@itsmehonest
but it's when people in stories crack/break ribs and the next day they are doing physical things that should be making them cry, it stops the flow if that makes sense.
Back in the Day, at US Army Airborne School at Fort Benning, our Class Leader was a USMC Major. After his 3rd parachute jump, and a month of rigorous training, he couldn't stand up. Because he had a hairline fracture of one of his legs, and multiple fractured ribs. ...from a training accident that occurred Before he was sent to Airborne School!
According to several Marine NCOs if he had sought treatment, some other Major would have been sent in his place, and he would have lost the slot in Force Recon. While 5 training jumps are required for US Army paratrooper wings, the Marines require 10, the other 5 after Army Airborne School. 3 plus the training were sufficient; he would just have to do 7 with the Marines, after he recovered.
Much later in my career I was WIA (Wounded In Action); my body armor protected me; mostly. I had multiple fractured metatarsals in my left foot. My ribs were wrapped tightly, I had 2 fractured fingers on my left hand, and some minor schrapnel wounds, bruising and a TBI.
They gave me percocet, and some 24 hours later my commanding officer asked me and several other Wounded soldiers to volunteer for a major combat operation. We were on drugs, and not thinking clearly! We didn't want to let our comrades down... however our Chain of Command, and the medical personnel should have NOT Considered putting us back in combat, just to have a few more soldiers in the field!
Years later I am much angrier about it!
Still, I know of many instances of people performing difficult physical activities, despite significant injuries. Some are effected more than others by the pain. Only a minority are able to perform with little or no effect from their injuries. Others may function at reduced capacity.
Adrenaline is amazing!
Some individuals have persevered until they dropped dead; only then did others realize they had been hurt!