Blessing During Isolation: How Loneliness Changed My Life
There has been a God-given quality of mine that has concurrently been a thorn in my side and a blessing. I am a serious introvert. I would be perfectly content and delighted to be tucked away, alone. That's where I am most easily available to think, work, and create. I've never been one to get lonely.
When my husband and I set out to move to an entirely new state, with no friends nor family for hundreds of miles, I knew that it was going to be a solitary endeavor, and I knew that I'd be just fine with that. I was unabashedly fulfilled and prepared to be alone in a new setting; if anyone could handle this task, it was certainly me. I just knew I could handle it. And I did. For about a year.
I think I sprouted armor at a young age that benefited me in this way. I was the black sheep in my family, in many ways I still am. I wasn't the popular one in school. There were times where I even felt witch-hunted by my fellow church members because my preferences and tastes were so starkly different than theirs.
As you can imagine, I felt more than prepared for being alone. My husband, and my dogs, and my thoughts were, more often than not, plenty for me. Nevertheless, I often was chastised for not attending more women's events in my new city. I was anomalized by acquaintances for not being more gregarious and outgoing. But I truly was fine. I was always alone, but never lonely.
Around the 1-year mark, something changed. I was angry. Discouraged. Confused. Long-distance friendships that I had worked so hard to keep up with had suddenly dissolved. People stopped calling. Stopped texting. Stopped answering. In what seemed like a blink of an eye, I was deserted, with no one near to me. I was caught off-guard, and I was terribly disillusioned. I was alone, and this time I felt it. I was beginning to understand and see the reasons why friendship and community are both vital to Christian health.
I was well-acquainted with the sensation of being overlooked, but this time something seemed different and darker. The seclusion was nearly physically painful, with abounding panic attacks and compounding fearfulness. I felt that all I'd ever known was ripped from me, without the promise of replenishment. I was furious with God, how dare He not provide for me? Why would He desire this for His child? And somehow God expected me to be an effective and thoughtful servant in and for the church? No. No. No. I retreated, and I seethed for what felt like a lifetime.
Have you ever had seasons in your life where you just refuse to learn what God intends for you to learn? Because that's exactly how I handled hitting my ceiling of loneliness. Instead of stewarding my disappointment, fear, and isolation to bring me closer to God, I chose to use it as a wedge in my relationship with Him. I stopped talking and listening to the One I needed the most.
I think what began the process of renewal for met was a quote from Francis Bacon that I'd come across when reading about the importance of Church membership.
"Those that