The hardest thing about going through an existential crisis is that you often feel depressed and alienated.
Nothing makes sense anymore, and everything feels meaningless โ including all of your old accomplishments, desires, professional attachments, relationships, and goals.
You want to find your real purpose in life. You want to know why the f*ck weโre all here in the first place, but you donโt know where to start.
Spiritual Wanderer Course:
Find your deepest path and purpose in life as a spiritual wanderer. In this immersive course, you get 3+ hours of content, workbooks, meditations, a premium test, and more!
If you can relate to these feelings, my heart goes out to you. Iโve been there before and itโs a dark place. Worst of all, it can sometimes last for years (like mine did).
As someone who has been through this, Iโm not here to bullshit you.
Iโm not promising that what I’ll share will help it all become magically better.
But I do hope you find a little bit of solace.
Table of contents
- What is an Existential Crisis? (Definition)
- 15 Signs Youโre Experiencing an Existential Crisis
- WHY Youโre Going Through an Existential Crisis
- Why More and More People Are Experiencing the Existential Crisis
- The Existential Crisis Can Be a Good Sign
- 9 Ways to Get Through the Existential Crisis ( and Actually Benefit From It )
- When the Existential Crisis Becomes Existential Despair
- This is a Time of Death and Rebirth
What is an Existential Crisis? (Definition)
Put simply, an existential crisis is a period in life where a person is at a crossroads and is questioning their entire reality.
They may wonder what the meaning of their life is and whether they have a higher purpose. They may wonder whether life itself has meaning or is just a random, chaotic product of chance.
As a result, they may suffer from tremendous anxiety, depression, isolation, and feelings of being lost. The existential crisis is often spiritual in nature and is sometimes a byproduct (or trigger of) the spiritual emergency.
Dissolve the shadows that obscure your inner Light in this weekly email-based membership! Perfect for any soul seeker serious about practicing ongoing shadow work and self-love.
If you’re a spiritual wanderer seeking some kind of path, place, and purpose in life, you’re likely experiencing or have gone already through an existential crisis.
15 Signs Youโre Experiencing an Existential Crisis
Are you going through an existential crisis? Pay attention to the following signs:
- Youโre searching for the meaning of life
- You feel a growing sense of looming existential dread when contemplating society, the state of the planet, etc.
- You feel alone and isolated
- You often find yourself feeling consumed by melancholia/existential depression
- You feel like your โold lifeโ has withered away
- You donโt know who you are anymore
- You feel like your past accomplishments are meaningless (and as a result, you feel lots of regret)
- You see through the shallowness of societyโs goals and desires
- You crave something deep and meaningful
- You realize that the Universe is far more complex than you previously thought
- You feel a sense of smallness or powerlessness in the face of everything
- Youโre acutely aware of your mortality (and feel existential anxiety as a result)
- You feel fundamentally different from others
- You feel like thereโs something innately โwrongโ or โbrokenโ about you
- You feel empty inside
- You canโt seem to find any place that feels like โhomeโ
How many of the above signs can you relate to?
When I was going through an existential crisis my entire worldview shattered. I was raised in a fundamentalist Christian background and could no longer come to terms with an โall-loving Godโ who would send people to burn in hell for eternity.
I went through years of confusion, emptiness, anxiety, and depression wondering what the purpose of all this was. It was an extremely difficult, traumatizing, and heart-breaking time. (And yes, thankfully I have pulled through it, hence why Iโm writing this article and for this website.)
But my story is only one of millions, and there are many reasons why you may be going through a crisis. Weโll explore below …
WHY Youโre Going Through an Existential Crisis
Why did all of this happen to you? Why are you experiencing an existential crisis?
