Being made a new creature in Christ regenerates our human spirit. Part of our soul’s healing and deliverance emerges from surrendering parts of our past that threaten our present state (2 Corinthians 5:17). Despite the internal wrestling match, the Lord proves what He has placed in us. Amid complexity, we grow into spiritual maturity as our relationship with Christ blossoms from one life season to the next, despite the fear of being alone.
While we treasure countless promises in Scripture, one enduring truth is that Jesus will be with us (Deuteronomy 31:8; Hebrews 13:5). Our Savior will never leave, abandon, or forsake. Sometimes, this can be challenging to process, especially if we struggle with the fear of being alone or by ourselves with no one else around.
Fear of being alone differs from loneliness, which is experiencing sadness due to isolation and disconnection. It is more closely linked to anxiety and stress due to being by oneself. The origins of the fear are often traced back to childhood experiences of assault, neglect, or other traumatic incidents, even if no harm was intended. This may include parental divorce, an emergency that compromises personal safety, or the death of a beloved person.
These marked experiences from childhood may imprint as abandonment, helplessness, or vulnerability. For a lifetime, a person can feel anxious or vulnerable that the same feelings of loneliness may occur again in a new or similar circumstance. It may help us to allow the Holy Spirit to reveal where this fear has deepened its root in our lives.
Often, we try to populate the places where we fear being alone. We may attempt to quell the anxiety, by forming codependent relationships with others whose presence may be damaging. Instead, we need to explore the origin of this fear, or we will find ourselves back in familiar cycles of neglect, abandonment, and codependency. As we seek wholeness in this area of mental and emotional health, we can invite the Holy Spirit’s work.
The Holy Spirit testifies of Jesus and will remind us of divine promises. Unlike those who may have abandoned or neglected us, Jesus will never leave. He eternally remains our source as the True Vine (Genesis 28:15; Isaiah 41:10; John 15:1-2). He preserves. His Spirit also supplies the healing that works comprehensively in us. From the Spirit, we learn to experience, appreciate, and enjoy our own company without clamoring to fill it with distractions.
God knows how to connect us to life-giving relationships that promote interdependence, individuality, and acceptance (Ephesians 4:16). Embracing the proximity of people and learning to healthily engage with them frees us from depending on any human’s presence exclusively to answer the fear of being alone. (Psalm 68:6; Isaiah 43:5; James 5:16)
Next steps to overcome the fear of being alone
Has the fear of being alone occupied your mind or life? Have you struggled to feel that the Holy Spirit remains present with you? If you have already navigated to this site, you are on the right track. We can connect you to a counselor to receive support and address the trauma that may have contributed to your current state. Receive the grace to go and grow forward in a new path, sometimes with others, always with God, but never alone. Reach out to us today!
References:
clevelandclinic.org
Photos:
“Enjoying the View”, Courtesy of Hannah Busing, Unsplash.com, CC0 License; “Standing by the Watter”, Courtesy of Lia Bekyan, Unsplash.com, CC0 License
- Kate Motaung: Curator
Kate Motaung is the Senior Writer, Editor, and Content Manager for a multi-state company. She is the author of several books including Letters to Grief, 101 Prayers for Comfort in Difficult Times, and A Place to Land: A Story of Longing and Belonging...
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