similar struggles and to find practical, emotional, and peer support.
Mondays — 1:00 PM to 2:00 PM EST**

Brain Injury Support Group — Understanding Life After Brain Injury
Living with a brain injury can affect memory, mood, physical abilities, and relationships. Whether you’re newly diagnosed or have been managing it for years, recovery is often long and complex. Our Brain Injury Support Group offers a compassionate online community where members share experiences, exchange practical tips, and support one another through the ups and downs of life after brain injury.
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Chronic Pain Support Group — The Silent Struggle of Living with Chronic Pain
Chronic pain is persistent and often invisible, taking an emotional as well as physical toll. This group offers hope, understanding, and connection—helping members reduce isolation, build resilience, and find practical strategies for daily life.
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In a world that often misunderstands mental health challenges, our Mental Health Support Group offers a welcoming space to discuss depression, anxiety, and overall emotional wellness. Through open conversation and peer support, members work toward breaking stigma and finding practical steps for healing and connection.
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Listen to The Podcast

https://podopshost.com/68bb1f4767d04/49372
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Images created and post-edited with the assistance of ChatGPT.
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This kind of content, which invites us to reflect with deep intention, is always appreciated. Thank you!
Thank you verry much
My pleasure