There are a number of reasons. Here are the most common that you may have experienced:
- Sudden death of a loved one
- Job change or loss
- Chronic illness or a shock diagnosis
- Moving to a new place or country
- Chronic stress and anxiety
- Getting married/divorced
- Relationship breakdown
- Having a baby
- Entering a new life phase (e.g., adulthood, mid-life, old age)
- Loss of religious beliefs
- Natural disasters (flood, hurricane, fire)
- Excessive drug use
- Mystical experience
- Sudden spiritual awakening or dark night of the soul
- Prolonged isolation
Let me know in the comments which of these you think triggered your existential crisis.
As you can see, the existential crisis is caused by literally any big life event or change โ whether positive or negative.
Would you like to save this?
Your information will never be shared.
Anything sudden can be destabilizing to your mind. Think of it like an earthquake that sets off a domino effect within your psyche. Before you know it, you have cut off all your friends, quit your job, and have completely withdrawn from society because it all feels too much.
Again, I want to emphasize the fact that this wonโt last forever.
It might feel like it and you might believe, in your present frame of mind, that youโre the only person out there who is going through this. But youโre not.
There are people who understand what youโre going through (like myself and the community of readers on this blog). So please take solace in that and keep reading to get support.
Why More and More People Are Experiencing the Existential Crisis
Yes, you heard it right: the existential crisis is increasing in prevalence.
Itโs becoming a global phenomenon.
With record numbers of people experiencing major depression and other symptoms associated with the existential crisis, the question is WHY?
With all our technology, wealth, and material abundance, why are we feeling more and more empty inside?
There are many possible answers, but I believe that the main cause is emotional, philosophical, and spiritual in nature.
We live in a world that worships the reductionistic mechanistic scientific view of life. Anything mysterious, magical, or remotely spiritual in nature is scorned and looked down upon. We pretend weโre โabove all that childish nonsenseโ when, in reality, itโs what we need the most.
As clinical psychologist and scholar C. Michael Smith writes,
The world seen only through the lenses of scientific-calculative thinking is a thin, dry, hollow, surface world, devoid of mystery, depth, and meaning. There is an existential nausea (Sartre) that comes with such a nihilistic view of reality. Such a view is itself a symptom of deep spiritual, social, and ecological pathology. Some face this nihilism with stoic courage, others retreat into fundamentalistic and traditional forms of security, where they may have some limited contact with the sacred, while still being touched by the nihilism of the modern scientific worldview. Some seek a genuine sense of the sacred to give their lives meaning and direction, but cannot find it in the institutional religions of the west. Some turn to the numinous resources of the East, some to occult interests; some are now turning to shamanism, others the psychedelics, to rekindle a sense of mystery and meaning characteristic of the sacred.
As a society, we deal with our existential emptiness in many ways, but the unifying sobering reality is that we are spiritually destitute.
Weโve lost touch with our spiritual nature and are suffering horribly as a result โ this is known as collective Soul Loss.
Iโll explore how to get back in touch with your spiritual nature (and what worked for me) a little later.
But first, letโs explore why this is not all so doom and gloom โฆ
Illumination Books Bundle:
Illuminate the depths of your heart, mind, and soul with our series of premium books covering sensitivity, solitude, shadow work, the spiritual awakening journey, and more!
The Existential Crisis Can Be a Good Sign
I know the title of this section sounds totally absurd. But the fact that youโre experiencing existential anxiety signifies that youโre not a mindless sheep of society.
You are alive goddammit, and more than that, youโre in touch with your spiritual nature.
As spiritual philosopher Krishnamurti once wrote:
It is no measure of health to be well adjusted to a profoundly sick society.
The fact that youโre maladjusted, the fact that youโre questioning everything and feel a sense of despair means that youโre getting more in touch with your own truth โ not the version of truth that society likes to spoonfeed us.
As author Tim Farrington writes,
Doubt as to whether you are in a dark night or โjust depressedโ is probably a very good sign; it means youโre alive and paying attention and that life has you baffled, which is the precondition for truth in my experience.
