
by
Aletheia Luna
May 18, 2025
from
LonerWolf Website
Spanish version

One of the most painfully common, yet neglected areas of discussion
when it comes to the path of
awakening to our deeper Self,
is losing all our friends, winding up alone.
Perhaps you've always struggled to make friends, or once upon a time
had friendships but have since lost them.
Maybe you're an introvert by nature and tend
to have one or two friends at a time, or an
ambivert who shifts like a
chameleon based on the circumstance.
Maybe you're even an
extrovert who thrives on social interaction.
Whatever the case, undergoing a spiritual
awakening - a call to reconnect with your deeper Self - has a way of
both slowly and suddenly
destroying the connections you once
held dear.
These friendships can,
-
either slowly fade through time, like a
withering flower in a pot of stagnant water
-
or they can suddenly disappear in thin
air as if an atomic bomb has gone off in your life...
However you've experienced the loss of friends, I
want you to know that,
You're not alone.
You're not weird.
And you're certainly not crazy.
The question is,
Why do we lose these connections?
How do we find new friends?
And if we can't find suitable connections,
what do we do with ourselves?
Why do we Lose Friendships on the
Path of Awakening?

Three
of cups, three of swords, and eight of cups.
These three
cards of the tarot symbolically represent
the loss of
friendship and the call to a new way of being.
There are a number of reasons why we may wind up
alone at some point in our lives:
-
We've actively distanced ourselves from
our previous relationships because they feel unhealthy,
empty, or no longer fit our needs.
-
Our friends don't understand what we're
going through and can't relate to the "new version" of
ourselves - they can only connect to the role they were used
to us playing. As a result, they phase themselves out of our
lives.
-
There's a lack of understanding and
shared values on both sides: we can no longer relate to
them, and they can no longer relate to us.
On a more meaningful level, losing friendships,
-
Helps us to "start over" by releasing old
identities, values, and aspects of the
ego
that we've
outgrown
-
Clears a space in our lives to go
inwards, reflect, and discover who we truly are at a deeper
level beyond surface masks
-
Creates more opportunities for the
healing and illuminating power of solitude
Losing friendships on the path of
awakening,
is an extremely common and painful
experience...!
I used to have lots of friends growing up, even
as a shy child.
But once I started going through my
dark night of the soul and
spiritual awakening at the age of 19, I wound up alone.
I began actively distancing myself from old
friendships because they just didn't make sense to me anymore.
They felt hollow and actually made me feel
more lonely than not having them.
So what I decided to do was to let them go.
I have made few friendships since (I've
tried, but they didn't go as planned) and a few private online
friendships.
But overall, I don't have the degree of
friendship connectedness I once had.
Eventually, I'd like to when the time is
right in life.
As you get older, it's harder in some ways to make friends.
Busy schedules, responsibilities, mouths to
feed...
Add the "I'm introspecting in my cocoon so I can look
into the deeper layers of my soul and find the
truth of reality"
into that mix, and it can become really hard to find kindred
souls.
How to Find Friends - And if You
Can't, What to Do Instead

We know that if we embrace our ideals, we
must prove worthy of them.
And that scares the hell out of us. What will
become of us?
We will lose our friends and family, who
will no longer recognize us.
We will wind up alone, in the cold void
of starry space, with nothing and no one to hold on to.
Of course this is exactly what happens.
But there's the trick. We wind up in space,
but not alone. Instead we are tapped into an unquenchable,
undepletable, inexhaustible source of wisdom, consciousness,
companionship.
Yeah, we lose friends. But we find friends
too, in places we never thought to look.
And they're better friends, truer friends.
And we're better and truer to them.
Steven Pressfield
The War of Art - Winning the Inner
Creative Battle
Here's a weird thing about me.
I might write a lot about spiritual topics,
but I don't actually like spending time around overtly spiritual
people - the stereotypical love-and-light kind, anyway.
Why?
A "spiritual person" role is still a role, one that is more
elaborate and in many ways more self-righteous and detached (in many
but not all circumstances) than the everyday person's identity.
In other words, it's harder to relate to and feel truly connected
with the spiritual people that I've come across in person (and
online).
I don't know if it's different for you and where you live,
but for me, the most off-putting places are,
-
yoga classes
-
meditation groups
-
spiritual centers...
I don't feel like I can be myself in these spaces
or around these types of people (too much
toxic positivity, new age babble,
cultish behavior, and so on). So I don't go anymore.
I find that I enjoy the company of more down-to-earth people:
those who are curious,
autodidactic (self-learners),
creative, and quirky...!
These are the people I vibe with the most.
I've always connected best with eccentric people:
The outsiders and ones that don't fit in
well.
The square pegs in round holes.
The "outcasts"...
Here are a few questions to help you find friends
after you've lost them on the awakening path.
Identities and roles aside,
-
Who am I deep down?
-
What type of person do I genuinely feel
comfortable around?
-
Where can I find that type of person in
person (or online)?
-
How can I show up regularly in that
space, same place, same time, each week, to build a bond?
Consistency and familiarity are the keys to
establishing new friendships.
The last question is important because if you can
show up in the same place, at the same time, in a place with the
right people, you'll inevitably make new friends.
Incidentally, that's why tactically religion works so well (not that I'm
necessarily promoting it) - it's great at connecting people through
an accepted ritual of showing up at the same place, same time, every
week.
The final question to ask is:
What are my values?
Does this person share them?
If you don't share the same core values (for
instance, creativity, compassion, faith, or loyalty), your
friendship won't be that deep.
If you're fine with surface-level friendships, that's fine.
There are different friendships for different
circumstances.
There are friends of convenience, casual
friends, close friends, best friends, and many other types...
But if you're like me, you enjoy deeper
connections, which is why knowing your core values is important.
One great way of discovering these is by asking
yourself,
"What is most important to me in life? What
couldn't I live without?"
When You Can't Find
Friends - What to Do

Sometimes you're in a place in life where it's hard to make friends
in person.
Maybe you have no space, energy, or time
after your busy work week.
Perhaps there are too many responsibilities
on your plate, like being a live-in carer to a parent, partner,
or child with a disability.
Maybe geographically you live in a very isolated place (like
where I live) or in a city or country with people who don't
share the same interests or values as you (as in the case of a
free spirit living in a highly religious or conservative
country).
Maybe you're still highly traumatized and your nervous system
doesn't allow you to relax around others, or you're still
sensitive and tender after going through an
existential crisis or
dark night.
Whatever the case, sometimes the cards aren't in
our favor. Sometimes life asks that you seek friendship in
alternative ways.
In this situation, I take comfort from what Anne Frank writes
in
The Diary of a Young Girl,
The best remedy for those who are afraid,
lonely or unhappy is to go outside, somewhere where they can be
quite alone with the heavens, nature and God...
As long as this exists, and it certainly
always will, I know that then there will always be comfort for
every sorrow, whatever the circumstances may be.
And I firmly believe that nature brings
solace in all troubles.
Other than taking solace in nature, animals, and
your connection to the Divine, there is always the online world.
There are many communities out there and spaces to directly connect
with others in an ongoing way.
Amid all of this, learning to be your own
best friend...
Losing all your friends can feel like a 'tragedy,' something
shameful, painful, or depressing.
But it can also be a gift in that it
offers you the chance to start over, begin anew, and find people who
do resonate with you on a deeper level.
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