Emotion of pain: Analysing relation between the Pain and Body-shame
Main Article Content
Abstract
Objective: The experience of pain is described by staggering between individual fluctuation. Different organic and psychosocial factors add to these individual contrasts in pain, including factors of psychosocial measures. Sex, age and emotional quotient varies. Additionally, both gender and psychosocial factors add to pain reactions. Significantly, these diverse biopsychosocial impacts communicate with one another in complex manners to shape the experience of Pain and Shame. This research explores the relationship between body shame and pain and the characteristics of the individuals.
Methods: In order to broaden the definition of pain a multi-method form of enquiry was adopted and significant differences were found in the emphasis on the role of the emotions, the social expectation, and, emotional ability to cope in experiences and perceptions of pain. The study includes interview as well as questionnaire method.
Results: Analysis of the study revealed how experiences of pain incorporate feelings and vulnerabilities, existential and beliefs as well the sensory components. The 'findings' of the study both reflect the particular experiences of people who underwent knife to beautify body parts (nose job, fillers), and provide a basis for developing new approaches to the understanding of pain, and the relationships between pain, body-image, culture and embodiment of body-shaming.
Conclusion: The individual and consolidated impacts of these natural and psychosocial factors bring about elements that contributes pain in every person. Understanding these patterns is fundamentally significant to manage body-shame, and research to explain the idea of these biopsychosocial interlink is required to give more educated and customized pain care.