Perhaps more than anyone, the Holocaust survivor and psychotherapist Viktor Frankl was acquainted with the depths of existential crisis. He writes in his wonderful book The Doctor of the Soul:
The โsymptomโ of conscientious anxiety in the melancholiac is not the product of melancholia as a physical illness but represents an โaccomplishmentโ of the human being as a spiritual person.
In other words, feeling existential anxiety is not just the result of depression (or melancholy), itโs actually an accomplishment that signifies weโre in touch with our spiritual nature.
Mirabai Starr, author of numerous spiritual books writes, โSomeone who is broken โฆ who has struggled all his or her life with some intense deficiency, may have a uniquely powerful relationship with God.โ
And itโs true.
The more you suffer existentially, the closer you are likely to draw to the Divine.
I realize you may be an atheist or simply not interested in spirituality, but perhaps itโs time to reconsider your relationship with the mysterious, at the very least. Weโll look more into this below.
9 Ways to Get Through the Existential Crisis (and Actually Benefit From It)
Again, I know โbenefitingโ from your existential crisis may sound ridiculous.
But hear me out.
The existential crisis is an opportunity for you to find your life purpose, figure out what truly matters in life, and connect with your spiritual nature.
What youโre going through may be horribly painful at times, but it also has a deeper meaning: youโre experiencing a death and rebirth.
Youโre undergoing a mental, emotional, and spiritual renewal process which is common to stage 1 of the spiritual wanderer’s journey.
Everything in life works in cycles. Think of life like the four seasons. What youโre experiencing right now is the winter stage of existence. But after that comes spring.
Here are some paths and practices you may like to explore. Many of these I have used myself during my existential crisis period โ and they helped tremendously:
1. Record (journal) all your thoughts every day
This one was a BIG help for me โ and I believe it can be for you too.
Writing down all your thoughts and feelings is a brilliant way of getting them out of your mind. The more you let your thoughts accumulate, the more overwhelmed you feel. So let them all out.
Journaling is extremely therapeutic and is constantly recommended by professionals and depressed folks alike. In my How to Journal article, I offer you some unique tips, just in case you need extra support.
Hereโs an example of an “existential crisis-styled” journal entry:
Iโm feeling horrible today. I watch and listen to people talk about their lives, but it all seems futile. I canโt relate to any of them. Not even a bit. All their plans, goals, and shallow desires โ canโt they see that itโs all going to perish one day? Their banality suffocates me and I feel like Iโm walking in the land of the dead. Everyone is asleep. Why canโt they just wake the fuck up? Maybe Iโll feel better tomorrow, but for now, I just wanted to get these feelings out. I know this is good for me to do and that these feelings won’t last forever.
As you can see, your journal entry doesnโt need to be long. It can be a tiny paragraph or even a few words. It also doesn’t need to be wordy, well-written, or poetic. The point is to benefit from it by making a habit out of it.
If you need some powerful and compassionate guidance to help you work through your existential crisis, see the Dark Night of the Soul Journal I’ve created.
2. Turn your pain into art
Some of the best art (think Vincent Van Gogh, Edvard Munch, Goya, etc.) has come from those who have suffered tremendously.
You donโt need to be good at art (or an โartistโ) to benefit from artistic self-expression. The point isnโt to create something that will please others but something that helps you feel better and process what youโre going through.
If you need ideas, go on Pinterest and look up different art projects, or go to your local art gallery. Places to start include watercolor, sketching, collage, and paint pouring. You can also read our article on art therapy ideas and see if it offers you some helpful places to start.
3. Get in touch with your inner warrior
Thereโs a reason why weโve named this website โlonerwolf.โ The wolf is symbolic of the inner spiritual warrior, the inner force of nature who refuses to give up.
S/he is the fire within you that voyages courageously into the unknown, fights for freedom, and respects your true self.
When we go through an existential crisis, it can feel like all our power and energy has been drained from us. We may struggle to get up in the morning and keep moving forward. We may feel small and defenseless in the face of life.
