How do you name your pain?

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In Shakespeare’s play “Romeo and Juliet”, the heroine whisper-wails into the night-air off her balcony; “O Romeo, Romeo! wherefore art thou Romeo?” After he doesn’t reply, she reassures him that she couldn’t care less what his last name is, or that his family is her family’s sworn enemy.

Soon after she doubles down;

“What’s in a name? That which we call a rose
By any other name would smell as sweet…”

A rose is a rose, in other words, no matter what you call it.

And it makes sense.

No matter what language I translate “rose” into – the rose stays a rose, only its label changes. Here’s a few versions I collected off Google Translate (I speak no other languages beyond plain English and the language of Migraine-Pain so apologies if I’m wrong): rose = bara, gül, irozi, méiguī, roos, rosa, warda…

I also remember that in the Victorian Era there was a language of flowers in which different colored roses meant different things: red was for passion, burgundy for devotion, pink was gratitude, yellow friendship… it made a difference which color bouquet you were gifted from a would-be-suitor… and which rose YOU wore in your hair or lapel for the next encounter. A quick google search reveals carnations were even more complex, with solid colors meaning approval, and stripes being a rejection to whatever mysterious request had been made…

…and don’t get me started on how curious it becomes when you leave the West and go East, where red and white and black all take on different meanings to our expectations of love, innocence and death…

Of course, this is a blog that’s interested in all things mindful with a preference to finding clues on holistic healing… so whilst I’m all for smelling the solid-yellow roses, we’re not going to stay in the garden any longer… it’s time to turn to what I really came here for: how do you name your pain?

I’ve mentioned a few times that I call my pain-brain Goldilocks (a quick search of the blog revealed I’ve mentioned her 9 times (Search Results for “Goldilocks”)). I name ‘her’ this because it helps me separate migraine-me from me-me. I can be a little frustrated at migraine-me without being downright rude to me-me… and I can remind myself that in the same way Goldilocks was a bit of a diva-drama-queen, a nit-picky, whiny-brat (sorry not sorry), so is my migraine-brain… love you Goldy… looking forward to seeing you next year… or never!

A while back I came across another lady who appears to name her migraines – it was over on Shail’s Nest (“where fingers tap dance”) – and Shail mentioned that in the months that start with J she seems to be her most-migrainey and “Ms Migraine” becomes her constant companion.

Ms Migraine.

I like it. It sounds… dignified and genteel.

Madame Migraine works too. As would Mr Migraine.

But now I think about it, there’s nothing dignified or genteel about Ms Migraine if she’s anything like Goldilocks. If they’re related in any way, then these chicks have a bad habit of turning up at random times, without forewarning or door-knocking… they just barge in and make themselves comfortable on the couch as you hurriedly rearrange all the furniture and the day’s schedule to accommodate them… they always overstay their welcome… and then, ungrateful house guests that they are… they always leave a mess behind when they eventually trail away… which is annoying… but at least they’re gone…

I guess, what I’m trying to say is – when we personify our pain – it helps.

I was surprised that I didn’t find much information on the advantages of personifying your pain when I went looking – perhaps there’s a concern that if you familiarize yourself too much you risk accommodating it too much…. but if you live with chronic pain, I would prefer a friendly rather than fearful relationship… (I’ve mentioned before that turning my pain into a clumsy sitcom character rather than a horror story monster helped me (here)).

After much searching, I did find one resource, which was referring to mental health struggles (such as anxiety, OCD and depression) – it had a series of steps I think could also work for physical pain: How Personifying Mental Health Struggles Can Help You Heal – Center For Mindfulness & CBT

To practice personifying your health-struggle (mental or physical), utilize the following techniques (summarized from the original):

  1. Give it a name – something silly, playful, or serious: whatever makes your struggle feel less powerful.
  2. Describe its personality – Is it a naggy, a know-it-all, a whiner? What (or who) does it sound or look like?
  3. Start a dialogue – Speak to it, write to it, or just think through what you would say with phrases like:
    • “Thanks for your input, Wanda, but I’ve got it from here.”
    • “I see you, Dan, but I’m still getting out of bed today.”
    • “Nice try, Doubt Bully. I’m not falling for that trick again.”
  4. Practice noticing when it shows up – address it; “Ah, there you are” and then, keep going about your day.
  5. Use imagery – Picture yourself carrying your pain/anxiety around, holding its hand, moving it into the passenger seat of your car… somewhere close, but separate to you.

