I was an
ailing child and most of my very young years were spent in bed, with me and my
books. So being alone became a necessity at first and then a space where I
roamed free with my mental melodies and dreams.
As I grew
older and became part of a new, large family it was strange to see that every
time I sat alone someone came along and said, “Don’t sit by yourself! Come join
us!”
Today I find that in our
society, the attitude towards solitude is deeply confused. And this confusion
strengthens the fear we develop towards being alone. In fact, we are forever in
a flux between aloneness and being lonely, the eternal emotional pendulum. We
are taught to value personal freedom, fulfillment and individualism more than
ever before, yet we’re so terrified of being alone. Our young generations grow
up valuing self-esteem, to be worthy in and of ourselves, then how come we
can’t be intimate with ourselves and intimate with our own inner life?
It is the cultural baggage
we carry…I think it’s a generational legacy from way back in time. In fact, I
learned that the word “spinster” was used in the middle Ages for someone who spun the thread well and wove fine fabric. This
made her financially
self-sufficient so she could choose to marry
freely and not because of needy desperation.
We’ve come a long way since
then, haven’t we?
Today aloneness is treated
as loneliness which is assumed to be a dreadful state to be. In the words of
Maitland, “we’re considered to be sad, mad and bad if we have chosen to flout
social norms and be alone. So we insulate ourselves from the risk of aloneness
by accumulating a vast network of social ties as a kind of insurance policy.
But we soon realize that there is no guarantee for this protection.”
The stigma of being single
has judgment on it because there is an underlying fear of those that dare to be
radically different from us and we turn hostile to the unfamiliar.
According to most
psychologists loneliness comes with settling for less than we deserve or
reaching for that which we feel we cannot attain. I’ve often heard people talk
about feeling lonely in a crowd….yes, and it is incurable by company! The truth
is that we cannot allow ourselves to be defined by the people who surround us.
A relationship isn’t a ticket to happiness!!
Is that why a lot more
people are choosing to go solo? And could aloneness be finding freedom in the very same
isolation we choose? And when are we truly free? When we are with another
because we WANT to rather than from the fear of being left out, we do not then
have a desperate need to be included as though we need others to affirm us
because we feel we may not exist if they don’t!
So it is all in the
attitude… how we define loneliness and aloneness. Certainly loneliness has
severe results causing physical disease, heart problems and even dementia.
Whereas, according to my experience, aloneness is absolutely essential for a
feeling of fulfillment and wholeness. Solitude creates healthier relationships
since we don’t relate from a needy or greedy space.
I tend to agree with
Maitland when she explains, “I would rather be described as having a rich inner
life, spiritual, sensitive, reflective than the opposite and extroverted. We
admire the life of an intellectual rather than a salesman.”
But how do we attain this
self-reliance in an environment that worships the extrovert ideal? My
suggestions, of course, come from what works for me. My trust is enhanced when:
·
I increase
my creativity.
·
Learn a
new skill.
·
Involve
myself with nature.
·
Get
spiritually connected through meditation and other internal practice.
·
Random
acts of kindness.
Life is a medley of
challenges and through these we grow to be self-reliant and independent. We
learn who our friends are and who is an acquaintance. I learned that I’d rather
be alone than be with people who make me feel alone. Solitude made me strong
enough to realize that life was as good as I wanted it to be….and with every
experience we hurt or laugh and then we grow.
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