The way to move through these feelings is to reconnect with your inner warrior in whatever way he/she/it appears to you. I like to see this fiery essence as an inner wolf, but you may see it differently.
To connect with your inner warrior, you may like to turn to your dreams. Before going to bed, ask your unconscious mind to present you with an image of your inner warrior. Then, pay attention to your dreams. Note down anything significant when first rising in the morning. My guide on dream work can help you through this process.
You may even like to take a herb like mugwort, blue lotus, or a lucid dreaming supplement to make your dreams more vivid (please do your own research regarding dosage requirements and look into the precautions).
An alternative is to practice visualization. Imagine youโre walking down a staircase and at the bottom is a golden door. Once you open that door, youโll come face-to-face with your inner warrior. What does he/she/it look like? You might like to play some music that puts you in the right frame of mind for this activity (think warrior music which you can find for free on Youtube).
Once youโve connected with your inner warrior, you can then work with this inner image in your daily life for strength and guidance.
You may like to journal with this inner force, talk with it through visualization, or create a piece of artwork that you put somewhere noticeable and special in your home.
4. Connect with nature
If you struggle to connect with others, go out in nature. Connect with the birds, trees, and plants. Sit and watch what happens around you and find delight in the small things.
Spending time in nature was one of the major ways I got through my existential crisis. I would often spend hours sitting outside observing how the clouds moved through the sky and the way the wind danced through the trees.
If you donโt live near nature, try taking regular trips to your local wildlife reserve, forest, or park. Nature is soothing to the soul and will help you to get out of your head. If youโre interested, I wrote this short and sweet article on the art of forest bathing (shinrin yoku) a few years ago.
5. Find what brings you joy and meaning
Even the smallest things can bring you joy like a patch of sunlight on the floor or the feeling of cold water against your hands as you wash the dishes.
By practicing mindfulness exercises, you can connect more with the present moment and step out of the cycles of dark thought that accompany the existential crisis.
Finding the meaning of life itself is a more complex path, but it’s something that can also bring you a sense of purpose and direction. I’ve written more on the topic of finding the meaning of life and youโre more than welcome to go check that out.
6. Practice self-care and self-love
Take care of yourself. This is a tough time. I know itโs hard, and I know that most days you donโt have the energy for much. But treat yourself with as much love and care as you can muster.
Even opening the window for some fresh air can be seen as a small act of self-love or putting on some warmer socks.
Two forms of self-love and care that you may like to start with are affirmations and gratitude. I know you may feel skeptical toward them, but thereโs a reason why theyโve entered the mainstream: they work.
You may like to start a gratitude journal and list five things youโre thankful for each day (being grateful, by the way, has been scientifically proven to help you feel better).
Before bed each night, I have a “gratitude stone” that I hold and I think of at least five things I’ve been grateful for during the day. This simple practice has done wonders for my mindset, and it’s so quick!
You might also enjoy finding or creating one or two affirmations that you carry with you and repeat throughout the day. Examples may include, โI have a resilient heart, and Iโll get through this,โ โItโs okay to not know all the answers,โ โI surrender to the cycles of life,โ and โThis too shall pass.โ My morning affirmations article can give you more ideas to work with.
7. Simplify and minimize sources of stress
Youโre going through enough inner stress as it is, so donโt be afraid to let go of people or responsibilities that cause you more harm than good.
One way of minimizing your stress is by creating a calm and clear mind. I love the philosophy of minimalism and essentialism for shaping a more intentional life, so look into those concepts more if you want to minimize sources of stress.
Also, try guided meditations that soothe your mind and body each morning and evening. I enjoy the free app โInsightTimerโ for all its variety and I use it on my phone each day. There are also many other meditation apps out there like Calm, Headspace, and Waking Up that you can look into.
8. Connect with others in a way that feels comfortable to you
See if there are any depression support groups around you. Not everyone experiencing depression is going through an existential crisis, but some are. And you can find a sense of kinship there.