As the post says: “When you give your struggles a character, you start to relate to them differently. Instead of thinking, ‘I’m such a screw-up for having this thought,’ you might say, ‘Oh look, there’s Wanda again, doing her thing.‘ This aids in self-compassion, because instead of over-identifying with your symptoms, you can step back and observe them with curiosity, not shame. When your mental health struggles are personified, this separation leaves room for you to reclaim your true self.”

So then… move over Goldilocks, there’s a new girl in sore-head-town and her name is Wanda… no not really… I can’t swap out Goldilocks after all these years (she’s been with me since my first migraine when I was 11 (albeit an unnamed little-girl shadow until 3 years ago when the migraines became chronic)).

I tried researching the topic in one last place – a Reddit thread – to see if anyone else names their pain, and it did not disappoint. Names and images that came up included (in the order I read them): an extremely annoying valley girl (of a tumor who always uses phrases like “barf bag”), my dear old friend Arthur (arthritis), big brown bear (of an unspecified cause), snake-and-wolf-duo (also unknown), Bertha (the herniated disc who is “a stern, big, overbearing, mean-spirited killjoy” who only ever wears brown), Rhonda (“a squatty bitter old biddy” of unknown medical origins), Chucky and the Bride of Chucky (ovarian cysts), Delores (because ‘dolor’ (where the name comes from) is Latin for pain and sorrow, which suits fibromyalgia)… and lastly The Gremlin (the skull-dwelling, ax-wielding, cause of migraines).

Suddenly Goldilocks is looking like a sweetheart!

Curious to know – is your pain a disembodied, amorphous non-entity, something with a vague shape or color, or more of an identifiable critter, creature, or character?

How do YOU name your pain?

Best wishes for the week ahead and may your pain-person be as silent as possible… rotten old barf-bag that it is.

Take care taking care, Linda x

*

PS – Today is the 22nd-month-anniversay of the blog… I can’t believe it’s been nearly 2 years that I’ve been writing and you wonderful people have been reading – [insert an assortment of mind-blowing-loveheart-firework emojis here] – so to celebrate my latest inchstone, and remind you that there is room enough for all our authentic voices, here’s a quick shout out to a brand new blog: The Migraine Diary – Stories of alcohol, chocolate and cheese as well as a dozen of the latest blogs that have crossed my digital path – pop over and share some blog love with one or two whose names tweak your interest or tickle your fancy:

and here i am – Blog for CIDP warriors—focused on stress relief, mindful living, and practical tools for better health and well-being.

Ariana R. Cherry: Poet & Artist – Helping others find a light in the darkness

CURIANIC – Where Science, Life, and Discovery Meet

Fragments of Loia – where faith gathers what the soul has scattered

Hive & Seek – Swarming the Globe

Holistic Healthcare Wexford & Workshops | Reiki, Chakra, Acupressure, Massage, Aromatherapy

Ken Wilson – author of Walking the Bypass: Notes on Place from Side of the Road

Las Vegas Photoblog – Photo Perspectives of Las Vegas

MoronicArts – Home of the Moroniverse

Next Chapter Living – Embracing life’s next chapter with simple and sustainable actions, ideas and thoughts. Creativity, reflection, good food and travel.

PerseveringK2 – Words that linger, stories that stay.

UNOBTAINIUM | Words and Reflections of a Being (UNOBTAINABLE)


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42 responses to “How do you name your pain?”

  1. Emiliano del Refugio Avatar

    Linda,
    your words made me think about something I’ve carried quietly for years — not only the idea of naming pain, but the possibility that pain itself is an eternal inhabitant of the human experience. Like Juliet speaking into the dark, trying to rename love so that love might hurt less, maybe we rename pain for the same reason: not to erase it, but to make it bearable. To give it shape. To make it answer when we call it.

