by
Aletheia Luna
June 19, 2024
from
LonerWolf Website
A wolf that represents
a spiritual
warrior
The world feels like it's collapsing around you.
Deep down, you feel scared, confused, lost,
alone, and adrift in a black ocean of emptiness.
Where are you to go?
What can you do now?
You feel a sense of being shattered inside -
there is a hollowness in your chest, a void where your Soul was
meant to be.
There is a part of you that wants to scream madly, pound your fists
against the earth, and protest about the injustice of it all until
your voice breaks.
Perhaps most of all, you feel weak, deeply fatigued. You're tired of
fighting. There is a sense of deep existential tiredness that drags
at your bones and eats away at your core.
Where has the light gone?
If you have experienced any of what I've just described, chances are
that you've gone through, or are going through, a life crisis of
some kind, perhaps even a
Dark Night of the Soul (or
spiritual crisis).
We are living in complex times riddled with suffering of all shapes
and varieties.
Personally, societally, and globally, we are
experiencing the repercussions of many forms of greed and
violence...!
It's no wonder that so many of us feel angry,
tired, full of anxiety, and grief-stricken.
But as tempting as it is to collapse into apathy, nihilism, or
learned helplessness, these aren't helpful or practical solutions.
In other words,
these reactions don't help you and they don't
help others.
As such, they're unhealthy and pointless uses of
our energy.
What we need are spiritual warriors - those
who are of great service to themselves and society...!
And this is what I'll be exploring in this
article.
What is a Spiritual
Warrior?
A spiritual warrior is,
a person who has learned how to transform
their pain into a source of power.
Instead of turning to violence or victimhood, the
spiritual warrior is an individual who chooses to wear the armor of
compassion and wield the sword of wisdom.
Unlike a warlike warrior,
a spiritual warrior isn't focused on killing
and destroying external enemies.
Instead, the spiritual warrior is concerned with
meeting, befriending, and overcoming the internal foes within.
Doing so enables the spiritual warrior to be a light in the
darkness, not just for themselves, but for others as well.
In their arsenal, the spiritual warrior doesn't carry guns, knives,
and bombs, but instead carries the spiritual weapons of,
-
courage
-
clarity
-
compassion
-
forgiveness
-
humility
In the words of Sogyal Rinpoche in
The Tibetan Book of the Living and Dying,
To be a spiritual warrior means to develop a
special kind of courage, one that is innately intelligent,
gentle, and fearless.
Spiritual warriors can still be frightened,
but even so they are courageous enough to taste suffering, to
relate clearly to their fundamental fear, and to draw out
without evasion the lessons from difficulties.
The Lone Wolf as a Symbol of the
Spiritual Warrior
In our work here on lonerwolf,
the lone wolf is seen as a powerful
symbol of the spiritual warrior and as the metaphorical 'hero' who
goes on a journey of spiritual awakening.
To embark on any meaningful journey in life and to make our way
through the dark forests where we can find ourselves lost, we need
to embrace this inner lone wolf quality within ourselves.
The lone wolf as a spiritual wanderer AND warrior possesses the
qualities of courage, strength, authenticity, and an insatiable
thirst for freedom.
If you're called to be a spiritual warrior at this point in your
life, you might be entering stages five and six of the
Wanderer's Journey of Spiritual Awakening.
See the image below:
Image of The Spiritual Wanderer's Journey
As you can see, stages five and six are defined by the archetype of
The Warrior who is tasked with the responsibility of both
going inwards and facing the darkness they find there.
The Warrior part of our life journeys often feel heavy, dark, and
full of a lot of emotional turmoil and processing work - or what we
refer to as inner work.
It's at this point, in
shamanic terminology, that we enter
the inner Underworld...
9 Signs You're Called to Be a
Spiritual Warrior
We all have the capacity to be spiritual warriors no matter what
cards life has dealt us or how wounded we are.
In fact, the more deeply broken we feel, the more powerful our
process of inner transformation and awakening will often be.
Here are nine signs you're called to be a spiritual warrior:
-
You feel tired and world-weary.
-
You often feel overwhelmed by a sense of
helplessness, lostness, or emptiness.
-
You're drawn to spending more time
in solitude.
-
You find yourself enjoying contemplation,
introspection, and inner exploration.
-
You're attracted to the archetypes of the
Warrior, Shaman, and Wounded Healer.
-
You're prone to getting stuck in a
depleting victim mentality and want to find more inner
strength, empowerment, and self-sovereignty.
-
You're dissatisfied with shallow
self-help teachings and want to experience something of more
depth and substance.
-
You've done some soul searching/inner
work already, but you feel called to go deeper into your
personal Underworld.