Otherwise, there are many groups online (such as Facebook groups) that you can join for support. Alternatively, simply browse around this website and see that youโre not alone in your existential difficulties.
You may also wish to call a mental health hotline if you desperately need to talk with someone or go to a website like 7cups that offers free support (it can be a “hit or miss” experience, but worth exploring).
9. Explore a spiritual path or practice that you resonate with
As psychologist Christa Mackinnon writes:
Studies find correlations between spiritual well-being and positive psychological responses when people are confronted with existential crisis situations. A recent study of 60 lung cancer patients in America, for instance, found that aspects of spirituality, namely meaning in life and prayer, have positive effects on psychological and physical responses, and an in-depth study of 160 terminally ill patients in palliative care came to the conclusion that spiritual well-being provides a sense of peace and offers some protection against end-of-life despair in those for whom death is imminent.
You donโt need to buy into anyoneโs bullshit โ find what type of spirituality works for you.
That might be simply praying or lighting a candle, or it could mean learning how to be a spiritual healer and finding a greater sense of purpose.
I personally enjoy the path of inner work, and I incorporate many eclectic practices into my spiritual path like working with the archetypes, reflecting on oracle and tarot cards, connecting with spirit guides, practicing meditation and mindfulness, connecting with nature โฆ the list goes on.
Find a path that works for you and let it give you hope.
Spiritual Wanderer Course:
โญ๏ธโญ๏ธโญ๏ธโญ๏ธโญ "I started the Spiritual Wanderers Course a short while ago and for the first time in twelve years I have started to experience love, acceptance and compassion for myself and within myself. Thank you so much." โ Vivienne S.
Recommended read: Soul Searching: 7 Ways to Uncover Your True Path ยป
When the Existential Crisis Becomes Existential Despair
If youโre experiencing suicidal thoughts or thoughts of harming others, your existential crisis has become existential despair. You need to seek help immediately.
I am not qualified to help (and I can only give general advice), so I strongly encourage you to seek out a psychologist, therapist, or counselor who can provide you with ongoing 1:1 help.
I know this may feel scary and you might feel ridiculous, but itโs worth getting help. Please do it. Yes, you might be given medication, but thatโs a stepping stone toward greater holistic health and healing in the future.
For a list of international suicide hotlines, go here.
This is a Time of Death and Rebirth
The existential crisis is a time of death โ the death of old beliefs, old ways of being, and old values.
But after death comes rebirth. Just look at the cycles of nature. What youโre experiencing isnโt going to last forever. After the night comes day and after winter comes spring.
I hope this article has shown you how valuable this process youโre going through actually is. There is nothing wrong with you. You are not broken. You are not alone.
You are actually saner than most people because you are questioning the insanity of the world around you.
You are a spiritual wanderer in the process of getting in touch with your True Nature.
Tell me, are you going through an existential crisis right now? How does it feel for you? Please share below. Letโs help others not feel so alone.
Whenever you feel the call, there are 3 ways I can help you:
1. The Spiritual Wanderer Course: Need "big picture" direction, clarity, and focus? Our Spiritual Wanderer course is a crystallization of 10+ years of inner work, and it can help you find your deeper path and purpose in life as a spiritual wanderer. You get 3+ hours of audio-visual content, workbooks, meditations, a premium test, and more!.
2. Shadow & Light Membership: Want weekly intuitive guidance to support you on your awakening path? This affordable membership can help you to befriend your dark side, rediscover more self-love, and reclaim inner wholeness.
3. Spiritual Awakening Bundle: Looking for a collection of all our essential transformative resources? You get five enlightening ebooks, seven in-depth journals, plus two empowering bonuses to help you soul search, heal, and awaken.
