Be patient.
It takes time to become comfortable with you. It takes time
to get to know who you really are and understand what you really want, make
decisions for yourself and feel at ease in the sweet and utter silence of your
own presence.
Start small.
Go on walks alone. Use your headphones to bring music to
your ears and soothe your brain from making you believe you’re a freak for
walking alone. When you feel comfortable with that go to coffee shops,
libraries and parks alone. Bring a book if you feel naked, but practice putting
it down for periods of time to enjoy your surroundings, the people, the noises,
and the conversations. Try the same coffee shop without your headphones. Sit at
a large table, one in which you are forced to share so you meet someone new.
You may even strike up a conversation you never thought you would have had.
That’s what coffee shops are for, and without your headphones you’re
introducing yourself to the world. You’ll find this becomes ritualistic -the
walks, the coffee shop and park visits without books or headphones become
meditation to you. Your aloneness begins developing into a form of salvation.
Next, take yourself to dinner.
Go some place you’ve always wanted to try. Somewhere you will
indulge deeply and passionately in your food. Find yourself smiling because it’s
all so delicious. Order desert to top the meal off and eat it slow as you look
around and see that the world is too concerned with the conversations at their
own table to judge you for being alone. Some may in fact be wishing they were
you instead of involved in the social obligation they were in fact obliged to
accept.
Go dancing.
If you go somewhere you’ve never been, somewhere where you
won’t run into anyone you know, than it simply becomes your body on a floor
moving to the beautiful sound of music. No one will notice you’re alone because
you’re simply allowing your body to dwell in the soft musical instruments and
moving freely like the body was made to move. A new conversation may even begin
and you’ll have an epiphany to add to your creative well.
Embrace the loneliness.
When you are painlessly able to get through these movements,
you’ll realize that lessons from kindergarten really are true. You are special.
By embracing our loneliness we find a deep love for our own soul.
Acceptance
Instead of giving in to the societal fear of loneliness,
accept it for all that it is. Allow your heart to be broken, and tears to fall,
then move on. Help yourself heal by fulfilling that creative art form you’ve
been neglecting and decorate your home with beautiful crafts that make you
happy. Embracing the loneliness allows you to feel joy and happiness for the
most important person in the world, yourself.
Hello, this was very obviously plagiarized from the popular Andrea Dorfman poem set to a video on Youtube. Kind of a bummer, honestly.
ReplyDeleteHi Anonymous sender - thank you for your thoughts. this article was inspired by the Tanya Davis poem but can assure you i used my own interpretation, what it means to me to be alone, and what it means to me to find solace in loneliness, something i have been working on for many years. moving forward it is always a good idea to include an inspired by bi-line, so thank you for your feedback.
ReplyDeleteAlso, i had never seen the filmmaker version, and it is beautiful so thank you for sharing.