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  • How to Deal with Overwhelming Pain During Meditation

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Updated on:

October 23, 2025

Pain in meditation isn’t failure — it’s an invitation to deepen your relationship with presence, compassion, and care.

dealing with pain during meditation, How to Deal with Overwhelming Pain During Meditation

One of the most challenging and ultimately liberating aspects of mindfulness practice is learning how to be with pain. Not to fix it. Not to push it away. But to meet it with presence, curiosity, and compassion.

That’s the heart of this week’s Mindfulness Exercises Podcast episode:

“How to Deal with Overwhelming Pain During Meditation.”

Listen on Mindfulness Exercises or find it on Apple Podcasts and Spotify.

When Stillness Brings Up Discomfort

Many people begin meditation hoping for peace, only to meet restlessness, physical discomfort, or emotional pain instead.

This can feel discouraging but it’s actually part of the practice.

In the episode, I talk about how to stay grounded when difficult sensations or emotions arise, and how mindfulness allows us to hold pain without being consumed by it.Rather than turning away, we learn to turn toward our experience with kindness, a shift that transforms suffering into insight.“Pain is not a failure of practice, it’s an invitation to deepen our relationship with presence and compassion.”

Softening Around the Pain

On Instagram, I recently shared a reflection about how we can soften around the pain instead of tightening against it.

When we soften, we notice that pain isn’t just a physical or emotional sensation; it’s also a doorway.A doorway into tenderness, humility, and connection with all beings who hurt.

See the post here.

Mindfulness Is Not Avoidance

On LinkedIn, I offered another reminder:

“Mindfulness isn’t about avoiding what’s hard it’s about learning to turn toward life as it is, with honesty and heart.”

When we stop striving for comfort and begin to welcome reality aches, fears, losses, and all we become freer. This freedom isn’t the absence of pain; it’s the presence of acceptance.

See the post here.

Additional Resources

If you’d like to go deeper into these teachings, you can explore new articles on the Mindfulness Exercises Blog. Recent posts cover topics like:

  • Working with self-doubt
  • Practicing mindful listening
  • Cultivating self-compassion in daily life

Explore them here →mindfulnessexercises.com/blog

For Teachers and Practitioners

This episode offers practical insights for both personal meditation and guiding others through discomfort. Mindfulness invites us not to eliminate pain, but to learn how to hold it wisely — with steady awareness, gentle breath, and compassionate understanding.

If you guide others, consider beginning your next session with this reflection:

“May we welcome each moment, even the painful ones, as part of our practice — and soften around what hurts.”

Final Reflection

Whether you’re sitting with your own pain or supporting someone through theirs, may this teaching remind you:

  • Pain is not punishment.
  • Discomfort is not failure.
  • Every ache and ache-resistance moment can become a teacher of compassion.

In meeting pain with mindfulness, we rediscover the quiet, steady peace that never leaves — even when life hurts.

Become a Certified Mindfulness Teacher

About the author 

Sean Fargo is a mindfulness teacher and the founder of Mindfulness Exercises, a platform dedicated to making mindfulness accessible to everyone. Sean's journey into mindfulness began after a career in international business, during which he was a Director of Product Development and Procurement in Beijing. Despite his business growth, Sean felt called to explore deeper aspects of life, leading him to ordain as a Buddhist monk in the Thai Theravada tradition. He spent two years immersed in monastic life, learning the art of mindfulness and meditation from some of the most respected teachers in the field.

Upon returning to the Western world, Sean sought to bridge the gap between traditional mindfulness practices and modern life. He worked closely with renowned meditation teacher Jack Kornfield at Spirit Rock Meditation Center and became a trainer for the mindfulness program born at Google. Sean’s work extends to advising technology startups like Elevate Labs and WellBrain (supporting people with chronic pain, trauma and addiction), as well as teaching mindfulness to top executives at companies such as PG&E, Reddit, and DocuSign.

In 2015, Sean founded Mindfulness Exercises to share the transformative power of mindfulness with a broader audience. His platform offers a wealth of free and premium resources, including guided meditations, worksheets, and a comprehensive mindfulness teacher certification. With a mission to help others develop mindfulness with integrity and compassion, Sean has impacted over 20 million people worldwide. Through his teachings, Sean continues to inspire others to live more present, loving, and resilient lives, especially in challenging times.

Sean’s deep commitment to mindfulness is not just professional but personal, as he tries to embody the principles of mindfulness in every aspect of his life and work.

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