“Because
sober or not, until you start to tell the truth, you're going to be
desperately lonely. Perhaps this is obvious, but I'm pretty sure it
escapes most of us.
We know we're lonely...but we don't really
know why...I felt a nagging ache of separateness I could not name.
Despite being surrounded by people, having a big social life, more plans
than I had time for, and a solid group of people I considered friends, I
still felt very much alone. I felt alone in my marriage. I felt alone
in my friendships, And actually being alone by myself? Forget it - that
was intolerable...
Loneliness started to abate only when I began to really let people in and tell them the truth, and that took a long, long time.
The antidote to loneliness wasn't just being around others or sharing common ground. It was intimacy.
My
friend Meadow's definition of intimacy...she says, "Intimacy is having a
kind, compassionate witness to your truest thoughts and feelings."
Having
a witness also means being seen. Really seen. In all our humanity -
flaws and ugly bits and all. Even the most courageous of us are willing
to go about 90 percent of the way there, but we hold on to that last 10
percent, the part that could allow us to be really known. Sobriety
hasn't so much been about revealing the 90 percent but that last 10. The
little bit I always want to keep to myself.
The problem is, 10
percent of withholding, or secretiveness, will still eventually
contaminate the whole...And keeping 10 percent of yourself from your
partner, or whomever you could trust with your heart, will make you 100
percent lonely.”
― Laura McKowen
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