How to Deal With Loneliness?

Acharya Prashant

8 min
2.3k reads

how to deal with loneliness

Research has shown that loneliness is found throughout the society, including among people in marriages along with other strong relationships, and those with successful careers. As a subjective emotion, people experience loneliness even when surrounded by other people.

But, do you know that the word ‘loneliness’ or ‘lonely’ is actually a misnomer?

The one who calls himself lonely is actually never ‘lonely’.

This is tricky!

Acharya Prashant deepens our understanding about loneliness through the following five points.

A Lonely Person is Never 'Lonely'

how to cope with loneliness

Traditionally, it has been said that the lonely person is the one who is needing somebody else’s company, right? You look at it a little differently. You go a little deeper into it.

If lonely means not being with anybody, not having anybody to accompany you, then the one who is lonely is actually never without company. He or she always has company.

And whose company does this person have? This person always has his own company.

This will make it easier for us to understand.

The fellow is thinking that he does not need anyone. And why does he not need anyone? Because right now he has his thoughts to accompany him.

So, the lonely person is one who is always with himself. The lonely person is one who can never leave himself. The lonely person is one who is always talking to himself, always looking at himself.

He has so much in him and going through him.

That is the mind of the lonely person—occupied with itself.

A Lonely Person is Always Surrounded

dealing with loneliness

Are you worried about yourself? Is your self-interest paramount to you? Do the thoughts of future keep chasing you? Do memories keep haunting you? Do you want to hold on to your relationships?

If so, then you need to understand that you are lonely.

To be lonely is to be surrounded. Surrounded not necessarily on the outside, but surely within.

It’s like you are sitting at a coffee table with two chairs. There is a center table, there is a chair, and there is another one opposite to it. On one chair are you seated. And on the other chair, again you are seated. And you are busy conversating. To whom? To yourself. You are always talking to yourself.

And there’s a huge world, a huge reality around you, but you cannot look at it because you are always talking to yourself.

That is the state of the lonely person.

A Strange Relationship With the World

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To a lonely person, this world may sometimes appear friendly. This world may sometimes appear unfriendly. But whether the world appears friendly or not so friendly, he is always afraid.

When the world appears friendly, he cannot trust it. He knows he is not really deserving of the friendliness. He knows the world too cannot really be trusted. Things come and go. And when the world is unfriendly towards him, then obviously he has reason for despair.

But to him, the crowd around him is the only reality. That is the lonely man. He sits at the center and around him is a crowd.

Can you look at his eyes? Full with desperation, with hope, with hunger.He’s looking at the world, “I may get this. I may get that. Who may hurt me? Who can becalm me? Who is going to be the next one to attack me? Who will be the one to comfort me?” He is always looking at the world.

The lonely person is always thinking. The lonely person is always busy with himself. The lonely person just cannot get rid of his own personal concerns.

It is far from an empty dinner table. It is a restaurant choked to capacity and serving distasteful dishes. Let not the world make you visualize a barren desert. Loneliness is not at all a barren desert. Loneliness is a teeming crowd. People people people everywhere. The world the world the world everywhere. A world that is unknown. A world that really can never be fully known. Nevertheless, a world that is the only hope of the lonely person.

And what is he doing with himself? Thinking of his own welfare, “What will happen to me? There is me, there is the world. What will the world make of me? What can I get from the world? And how do I save myself from the world?” It’s a strange relationship that one has with the world.

Be Alone, Not Lonely

Be alone, not lonely

You may look at a car. You do not look at a car just as a car. You look at the car in relation to yourself. "How big is it compared to my car? When can I have that car? The driver of that car zoomed past me, did he mean insult to me? The color of this car is similar to the color of my first bike." That is how we look at cars. “I have to overtake this car.”

What is common between all these statements? There is the car with reference to ‘me’. Because I am always busy with myself hence I cannot look at everything except in relation to me. That is how the lonely person’s world exists. It is a dualistic world. He looks at the world in relation to himself. That is the world of the lonely person because his is a self-centered world. He looks at a car with respect to ‘I’. He looks at anything with respect to ‘I’.

The world of the fellow who is not lonely and who is depicted by the word ‘alone’ is fundamentally different. In that world, there is just the car. The car as it is. Not the car with respect to the person. The car just as it is. Nothing added to it. Nothing subtracted from it. Just the ‘fact’.

There is nobody within this person who needs to borrow his identity from the car. There is nobody here who is so hungry that he would look at a car and pounce on it in some way or the other. He is alright. He does not need the support of the car. He is not afraid, so he does not need to reject or disparage the car. He looks at the world objectively.

A Healthy Relationship With the World

A healthy relationship with the world

A strange thing happens in the case of this fellow who is called alone. The world keeps changing its shapes, forms, keeps getting modified, keeps flowing, but this fellow does not quite flow with the world.

Because he does not flow with the world, so he is free to understand the world as it is. In understanding the world as it is, he becomes free of the fear of the world. And when he is free of the fear of the world, he becomes free to plunge into the world.

When the fellow who is alone is with the world, he is not being changed by the world he is with. He might be with any color, any part, any mood of the world, something inside him remains free of all moods. Therefore he becomes available.

To the lonely fellow, the world, as we said, is both a danger and an opportunity. Hence, he cannot become available. He is necessarily attracted to some part, and afraid of the remaining part.

Even when he is with so-called friends, he is talking not to the friends, but to his projections of who they are. Fighting enemies, he is fighting phantoms. And loving friends, he is loving dreams. All his love is dream stuff. And that is why his love so frequently gets hurt.

Aloneness is not being free of others and living without others. Aloneness is to live without oneself. Aloneness is to get rid of the tendency to cling to the world, and to oneself.

This article has been created by volunteers of the PrashantAdvait Foundation from transcriptions of sessions by Acharya Prashant.
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