TLDR: Rather than viewing suffering as punishment or glorifying pain, consciousness can transform genuine life challenges into catalysts for spiritual awakening. By understanding the distinction between unavoidable real-world difficulties and unnecessary suffering created by the mind's resistance, we can access a deeper dimension of presence that transcends the ego. This shift in perspective—from fighting what is to accepting it while remaining aware—forms the essence of the spiritual path and the ancient wisdom encoded in phrases like "through adversity to the stars."
Why Humanity Associates Suffering With Spiritual Growth
Across nearly every spiritual tradition, a curious pattern emerges: suffering and ascetic practice appear as central elements of the path to enlightenment. From Christian monasticism to Hindu renunciation to Zen Buddhist austerity, the disciplines of discomfort have held a respected place in the architecture of awakening. This is not accidental. There is something structurally real about how difficulty can strip away the illusions of the separate self and open awareness to a deeper dimension of existence.
The Latin phrase "per aspera ad astra"—through adversity to the stars—captures this ancient understanding. But what makes adversity potentially transformative? The key lies not in the suffering itself, but in what suffering can do to the egoic mind when met with presence rather than resistance.
The Real Distinction: Challenges Versus Mind-Created Suffering
This is where clarity becomes essential. Life contains genuine challenges—loss, illness, failure, uncertainty. These are unavoidable dimensions of the human condition. But the Buddhist and non-dual traditions point to something equally real: the mind adds a layer of suffering on top of these challenges through resistance, denial, story-making, and identification with thoughts.
When you encounter a real difficulty, the mind's first move is often to fight it, to label it as "wrong" or "not what should be happening." This resistance—the saying "this shouldn't be"—creates a secondary layer of suffering that is entirely mental. You experience the challenge plus the mental contraction against the challenge. The challenge itself is one thing; the mind's commentary and resistance is another.
The spiritual path involves learning to meet life's actual difficulties without this added resistance. This doesn't mean becoming passive or accepting injustice. Rather, it means responding to what is from a place of clarity rather than from the reactive contraction of the egoic mind. In this shift, the unnecessary suffering falls away, while the ability to act wisely remains—often becomes sharper.
How Ascetic Practices Work: Transcending the Ego Through Discomfort
The ascetic traditions understood something practical: the ego thrives in comfort and familiarity. It builds identity around preferences, accumulation, and the avoidance of discomfort. When you deliberately step outside these comfort zones—through fasting, silence, simplicity, or physical discipline—you disrupt the ego's usual mechanisms of control and reinforcement.
In Christianity, monks withdrew to deserts and monasteries not to punish themselves, but to remove the props and distractions that kept the mind locked in egoic patterns. In Hinduism, renunciation (sannyasa) involves walking away from social status, wealth, and worldly identity to reveal what remains when the ego's primary sources of validation are removed. In Zen Buddhism, the discipline of zazen (sitting meditation) under austere conditions serves a similar function: by sitting with discomfort rather than chasing comfort, the mind learns that the sense of self is not as solid as it appears.
The common mechanism is this: discomfort, when met with awareness rather than aversion, reveals the gap between what is and the mind's story about what is. This gap is where freedom lives.
What Makes Suffering a Catalyst for Awakening?
The crucial factor is presence. Suffering alone does not guarantee awakening; many people suffer their entire lives without any deepening of consciousness. The difference comes when suffering is met with awareness rather than reactivity.
When you are present with a difficulty—when you observe your thoughts, your emotions, your impulses without being completely identified with them—something shifts. The sense of being a separate self, under siege from external circumstances, begins to dissolve. You recognize that there is a dimension of consciousness that is aware of the suffering, but not caught in it. This awareness itself is untouched by the challenge.
This is not dissociation or spiritual bypassing. It is the development of what might be called "dual awareness"—the ability to fully acknowledge what is happening (the pain, the difficulty, the loss) while simultaneously resting in the consciousness that observes it. From this stance, you can act, respond, and engage with the situation without the added layer of psychological suffering.
How Presence Transforms the Experience of Challenge
The moment you stop resisting what is happening, something unexpected often occurs. The intensity of the suffering may not change immediately, but its quality changes. You are no longer fighting reality; you are meeting it. And there is a fundamental peace that comes from accepting what is, even if what is includes pain.
This acceptance is not resignation or defeat. It is more like an archer's stance: you acknowledge the target, the distance, the wind. You work with reality as it actually is, not as you wish it were. From this place, your response is more effective, more creative, more aligned with what the situation actually calls for.
The spiritual traditions teach that in this state of presence and acceptance, something deeper becomes accessible. The small, defended self (the ego) momentarily steps aside, and you touch something more vast: consciousness itself. Many people describe this as peace, freedom, or even joy—not because suffering has vanished, but because the sense of being a separate self struggling against life has loosened.
Beyond Glorification: The Mature Understanding of Suffering
It is important to be clear: the spiritual path is not about seeking suffering or praising pain. Unnecessary suffering is still unnecessary. If you can reduce suffering—through healing, education, justice, or removing genuine obstacles—that is good. The maturation of consciousness does not require that we remain trapped in avoidable pain.
What changes is the relationship to unavoidable suffering. You come to see that even the difficulties you cannot avoid—aging, loss, uncertainty, mortality—are not primarily problems to be solved. They are invitations to wake up. They are places where the illusion of a separate, permanently safe self becomes transparent.
In this mature understanding, suffering is neither glorified nor despaired over. It is simply met with presence, and in that meeting, its capacity to deepen consciousness is realized.
Where to Go From Here
If you are currently facing significant difficulty, the invitation is simple: practice presence with what is. This might take the form of meditation, where you develop the ability to observe your thoughts and emotions without identification. It might look like mindfulness in daily life—pausing, breathing, and asking: What is actually happening right now, beneath my story about what is happening?
The goal is not to achieve any special state or to become "more spiritual." It is to discover the freedom and clarity that are always available when you stop resisting life and start meeting it with awareness. From that stance, suffering itself becomes a teacher, and the path to awakening becomes visible not just in isolated moments of meditation, but in the texture of ordinary life.




