Good try and I kind of understand it. Sort of like putting your fist through the door to help with your headache.
or when you're drunk and you're in a car accident. you don't feel the real pain until you wake up in the hospital with serious injuries.
on a more positive note:
some football players have been reported to run on a broken leg a few hundred yards all the way to the touchdown and having not felt any pain all due to the fact that their system was filled with adrenaline. They experience the real, raw pain only afterwards, when the adrenaline leaves their system.
and on a more random note:
i've noticed that when a person is extremely angry...when i'm extremely angry...I can block out pain...very much pain...hell of alot of pain...i can block out...almost completely. its as if i don't really feel it at all. I guess I can credit this to adrenaline.
also,
some people claim that they actually enjoy feeling pain. to the point that pain becomes pleasure. masochist actually go towards pain and actually seek it out - instead of retreating away from pain. Just for your information. Something to think about and chew on. Food for thought.
and another random fact:
scientists have witnessed that mice would actually make the decision to endure an obstacle of pain to reach to achieve a source of pleasure; to reach a reward...
Cutebald, maybe you can reward yourself after every time you make yourself endure the clicks with something you like. such as a bowl of your favorite ice cream, etc etc etc...
also, lastly, i heard that you can become desensitized to pain. (i think)
and LASTLY,
I'm going to go out on a limb here, Cutebald and suggest a little experiment for you.
there's this experiment where if you put your hand in hot water and you feel the heat of the water and then you put your hand in cold water and you feel the cold of the water and then you put your hand in hot water and you feel the heat of the water again and then you put your hand in cold water, but this time, your brain cannot tell if its cold or hot anymore... because at this point, the brain cannot tell if the water is hot or cold...the brain becomes confused. I'm pulling this idea from somewhere, i dunno where.
but its an idea. If you hold a cold ice cube tight in one fist and focus on the really cold feeling in your fist, then it'll distract and confuse your brain from focusing on the fullest extent of the pain in your leg when you click. Like your brain cannot focus on two things at the same time.
Try it. Might work.
but i gotta warn you. I never had a broken leg, so i'm pulling these ideas out of my ass, so i cannot say i speak from experience on what its like to have a broken leg.
I'll post an article about pain and how they're studying how to handle it when i get a chance.