Mind healing, how we can heal our minds and hearts of the hurts we have 
suffered, was the topic of a recent desk column commentary by the 
editor-in-chief of the Catholic Times.  Many in today's society are 
hurting: wars, family and individual conflicts, cultural prejudice, 
workplace and educational injustices, and a host of other situations 
that inflict much pain. We all have to live with these painful 
situations every day; the only difference among them is their size. But 
to say that my pain is greater than yours, he says, is an attitude that 
makes no sense. The way we face the pain is what is important. 
Some
 people, in the face of the pain, close their 
hearts and become angry and hateful, while others, precisely because of 
their pain, open their hearts with a better understanding of the 
suffering of others. To live with others
 is difficult; we are likely to discover aspects of ourselves we would 
prefer not to see.  An example
 would be when we see another person, completely unrelated to us, who is
 happy, which tends to make us acutely aware of our own unhappiness. 
We
 can define life, he says, as a time of waiting.  The psychologist and 
philosopher Erich Fromm tells us that humans can be described as 
creatures that look upward and forward to a future time, waiting for a 
better person to emerge and for better opportunities, waiting for their 
dreams to be realized, waiting for the end of their suffering.
That
 we wait mindlessly, he says, is the problem. What are we waiting for 
and and 
how is it important to us? are questions we need to ask ourselves.He 
suggests that what is important to all Christians is the consolation of 
family and friends. More so would be the consolation that comes from 
God. Also helpful is to realize that we tend to imitate those we admire 
and think about, and to realize that faith is also a kind of waiting, 
which we can see illustrated by the Scriptures. 
Those
 that have received consolation in their suffering are the ones who can 
share it with others who are suffering. He mentions the tragic incident 
of a mother who had lost a child in an accident. Though many tried to 
console the mother, they were unable to do so, the tears kept coming. It was only when a friend, a mother who lost her own daughter in such an accident, approached the grieving mother with a hug that the tears stopped.   
There
 is a direct ratio of  pain to consolation. The greater the pain, the 
greater is God's consolation.  We have the example of our martyrs, whose
 faith and trust grew because of  God's  promises; suffering  sublimates
 into great hope.
All those who are suffering are walking in the 
way of Jesus. Let us experience his outstretched hand. Like the sun that
 is always there in the sky even when hidden by clouds, God is always 
with us,  offering us the consolation we are seeking.