DWQA QuestionsCategory: Problems in SocietySometimes being alone is unavoidable – such as being in solitary confinement. But many people feel lonely even when surrounded by other people. When satisfying human companionship is not available, what is Creator’s advice on the best ways to deal with isolation and reduce the suffering of loneliness when others are truly not available?
Nicola Staff asked 4 years ago
We can suggest as a good rule of thumb that it would be a good idea to reach out to the divine in such circumstances and commune with the Almighty and any others in the pantheon of divine beings and even departed family members who were beloved. All are reachable by your thoughts alone. Even though you may not discern an answer, they will know you are thinking of them and may well be able to impulse a sense of calm and a sense of their essence as though they were there beside you. This will be quite real but only variably perceived because most people are not very intuitive and will not be able to sense the energies involved. The sense of a presence of such a being must be allowed by the human in the physical. It cannot be arranged to happen without a request and an openness to the experience. So it will not take someone by surprise typically other than people often are reaching out to the heavens but not really expecting much of anything to happen they will perceive, so when something does happen, are surprised in that way but it is not because the divine happened to show up and tap them on the shoulder—unsolicited, that will not happen. So this is yet another way to deal with the issue of loneliness. After all, a large part of the yearnings people feel in not being fully satisfied with their lives and the level of interchange and sharing with other people in their circle stems from the fact they are cut off from the divine and feel quite isolated and alone compared to what they were used to in the light where they can be with Creator whenever they like and share many profound experiences of divine love directly. There is nothing akin to that in human experience in the physical domain, so the problem of loneliness has as a fundamental aspect the absence of the divine once again as the proximal cause of human suffering in their state of disconnection.