13.11 – Are we mistaking solitude to be loneliness?

by February 1, 2013

Some people fear, “If I become too spiritual, I won’t be able to relate with most people for they are materially-minded. Won’t I end up feeling lonely?”

This fear betrays a common but serious confusion between loneliness and solitude. Both refer to a state of social isolation. But the key difference between them is the direction of our consciousness, our desires, our heart. When these are externally directed, social isolation makes us feel lonely, bored, deprived. When these are internally directed, social isolation engenders solitude, introspection, rejuvenation. Loneliness is like night, a state of disconcerting darkness. In contrast, solitude is like day, a state of comforting illumination.

Pertinently, the Bhagavad-gita (13.11) mentions solitude as characteristic of those who cultivate spiritual knowledge. Such knowledge-seekers aspire to live in a solitary place (vivikta desha-sevitvam) and are detached from the general mass of people (aratir jana-samsadi). They see social isolation not as a threat but as an opportunity. It provides them the necessary physical and emotional distance from the world’s obsession with materialism. Thus distanced, they can better contemplate and comprehend the unchanging spiritual realities that underlie the ever-changing material appearances.

Significantly, to re-direct ourselves from matter to spirit, bhakti-yoga offers us an easier way: associate with those who are spiritually-minded. In the association of advanced devotees, spiritual knowledge doesn’t remain a matter for abstract analysis. It becomes the setting for relishing living, loving experiences.

Nonetheless, even on the devotional path solitude is a potent resource for us. We may under-utilize devotee-association by seeking it merely for its social pleasantries and emotional comforts – not for its spiritual potency. Brief, regular periods of solitary introspection help us evaluate whether we are redirecting our heart from the world to Krishna.

When we thus tap both association and solitude, loneliness flees far away.

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  • Ashu Pathak
    February 2, 2013 at 8:42 pm

    Thanks Prabhuji for nice guidance. I regularly get opportunity of being away from day to day life but I will take that opportunity very seriously to introspect and self analysis. thanks for direction and making that verse practical for us

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