Sunday, June 28, 2015

5 Things that Happen When You Embrace Being Alone

For this Super Soul Sunday, I wanted to share with you another post from marcandangel.com that talks about being alone. Here is a link to the post and also below I have been able to get the post for you to read 5 Things that Happen When You Embrace Being Alone.

The reason why I am sharing this post is because I have always embraced my alone time. Even though most of us hate being alone, I have truly embraced it. I love to travel alone, eat at restaurants alone, go to a movie theater alone - why? It is freeing,  strengthens me emotionally, have learned about myself and discovery who I truly am and accepting myself with all my flaws. And I never fear being alone. 

So if those thoughts of being alone are causing you fear for the worst,  remember these 5 Things as written by Marc and Angel:

You develop strengths you need, and didn’t know you had inside you.

Whenever I tell a coaching/course student that they need to embrace being alone, they usually say something like:

“But don’t you think the thought of being alone is scary… to go through life by yourself when you feel uncertain about things?”

Yes, it can be very scary.  And that’s precisely the reason to learn to do it.  Sometimes the scary things are the right things.  Sometimes the situations we don’t want are the ones we need to grow.  

Embracing this may be painful at first, but nothing in life is as painful as staying endlessly stuck in situation you don’t belong simply because you are too scared to walk alone for awhile.

Likewise, it’s always better to learn to stand on your own two legs, rather than have someone carry you around your whole life.  And once you are self-sufficient, then relying on someone else from time to time is an act of strength, not weakness.

So…

Don’t know how to manage your finances and your life? – Start by educating yourself.  Read one book on personal finance, one chapter at a time.  Teach yourself life management skills, one at a time.  Become self-sufficient, gradually.

Don’t know how to defend and protect yourself? – Learn to avoid dangerous situations.  Learn to be aware of your surroundings.  Learn the basics of self-defense.  You’ll feel more and more confident walking alone with each passing day.

Regardless of what skill set you’re trying to strengthen in yourself, the key is to take small, consistent steps in the right direction, day in and day out.

Journeying through life alone is a learning process – you become stronger as you go.  It’s like a kid who can’t find her way home when she’s alone – doing it the first few times is daunting and scary, but in the long run she’s safer and better off having learned the way. 

Your relationships grow stronger and less codependent.

Does learning to be comfortable with being alone mean you can’t be in a relationship?

Not at all.  But if you aren’t comfortable with being alone, then you aren’t going to be comfortable in your relationship either.

Why?

Because you will become codependent.  When your actions and thoughts revolve around another person to the complete disregard of your own needs, that’s codependency, and it’s harmful.  When you set a precedent that someone else is responsible for how you feel at all times (and vice versa), then you both will develop codependent tendencies.  

Suddenly neither one of you is allowed to plan something without getting approval.  All activities – even the mundane things such as watching a TV program – must be negotiated and compromised.  When someone begins to get upset, all personal needs go out the window because it’s now your responsibility to make one another feel better.

The biggest problem with developing these codependent tendencies is that they breed resentment.  Sure, if Angel gets mad at me occasionally because she’s had a crappy day and is aggravated and needs attention, that’s understandable. 

But if it becomes an expectation that my life revolves around her emotional well-being 24/7, then I’m eventually going to become very bitter toward her feelings and desires.

As Jim Rohn once said, “The greatest gift you can give somebody is your own personal development.  I used to say, ‘If you will take care of me, I will take care of you.’  Now I say, ‘I will take care of me for you, if you will take care of you for me.’”

You learn that aloneness does not mean loneliness.

That’s right, being alone does not mean you are lonely, and being lonely does not mean you are alone.

One can be truly lonely in the midst of a crowded room.  Wouldn’t you agree?

Thus, the trouble is not always in being alone – it’s being lonely in the presence of others.

So keep this in mind and choose your relationships wisely.  It’s always better to be alone than to be in bad company.  And when you do decide to come back for someone, do so because you’re truly better off with this person.  Don’t do it just for the sake not being alone.  

You find the intellectual space to support your own decisions.

Everyone you care about does NOT need to support every decision you make.  When you are surrounded by others 24/7, this truth can be hard to embrace.

Friends and family won’t always support your goals, but you must pursue them anyway.  Follow your intuition.  Following your intuition means doing what feels right, even if it doesn’t look or sound right to others.  Only time will tell, but our human instincts are rarely wrong.  

Even if things don’t turn out as you anticipated, at least you will learn what you needed to learn, and you won’t have to spend the rest of your life wondering what could have been.

Ultimately, you know you’re on the right track in life when you become uninterested in looking back, and eager to take the next step, regardless of what anyone else thinks.

You get to mindfully experience more of YOUR life.

One of the hardest challenges we face is to simply live in our own skin – to just be right here, right now, regardless of where we are.  Too often we needlessly distract ourselves with anything and everything: food, booze, shopping, television, tabloid news, online social networks, video games, iPhones, iPads, etc. – basically anything to keep us from being fully present in the current moment.

We use compulsive work, compulsive exercise, compulsive love affairs, and the like, to escape from ourselves and the realities of living.  In fact, many of us will go to great lengths to avoid the feeling of being alone in an undistracted environment.  So we succumb to hanging-out with just about anybody to avoid the feeling of solitude.  

For being alone means dealing with our true feelings: fear, anxiety, excitement, uncertainty, anger, joy, resentment, disappointment, anticipation, sadness, and so on and so forth.

And it doesn’t really matter if our feelings are positive or negative – they are overwhelming and exhausting, and so we prefer to numb ourselves to them.

The bottom line is that every one of us is an addict, and what we are addicted to is avoiding ourselves.  Acknowledging this addiction is the first step to healing it.  So begin again right now by just breathing, alone, and noticing with curiosity, and without judgment, all of the little ways you can simply BE in your own skin, right here, right now, in this present moment we call life.

Closing Thoughts

Solitude can be a scary thing, but it can also be a joyful thing.

You CAN learn to enjoy (and grow from) the times when you’re alone…

You can get to know yourself.  You can do things that rely on very little external influence – reading, writing, walking in the woods, playing guitar, singing in the shower, dancing in your bedroom, learning something new, etc.  

You can discover hidden parts of yourself and the world around you without needing to instantly share it or get someone else’s approval to enjoy it.

Be alone and be at peace.

You deserve it.

Super Soul Sunday and enjoy your week!

Cheers,

Neema




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