Pain disintegrates a person, fracturing self and relationships. In Living through Pain Kristin M. Swenson charts the multifaceted personal and social problems caused by chronic pain and surveys professional efforts to mitigate and manage it. Because the experience of pain involves all aspects of a person--body, mind, spirit, and community--Swenson consults an ancient resource for wisdom, perspective, and insight. Her close reading of selected psalms from the Hebrew Bible demonstrates that the challenge of living through pain is timeless. Swenson shows how these ancient texts offer a vocabulary and grammar for understanding and expressing the contemporary experience of pain. The psalms tell of suffering and healing. They decry pain's propensity to fracture even as they demonstrate a person's ability to mend. Pain is a universal experience, and this book invites readers to consider more fully what is involved in the process of healing.
Swenson, K. M. (2005). Living through Pain: Psalms and the Search for Wholeness. Waco, TX: Baylor University Press. Retrieved from Questia.
If you have chronic pain and you believe in God, you cannot afford to miss this book. Kristin Swenson takes 6 Psalms and works through through the problem of pain with reference to those Psalms. All the usual suspects are there, including Psa 22 ("My God, my God, why have you forsaken me") and Psa 88 ("Hello darkness my old friend.")
The book shakes you to your core, and makes you think long and hard. Provided you live with chronic pain.