-
You feel called to do the work of healing
your deep-seated personal and inherited ancestral wounds to
find more freedom, expansion, and wholeness.
How many of these signs can you relate to?
Way of the Spiritual Warrior - 3
Ways to Turn Your Pain into Power
Now more than ever we need spiritual warriors who are willing to do
the courageous work of turning their pain into power.
Doing so lights a way for others in this world who may feel lost,
confused as to how to befriend their darkness, and are in need of
inspiration and motivation.
This is profound spiritual work, and it is a core part of the
spiritual journey of awakening and Illumination.
Here are three ways to turn your pain into power and find your inner
strength:
1. Accept having a broken heart
and embrace the pain within you
Firstly, read this quote from poet Mark Nepo (from the
Book of Awakening) - it says it all, emphasis my own:
There is a beautiful Tibetan myth that
helps us to accept our sadness as a threshold to all that is
life-changing and lasting.
This myth affirms that all spiritual
warriors have a broken heart - alas, must have a broken
heart - because it is only through the break that the wonder
and mysteries of life can enter us.
So what does it mean to be a spiritual
warrior?
It is far from being a soldier, but more
the sincerity with which a soul faces itself in a daily way.
It is this courage to be authentic that
keeps us strong enough to withstand the heartbreak through
which enlightenment can occur.
And it is by honoring how life comes
through us that we get the most out of living, not by
keeping ourselves out of the way.
The goal is to mix our hands in the
earth, not to stay clean.
As we can see, being a spiritual warrior and
carrying some level of pain inside go hand-in-hand,
what else would motivate the spiritual
warrior to be a warrior...?
To turn inwards and face the pain,
woundedness, and darkness we find there, we need to first be
willing to look within.
Next, we must be willing to accept the pain that we find inside
ourselves without avoiding, judging, suppressing, obsessing
over, or pathologizing it.
Remember that pain is a part of your inner landscape, but it
doesn't define the whole of you.
Accepting your broken-heartedness instead of pushing it away is
one of the most fundamental and important ways of turning your
pain into a source of power.
2. Don't collapse into passivity - proactively
step into a space of courage
When we're in the metaphorical dark forest of pain, not knowing
where to go or what to do next, it can be all too easy to throw
our arms up in despair and fall onto the ground defeated.
But every good hero will pick themselves up and realize that
collapsing into passivity is not just dead-ended but ultimately
pointless:
it keeps you stuck in a disempowering
victim mentality.
While feeling anger about, grieving, and
accepting our victimhood is important, that's only part of the
journey.
The other part is to step into a space of survivorship, a place
of proactive healing and self-empowerment. Only then can we be
of authentic, deep, and practical service to others and society
at large.
In the words of Thomas Moore (Dark
Nights of the Soul),
Even though your dark night has much of
positive value to give you, you shouldn't be completely
passive in it.
You have to be armed and ready for
battle.
You have to be a spiritual warrior and
take on the emotional accouterments of the knight and hero.
You have to be a big person, which is
not the same as being full of will and
ego.
To be a 'big person,' in this case, is to be
a person of courage, a person willing to rise above fear and go
into the dark forest with fortitude, zeal, and resolve.
These qualities don't come from the ego but
from the Soul.
3. Return to your heart and let love be the
light that leads you
Fear is the darkening of the light
in the gloomy forest of our inner Underworlds - but love
is the candle, the lantern, the north star, the sun
rising over the horizon, that lights our way.
To be a spiritual warrior is to be a heart warrior, a
Bodhisattva, a devotee of Divine Love, and it is only through
love that we can find our way out of the dark forest in the
first place.
Sufi mystic and teacher Llewellyn Vaughan-Lee, when
writing about the sacred text of the
Bhagavad Gita, says the
following,
So the way of the Gita is the way of a
spiritual warrior, a peace warrior and an eco-warrior, what
Gita calls a karma-yogi:
one who is engaged constantly for the
upliftment and well-being of the deprived and
dispossessed but who acts without desiring the fruit of
his or her own actions.
Letting love lead you isn't only about
showing compassion to your wounded inner parts (such as
befriending your inner child and shadow self), but it's also
done in service of helping and being an example for others in
society as well.
When you face the darkness, when you look into the eyes of your
innermost demons, you're not just doing this for yourself, but
you're also giving it a higher purpose.
You're doing it for the collective good as
well.
You recognize that your inner world has a
direct impact on your outer world.
Your actions create ripple effects.
You aren't separate, but you are one
interconnected strand on the greater web of life.
What you do counts.
Even if you don't get public accolades and badges of honor
(which typically never happens when it comes to any form of
inner work as it is a very internal and often private
experience), you still know, feel, and are irrevocably assured
of the profound value of what you're doing.
Now is the Time...!
|