    Your post reminded me of a passage often attributed to Shakespeare:

    “Mother, was my father a traitor?”
    “Yes, he was.”
    “And what is a traitor?”
    “One who swears and lies.”
    “And must all who do so be hanged?”
    “All.”
    “Then who shall hang the last?”

    There is brilliance in that final question — because it exposes something we don’t like to acknowledge: some things cannot be executed, exiled, or eradicated. Someone must remain. Something must remain.

    Perhaps pain is that last one.
    The one no rope can reach.
    Not because it is noble, or useful, but because it is intrinsic — woven into the condition of being alive. The last figure standing when all punishments are exhausted.

    So when you ask how we name our pain — Goldilocks, Ms Migraine, Bertha, The Gremlin — I wonder whether part of the reason naming helps is because it allows us to speak to something we cannot finally destroy. If pain is that eternal “last traitor,” the one left after all others have been hanged, then giving it character, voice, and even absurdity becomes a quiet act of rebellion. It returns power to the sufferer.

    We stop being swallowed by it.
    We start negotiating with it.

    A rose stays a rose whether we call it rosa, gül, irozi, or warda.
    But pain — when renamed — becomes something else entirely:

    not all-powerful,
    not faceless,
    not infinite.

    Just Goldilocks banging around the cupboards again,
    or Ms Migraine overstaying her welcome,
    or Wanda rolling her eyes for the tenth time today.

    If pain must be a lifelong companion — as permanent as that final un-hanged traitor — then naming it may be the closest we come to peace. A way to look back at the monster in the room and say, calmly:

    I see you.
    I know your name.
    And you do not get to be all of me.

    Thank you for opening the door to this conversation — and for reminding us that sometimes a name is the beginning of reclaiming our own story.

    With admiration and solidarity,
    Emiliano 🌹✨

    Liked by 1 person

    1. The Mindful Migraine Blog Avatar

      Thank you Emiliano! I think that you touch on many important aspects of this theme in your thoughtful reply. For me the naming is a way of calmly looking the pain in the eye as it were, and saying, “I see you, I acknowledge your presence… now, with all respect, please let me be.” Perhaps it will outlive me, but I like to think not. But I know that even if the headaches go there will be heartaches and other pains to replace it… that is what it is to be human. Sending warm wishes your way. Linda 🙂

      Liked by 1 person

  2. perseveringK2 Avatar

    I want to name my pain Duck. Whenever I get a headache while studying, the only word that comes out is –uck, so for everyone’s sanity, let’s just call it Duck. And it matches perfectly too, just like a duck-out in cricket, the moment my headache arrives, my study session is out as well.
    A nice post, Linda, and congratulations too! 🥳🥳”

    Liked by 1 person

    1. The Mindful Migraine Blog Avatar

      Thank you kindly – I LOVE the “Duck” name – it’s perfect; all out, all over, back to the sheds you go!! 🦆👋💔

      Liked by 1 person

  3. Info-Man Avatar

    Naming my pain 🤔 what should be the name given to that 🤔 you make me wonder Linda 😉. Nice post 👏👏.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. The Mindful Migraine Blog Avatar

      Anything but “Endless” would be my recommendation Info-Man!! 🙃

      Liked by 1 person

      1. Info-Man Avatar

        Oh this is a nice one !

        Liked by 1 person

        1. The Mindful Migraine Blog Avatar

          🥰

          Liked by 1 person

  4. Widdershins Avatar

    How do I name my pain? .. with every swear-word I can imagine and when I run out of them I invent new ones! … which is a way of venting, I know, and distracting myself. 😀 … A good cry also helps, but that’s not a name … well, what’s in a name, after all. 😀

    Liked by 3 people

    1. The Mindful Migraine Blog Avatar

      Oh I hear you – “!@#$%” is a phrase that runs through my pain-conversation all the time! For me, crying tends to make my head pain get worse… so I have to allow myself only a quick cry in the shower in the morning and then that’s it… back to mindfulness… or swearing… although the swearing keeps me trapped in the pain-fear-cycle…. so mostly mindfulness… fake it til you make it! 🤣💕

      Liked by 1 person

  5. daylerogers Avatar

    What a brilliant idea of naming your pain. I have arthritis in my knees and have been denying the need for knee replacement–I can’t seem to figure out what will hurt worse. Not a fan of doctors. I’ve referred to the two knees as Thing 1 and Thing 2, which makes them less fearful and just more annoying. And heartiest congratulations on 22 months of putting your thoughts and creativity out there!