Yes, moving to a new place, a year and a half ago after living in my previous place for 32 years. I also quit work. The main thing now is that I have always known that I have a strong tendency for emotional dependency and there has been a particular couple that has shown such love and support. She told me the other day “… you have gone into your own wound and you are looking in the mirror and seeing the wound, rather than the election of your Soul’s essence.” As such, she will still love me etc. but not to the point where I am reflecting on my own wound. And I honour her for this. This has thrown me into a dark and challenging place. A place now where I NEED to recognise the shadows that have been there for so long and yet I have feared to look at. Am feeling a huge amount of shame and recognise that it is there. As well, as moving, retiring I am at an age (66) where I feel like I am still not fulfilled in life. I have always had a spiritual hunger within and had an intense desire to know who I AM, been aware that I am beautifully connected to the Divine, and was 45 years in religion. As someone told me the other day, especially since I have moved location, old ways are dying. . . I am waffling one now. I have found this article to be very good and encouraging and will be reading more of your work. Thank you
Well I found I connected with more than one. Chronic stress and anxiety, the end of relationship, soul awakening or dark night of the soul. At first when the relationship ended I felt like a piece of my soul was ripped out of me. I prayed daily though, read devotionals, went to counseling, at the time I was also in a downward spiral mentally from my bipolar disorder. For maybe 2 months I felt lost. Than a fire inside be lit up. Before our break up I started seeing sequences of numbers. While mourning this relationship. I started seeing other things repeatedly and hearing things repeatedly. So as each free thing came up or something caught my eye. I downloaded everything that I could get for free. I started meditating, journaling, mindfulness, if negative thoughts came up I sat with them and let them flow through. I have always been a loner, I have always loved nature and animals, I used to feel things before they happened, I am highly sensitive and pick up others feelings or emotions. My great great grandfather was a shaman.
I’m so scared, I’m 16 years old and I started my spiritual path last summer because I was in a really bad state in my life and spirituality helped me a lot but two months ago all of a sudden I started questioning my reality and asking the question why everything exists every single day. And I can’t with this anymore, I also have to study to enter a good university and I can’t do it. And it scares me reading that people said that they have been like this for 10 years. I cant bear that.
What should I do?
Hello Carla. I am sorry that you are experiencing these things, that is something no one should have to deal with. I know it feels scary sometimes and your just can’t with this anymore, and I know what it’s like to be afraid by what others have said their experiences were like. But you mustn’t give into that fear, that fear will only keep you afraid and spiraling downward. I cannot say I have sure fire advice to give you as I am working through much of these things myself, but I will say that the article above has many good pointers and advice. One thing I try to do each and everyday is remind myself that things will be okay even when they look terrible. Always remember that their is a brighter tomorrow waiting for you. If you need someone to bounce ideas off of I am here to help. Just be brave. I know you’ve got this, you just need to keep fighting. Be the warrior you were meant to be. Many blessings my friend.
Hi. This is Tammy. I have so far learned enough to understand I am most likely going through some sort of awakening and existential crisis. I’m pretty positive there is more to it than I am aware of. But I find it exciting to know there are answers to my questions. I believe my journey started when I was around 4 years old. I wanted to understand what was wrong with my mom and how could I ever help her. That lead me into my own world of watching and listening and seeking. That by itself has lead me a long way in my life experience. I do know that everything I have in me where I am at right now is not everything about everything. I believe I can learn a lot more with your help. I am a believer in God. Nothing about my life ( I think) has much to do with being religious. I can’t keep up that way. But I have always felt a lot more confident in seeing myself as being more spritual. Though I need more knowledge and especially understanding to what that really is. I do believe that it is something that comes from God. I especially want you to understand that about me because God has been very important to me in my walk through life. But please don’t think I’m not open to new things. And your sight is new to me. But already are showing me things I need. So I plan to stick around for a while at least. I promise to do what I can to help support your work. Because I already think it is very important. I just have to be very careful of my spending. I just need a little more time before I can make a contribution to help you for helping me. And thank you for being there.
Hi everyone,
Yes im in tears too, finally finding a site that answers all my questions.
