A Real Pain -
But when someone says, “I’m in a real pain,” without irony, the stakes change. Listen for the absence of the article a : “I have real pain” vs. “He’s a real pain.” The first demands care; the second demands patience. Social media has amplified performative pain —sharing suffering for sympathy, identity, or influence. Critics argue this dilutes empathy; defenders say it destigmatizes struggle.
The most radical act may be to stop ranking pain. Instead, ask: Is this pain real to you? Then it matters. A Real Pain