I agree with this in a very deep way. Pain is not just something we go through. It is one of the places where the illusion of who we thought we were starts to fail. That is why the symbol of the cross matters so much. Not because suffering is somehow admirable. Not because anguish is spiritually superior. But because the cross points to a reality most people spend their whole lives trying to avoid: there are parts of us that do not get refined gently. They have to be brought to an end. The defended self. The frightened self. The self that learned to survive by gripping, naming, controlling, resisting. That self does not want surrender. It wants relief. It wants escape. It wants explanation. But real transformation usually asks for something harder than relief. It asks that we remain present long enough for the false to start falling apart. That is why pain can become a path. Not because pain is good in itself, but because it has a way of stripping away what comfort protects. It confronts us with what we are leaning on. It reveals where identity got built around wound, memory, fear, and repetition. And once that is seen clearly, pain is no longer just an enemy. It becomes a place of unveiling. That, to me, is one of the deepest meanings of the cross. It is where suffering stops being merely personal and becomes metaphysical. A place where death is not only loss, but the ending of misidentification. Where something in us is crucified, yes, but it is precisely that which cannot enter truth unchanged. Pride. illusion. self-attachment. the old architecture of separation. So when someone says pain became the path, I do not hear romance. I hear initiation. I hear that life stopped allowing them to remain who they had been. And in that sense, some forms of pain are not obstacles to awakening. They are the breakdown of everything that prevents it. Not all pain ennobles. Some pain distorts, hardens, closes. But pain consciously met is different. It can deepen a person without making them heavy. It can humble them without humiliating them. It can empty them of what was never truly theirs.