Ive git all 15 signs, Ive felt this way for past 10 years on and off, went to few therapists but they could not provide answers unlike the answers this thorough provides! Im taking little paces using this site. I often considered suicide several times over the years but something stopped me. Im trying to see the sunshine in life now and will try art therapy too :)
I’m so glad you’ve found this article and these thoughts/discoveries/feelings I’ve shared have helped you Paul! Much love to you โก
Tears are pouring down my face as I read this. I have been in a spiritual desert for years. I have been through so much the last 10 years and then just as I was thinking I was going to be able to move past all the illness and depression my son died on on Mothers Day. I literally had signed up the day before to start my website and business as a cannabis health coach. I had been healing my body physically but had experienced so much loss and hearbreak all while I was leaving my old life. I live such a different life, I often wonder about how such a thing happened. I like the choices I am making and the paths I m exploring but it’s all been so terribly lonely….yet that is what I have craved. I have experienced a type of brain injury from medications. This has been part of the transformation. I am still healing physically but feel lost on moving forward.
I found this site as I am doing a 21 day Spirit Cleanse and today was a day to work on the 4th Chakra. The heart…the soul. The me. I found this site and then found this particular page and it was like being banged upside the head.
I am a former nurse. I did mostly cardiac and post op floors. I became unable to work due to many ailments in 2010. I up and moved in with a man I barely knew 6 hours away from my family and all the friends I had. I was heavily medicated over a period of 4 years when I had an awakening that the path I was on was hurting me even if I was following doctors orders by taking the medication. I was severely depressed. It was a severe dark night. I believe the combination of all the trauma I have from childhood on, then having such a prolonged sickness, followed by my sons death at the young age of 36 have sent me to this place. I have been learning about mindfulness. I have been learning to practice meditation. I was asking about crystals today. This is far from my conservative protestant christian middle class life I had for 50 years.
I have lived in a RV for 6 years. I am very mindful of many things most never consider, like water use, and plastic use. I feel most content in nature. I have wondered if I am to use my previous “healing” but in a new way. I feel called but to what I do not know. OHGosh….this is the first I have spoken of this. I have been in therapy and making headway…but still feeling something is missing.
I look forward to my journey. I look forward to learning what I am meant to do for the next part of my life. It couldn’t come at better time than now. I know Spirit is calling, which has created all the synchronicity of the information on heart work lead me to here. Thank you. I am excited now.
Hearing that you now have hope and are starting a new chapter in your life makes my heart swell with joy โ thank you for sharing this and for your vulnerability Debra! โฅ
Chronic stress and anxiety, mostly over finances and income. Lack of a support system to help me with everyday life issues. I still have all these.
I’ve been struggling for 10 months now. I have to say honestly these were the worst times I’ve ever been through.
nothing triggered my existential crisis but I’m pretty sure it’s a spiritual awakening, I’ve been into spiritualities for a long time now but I didn’t put much effort into it so I think it’s time to start paying more attention to my inner self and soul.
I’ve read into science and philosophy but nothing helped, in fact, science triggered my crisis so much and made it worse.
I’ve strayed away from spirituality these past few months but your article made me realize that I should start taking it seriously.
this article – and the whole website- are amazing, I just pulled an all-nighter reading the other articles linked with this one.
i can’t stress enough how thankful I’m for you! also I really hope for anyone who’s reading this to get through these tough times ! we’re all strong being !
Existential Despair. I had two days of this I am feeling better this afternoon. My appt. with my Pysch Doc is Thursday morning. I will be ok, but I have a hard road ahead. I was in the hospital for two weeks last year where my ego died. I thought that was the end of the dark knight, but it has returned. The only thing I can think of is some very deep emotional traumatic events rooted in my subconscious. Also, at the end of July of this year I had four seizures and during one of them I broke my back.I have also had depression for twenty years, but last year mania hit, so now I am bipolar I with anxiety and i take medications daily. I have been really sick with something on top of all this for two months to where I can barely walk. Also, veils have been lifted and I can see more than I can stand. Thus, all of this may have been the โtriggerโ.
