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🌙 Time Alone is Sacred: The Power of Solitude in Spiritual Work 🌙

  • Jul 18, 2025
  • 2 min read

I love being alone—specifically, having my alone time. It’s sacred. I crave it. Time for me to be me. To reconnect with myself. Especially in nature—it feels like home.

I'm also a self-proclaimed introvert, even though I participate in extroverted activities. I love providing readings, teaching classes, being with my loved ones. That connection is necessary—we aren’t meant to do this life alone. I love group rituals. They're powerful work, harnessing the collective energy of the group.

But I also adore solo rituals and spiritual work.

There’s something deeply healing about being alone. Not the lonely kind—although that has its own lessons—but the intentional, sacred solitude we give ourselves when the world gets loud and our spirit whispers for stillness.

It’s in those quiet moments—when you’re not performing for anyone, not scrolling, not rushing, not answering to the noise of life—that your soul can actually breathe. And speak.

So often, we try to access spiritual clarity in the middle of chaos—between texts and to-do lists, while juggling a thousand emotional weights.

But real spiritual work? The kind that helps you feel connected again... helps you remember who you are and why you're here?

That kind of work thrives in the in-between moments.

In the space you give yourself.

In the time you take away from everyone else—so you can come home to you.

Time alone lets the deeper truths rise. It sharpens your intuition and helps your nervous system settle.

It gives your spirit room to speak—without being drowned out by the opinions and energies of others.

Sometimes that solitude looks like sitting on the floor with a candle and just breathing.

Sometimes it’s journaling messy pages no one will ever read.

Sometimes it’s lying in bed, crying and releasing.

Sometimes it’s walking barefoot in the grass, letting the Earth hold you when you’re too tired to hold yourself.

Whatever it looks like—it counts.

Solitude gives you time to truly listen.

And you can’t really hear Spirit (or yourself) if there’s no space to receive it.

If you’re feeling disconnected lately… overwhelmed… emotionally flat or spiritually foggy—check in.

When was the last time you truly gave yourself some space?

Not five minutes between errands. But real, intentional time to just be.

Let your solitude be medicine.

Let it be a recalibration.

Let it remind you that you don’t need to chase anything.

You just need to return.

Because when you return to yourself,

you return to Source.

 
 
 

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