Pursuit of pleasure and/or pain avoidance

I would argue that everything we choose in life falls into a spectrum of pursuing pleasure or choosing to avoid pain. And most decisions are a mix of both ends of that spectrum.

  • What color socks should I wear today? Pleasure: If I choose well, friends will compliment my choice. Pain avoidance: If I choose poorly, an honest friend might take me aside and question my choice.
  • Should I say a joyous yes to my partner on my wedding day? Pleasure: Yes! You’re the one I’ve been waiting for all my life!! I can’t imagine life without you. Pain avoidance: I have some level of doubt – even just a little. My parents got divorced, and I know the immense pain they have gone through.
  • Should I buy that $150,000 Porsche (assuming that’s a possible choice)? Pleasure: Wow – the rush of incredible speed, the feel of quality and craftsmanship, singular lasting style, and uncompromising performance will be part of my journeys. Pain avoidance: What could I do with that money to help others? How long will that pleasure last? What will some of my friends think?
  • Should I volunteer with that group that helps underprivileged people? Pleasure: Giving my time and energy seems to provide even more reward to me than to those I serve. Pain avoidance: It’s emotionally exhausting to bridge the gap and make a real connection.

Be blessed as you decide.


I generated the image above using the AI tool, Red Panda. I generated the image below using Microsoft’s Copilot tool. I was surprised that Red Panda got much closer to what I was thinking, even though its creator has a lot less money to spend than Adobe. A distant third place was Adobe’s Firefly tool, which couldn’t seem to understand that I wanted one of the identical women to be smiling and the other to be sad… both faces were smiling in all of my ten attempts.

One woman shown twice, experiencing both pain and pleasure - second version

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