Aken
I know this is a late reponse, but I hope you’re feeling much better by now Ken. Along with an existential crisis, you might also have undergone a spiritual emergency (https://lonerwolf.com/spiritual-emergency/). I’m so glad that you’ve sought help! Sending love
Before I move on from here. I just want to take a moment to say you sound much like me in my life. So if there is anything I can help anyone with I hope my sharing does that. I have held myself back from so many things that probably could have been helpful to me in my life. But recently I have discovered that a big part of it is not being sure of myself and the journey I have been on almost all my life. Looking for answers to my questions and seeking truth to the best of my ability. And I know it’s not everything. But I do think there is a lot in it.
I find it exciting to find answers and info that help open my eyes through time. But some things take so long to connect for me. My mind seems to spin in ways that are even hard for me to understand. I think we sometimes get mentally tired. Recently I thought I was going into a mania. But I don’t think so so much right now. I think it has something to do with the way I have been “conditioned” in my life. Causing me to doubt myself and that what excites me so much is real. But now I can say it is real. I’m not crazy like I have been made to be afraid that I am. Something that if my mom was still around would be very important for her to know. I just hope I have enough in me to help you see it too. You (I, we) are not crazy! Life is. It has a way of getting things confused inside of us and there is a reason for it. It’s just not that easy to connect the dots so our understandings make sense. But that is why our traumatic experience when we are young is so important to us now. Not in the way of reliving it but in the way of looking at it and learning from it. I think that is why “personal inventory” is so important. Because we can explore and learn from ourselves for ourselves and know what to do different in order to feel better about moving on. Within the last month I have made one of those discoveries. So I need to seek out answers to questions I never explored before. Answers you don’t find in a psyc ward. If I can avoid that I try. I have so much to do when it comes to these things. Being in the hospital for it is somewhat waist full. Though sometimes nessasary. There is such a thing as waiting too long. But to be a believer in a environment that most people are not. Tends to leave a person feeling they are alone in their walk. To know the truth that comes from inside is not always easy to deal with alone. This is a big reason why this sight has my attention. Because this is not so much the kind of stuff you find being talked so much about in church. I think this is a very good way to explore ourselves from the inside and what comes out will be more natural. Not so much about because it is what we are told by others. We are guided and lead by others and we learn a lot of things that are good and bad, truth and not truth. And even if we are not always 100 percent sure about everything that comes our way. I think God finds a way of helping us see it. In ways only He can do. I think we both can get a lot out of this just for our own sake by itself. For me I am on the road to breaking a chain that has been saught for a very long time. So I hope you have found the same.
Iโve been suffering with this for about 10 months now after losing my dog, then my stepdad was given a diagnosis of 12 months to live, then he passed 3 months later. Mum was suicidal and I was the only one who could help her. The pressure on me was immense, and on top of all of that, I was waning off the anti-depressants Iโd been on for 5 years so that plunged me back into depression just as I started to experience all of the above.
Iโm now suffering with another bout of anxiety and depression but I donโt want to go back onto the anti-depressants as it took me months to wean off them last time and I was so ill during that time. I canโt bear to put myself through that again. Plus, as a reiki practitioner, I feel it would be hypocritical to go on โpillsโ whilst telling recommending energy healing for everyone else, I feel like tablets arenโt very โspiritualโ and although I know they would help me, something deep inside me is stopping me from going back on them. But itโs so hard going through this, everything is starting to fall apart around me that Iโve worked so incredibly hard to create. I feel lost and alone – so itโs so comforting to read this article and realise that Iโm not, thank you so much xx
Yes, the meds dope me up but at least I donโt feel like killing myself. My trick is to take as small a dose as possible to stay sane.
Aken