Pain
I remember, as a kid, when I really was confronted with pain. I had been playing, in the park across the street from my home, and I stepped on a bee. That bee took revenge on me and I ran home screaming to Mother. She applied a home remedy, a salve made with baking soda, over the wound and I quickly calmed down.
Another encounter I had with the insect world, was an attack from an angered wasp, while helping paint our house. Apparently I disturbed the wasp's nest and that precipitated an attack. That wasp's sting was really a few degrees more intense than the bee sting I got in the park. This time I had to go into the house, lie down and rest. Eventually a fever ensued, but in a few hours I was ready to continue with my job, albeit much more cautious about getting too close to a wasp's nest.
Physical pain from a bee or wasp sting is immediate and evident. But psychological pain can match the intensity of a bee sting over longer periods of time. A loss of a loved one, an extended illness and personal abuse can have a lingering exposure to pain.
"The pain of the little finger is felt by the whole body." Filipino proverb
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