Where does it hurt? Wherever you might think it hurts, it doesn’t! The body is a complex system meant to move and adapt. It is designed to respond to mechanical forces, but it is not designed to hurt. Pain, however, is a common response to anything that hurts, and it may only be when we don’t recognize the response in our lives.
It’s important to note that pain is both an external sensation and has a personal story behind it. A person can be hurt by anything that causes damage to their body. This includes anything from a car accident that causes a broken arm, to a serious car accident which causes a hernia, or even the worst accident of all: an auto accident which causes death.
One way to recognize pain is to recognize that it feels like that. Pain is a result of damage to your nervous system. By identifying that your body is not functioning as it should, pain can be identified as such. When the body doesn’t function as it should, there is a natural tendency for the body to feel pain. For example, many people take aspirin (which is a pain reliever) to prevent headaches, and because it works so well, they take it for pain.
Pain is the most obvious response to damage to the brain. All other responses to damage to the body are also associated with pain. A cut made by a knife is painful, but if you have a cut on your finger that is bleeding you will feel pain for a few moments. If the cut was made by a blunt object, you will feel pain for a moment, but then you will feel a normal sensation of pain.
In the case of a cut made by a blunt object, if you think about the force of the blow, you will feel pain for a moment before any sensation of pain begins. There is a pain response to a cut made by a knife because the force of the blow will cause the skin to be pushed in, and that cut will be the most painful one of all.
I just got that cut on my hand, and it is killing me. I need a new cut soon.
That’s good to know. In addition to pain, you may also feel some kind of normal sensation(s) of pain, but you will get a different sensation of pain when you are cut with a blunt object or a knife. This is because a blunt object and a knife will cause the most damage to the soft tissue, and also cause the most bleeding.
The cutting sensation is not as painful as the pain, but it is still very unpleasant and usually lasts for only a few seconds. The bleeding sensation is much worse. If you get stabbed, your skin will bleed profusely and may last for several hours.
Bleeding is a universal phenomenon, so most people get the bleeding feeling right away. People with bleeding disorders may show a delayed response to a cut. For example, people with blood disorders may get the bleeding feeling less intense and last longer. You will feel pain immediately after getting a cut, but it will not last as long as the bleeding sensation. In fact, most people with bleeding disorders will not feel the pain.
After a cut, people with bleeding disorders get the feeling that they have broken something and/or are dead. People with such people are particularly vulnerable to the cut. Even people who have a life-long cut will not be able to stay awake for long enough to get a good feel for how bleeding will affect the life of the body.