    Liked by 1 person

    1. The Mindful Migraine Blog Avatar

      Thank you so much – I love the idea of Thing 1 & 2 (apparently they’re called Bim and Ben in the books) – I love that whilst they’re mischievous, they’re also a bit goofy; not a mean knee-bone in their body! 💕

      Liked by 1 person

  6. Angelo Devlin Avatar

    Great post.

    It is with the word “pain” that it occurs at all. Not to say that without that word, there would not be any pain. How would you say it? A rose by any other name is still a rose.

    However, it is the words in their context surrounding the “pain” that the healing begins. Sounds like to personify it as a way to manage it would work well.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. The Mindful Migraine Blog Avatar

      What’s curious, is that I did this for years without really knowing why – it makes sense to me now – I get to keep a bit of distance between me and my pain-brain! Thanks so much for popping over, it means a lot to me! L xx

      Liked by 1 person

  7. Susana Cabaço Avatar

    I love this idea of giving migraine a name. It somehow disidentifies us from it. Thank you, Linda, for this great, inspiring piece. Much enjoyed! Light and blessings to you, always!✨🙏

    Liked by 1 person

    1. The Mindful Migraine Blog Avatar

      I’ve done it for years without really knowing why, but ‘disidentify’ is exactly it! Best wishes for the week ahead! xox

      Liked by 1 person

  8. silverapplequeen Avatar

    I don’t name my pain. I don’t name the parts of my body, either ~ I’m not a dude who gives his dick a name ~ like so many men I’ve known ~ & who have asked me what are the names of my breasts. PUL-LEAZE!

    It’s just pain. & I’ve been in a LOT of pain lately. Not migraine pain but arthritis pain & other pain due to aging.

    It’s just PAIN. There’s no need to name it, it has a name. PAIN.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. The Mindful Migraine Blog Avatar

      OK – I love this reverse take! You’re right – I would never in a million years name any part of my body as Tom, Dick or Harry, as if it were someone else – I wouldn’t because it is me… and yet… maybe because I really wish the pain wasn’t a part of me that it is easier to name it and shame it! But now I’m conflicted, because I can see the risk that it might bring… hmmm… I’ll have to think this one through! 🤣🥰

      Like

  9. Craggy Avatar
    Craggy

    Thanks for the insight, Linda. I recently listened to a brief course on anxiety which talked about naming your anxiety and turning it into a small creature you are carrying with you and protecting. Quite interesting 🙂

    Liked by 1 person

    1. The Mindful Migraine Blog Avatar

      How wonderful! I like the idea of tucking my anxiety into my coat pocket (even though I can already imagine it nibbling its way out 🙃😉😵‍💫)

      Like

  10. swadharma9 Avatar

    in the ostomy community (i have an ileostomy), one of the first things we are encouraged to do is to name our ostomy. it really does help to disidentify oneself from the physical challenge. one woman named hers ‘vesuvius’ because of its eruptions. mine is named Baby, because her specific needs supersede my own more fleeting needs. Baby’s needs are more urgent than my personality needs, thats for sure! & if i dont take care of her when she needs, i will regret it! no pain is connected with it, but it can surely be a mess to care for! promptness is a virtue when emptying or changing an ostomy bag. because the output from an ileostomy contains digestive acids, if one isnt prompt, the output can cause excoriation of the skin around it. that can cause pain!

    whatever the physical challenge, we all try to optimize its care for the good of all! no matter what it’s name is!🤪

