It happens more than I’d like to admit. I’m surrounded by people — laughter, conversation, familiar faces — and yet, somewhere inside, I feel completely alone.
It used to confuse me. Now, I think I understand it a little better.
Loneliness isn’t always about being alone
Sometimes it’s about feeling unseen, even in a full room. It’s the gap between the version of yourself you’re showing the world and the one quietly sitting inside you, waiting to be acknowledged.
That gap is real. And feeling it? That’s actually a sign of awareness.
What mindfulness taught me
Mindfulness doesn’t ask you to fix the feeling. It asks you to sit with it.
When I stopped trying to shake off the loneliness and started getting curious about it, I noticed something: it always had something to tell me. Maybe I was craving deeper connection. Maybe I was exhausted from performing. Maybe I just needed to come home to myself.
Loneliness, I’ve learned, is often the inner self way of asking for honesty.
The quiet way back
I don’t always need more people. Sometimes I need more presence — a slow breath, a quiet moment, a candle lit with intention.
When I return to myself, the loneliness softens. It doesn’t always disappear. But it becomes something I can hold, rather than something that holds me.
And in that stillness, I find I am never truly alone.
Have you ever felt this way? I’d love to hear your thoughts below.