    Liked by 1 person

    1. The Mindful Migraine Blog Avatar

      Thank you for this – it sheds light on what people are going through AND it endorses what I intuitively thought; naming really DOES “help to disidentify oneself from the physical challenge” as you so perfectly put it – and don’t tell your friend but I think ‘Baby’ is a much better name than ‘Vesuvius’ … the former is much gentler and kinder, but I guess that latter helps others understand the drama of it all. Thanks again for being here – I always appreciate it! L xx

      Liked by 1 person

      1. swadharma9 Avatar

        🙏🏼❤️🙏🏼

        Liked by 1 person

  11. Chris Avatar

    I think this is a great idea.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. The Mindful Migraine Blog Avatar

      It’s helped me enormously to be kinder to myself when things were really bad – AND it reminds me to be cautious of my potential triggers. 😊

      Liked by 1 person

      1. Chris Avatar

        Great reasons! Thank you for sharing and I pray that you will have a good day tomorrow!

        Liked by 1 person

        1. The Mindful Migraine Blog Avatar

          thank you lovely! 💕

          Liked by 1 person

  12. The Oceanside Animals Avatar

    Charlee: “I name my pain Chaplin.”Chaplin: “Hey!”Charlee: “I said what I said.”

    Liked by 1 person

    1. The Mindful Migraine Blog Avatar

      tag-teaming for grimace-smiles… I like that! 🙃

      Like

  13. Sara Allwright Avatar

    What a great concept, I will give this some thought 🤔 on what name would identify with my pain.
    Happy 22nd month Anniversary…well done, keep up the brilliant work Linda 🌻❤️

    Liked by 1 person

    1. The Mindful Migraine Blog Avatar

      Thanks – I’ve told myself that once I get to 24 months I’ll stop counting (but keep doing a monthly shout-out for the new people who cross my path – I love blogland so much!) 🧡Let me know if you come up for a name for you pain-buddy!

      Liked by 1 person

      1. Sara Allwright Avatar

        I’ve been blogging for just over a year now. It is a great platform for connecting with like minded- and not so like minded people 😂.
        I will let you know my pain-buddy name when I find it 😀. 🧡🌻

        Liked by 1 person

        1. The Mindful Migraine Blog Avatar

          Looking forward to it (can’t believe it’s only been a year – I feel like I’ve known you for ages!) xx

          Liked by 1 person

          1. Sara Allwright Avatar

            I know, it feels a lot longer for me as well! 🤗xx

            Liked by 1 person

            1. The Mindful Migraine Blog Avatar

              😊💕

              Liked by 1 person

  14. John Avatar

    I’m glad you have ways of helping manage your pain, Linda. I follow one other blog who’s author also has migraine pain. My pain usually comes from my lower back from three herniated lumbar. I hope you have a great new week!

    Liked by 2 people

    1. The Mindful Migraine Blog Avatar

      Thanks John – wondering if it’s my blog-buddy Sheila that you follow (she’s a photographer like you and a migraine-person like me!)

      As for a herniated lumbar – Yikes! – pain in the back is always so tricky to repair / live with, sending lots of good vibes your way so that the weekend is as pain-free as possible for all three of us! 🌟

      Liked by 1 person

      1. John Avatar

        Thank you Linda, when the back goes out I need a cane and have a handicap parking tag. Yes, I started following Sheila not too long ago, her photos are great!

        Liked by 1 person

        1. The Mindful Migraine Blog Avatar

          Yay – I love all the concentric rings / Venn diagrams that happen in blog-land!! I don’t know how to say that I’m glad your pain comes and goes enough that you don’t have to use the cane permanently – but that sounds like I’m happy you’re in pain – it’s more that I’m happy you’re not always in pain… I’m getting in a knot, but (hopefully) you know what I mean!! 🧡

          Liked by 1 person

          1. John Avatar

            Yes, I understand what you are saying, Linda. No worries! 😉😊

            Liked by 1 person

            1. The Mindful Migraine Blog Avatar

              🥰phew!

              Liked by 1 person

              1. John Avatar

                You have a great eve, sleep well. ☺️

                Liked by 1 person

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