You feel a sense of anger and deep pain rippling through you. How could they leave you so brutally, and without a second thought?
How could they take your love and trust, and throw it to the wind as if it didn’t even matter – as if YOU didn’t matter?
If you’ve experienced abandonment in your life before you will know how far the wounds of being “second best” or “not worth it” run within you. You will be very aware of how feeling unwanted has changed the person you are and the way you interact with others.
One thing I’ve learned on my path is that abandonment takes many different shapes and forms. Feeling unwanted and unloved can manifest itself physically, emotionally, psychologically, and even spiritually. But the one thing that all of these different facets of being neglected have in common is the big gaping hole they leave in our lives.
Today I want to explore that void within you.
“I Am Not Worth It” Might Be Your Core Wound
When we experience a severe form of abandonment or neglect, particularly at a young age, the shock from that experience tends to stay with us for the rest of our lives. But these shocking experiences continue to dwell within us only if we fail to explore them. These experiences when left unexamined for too long become our core wounds or the deepest fundamental beliefs that we have about ourselves on an unconscious level.
As Sol wrote in his article “How to Discover Your Deepest, Darkest Core Wound”:
Our core wounds are our deepest seated pains in life. They are our oldest and most miserable friends. For most of us, these core wounds within us are ruled by the following two mistaken beliefs:
“I am flawed and therefore a bad person.”
“I must change or fix something about myself in order to be acceptable.”
Other common core wounds that arise as a product of feeling unwanted include, “I am not worth it,” “I am unlovable,” and “I am irreparably broken.”
4 Ways to Deal With Feeling Unwanted and Unloved
We have found ourselves in a period of time which I like to call the Individualist Era. As our ability to communicate empathetically and meaningfully with others breaks down as a result of our “ME FIRST!” corporate and materialist culture, we find that our families, friendships and relationships are as unstable as ever. Therefore, more and more of us are experiencing the isolation of being abandoned, cheated and forgotten.
What can we do to explore and heal these core wounds? How can we tear down the brick walls that shelter the tattered remnants of our hearts? And finally, how can we become stronger, more whole people again?
Like you, I have experienced abandonment in many different shapes and forms. Like you, I have suffered terribly as a result of it. But today I want to provide you with something proactive, something that will empower you to take your life in your own hands again.
This is what I have personally learned about facing the pain of feeling unwanted:
1. Most people don’t want themselves
In other words, most people don’t LIKE, respect, or even value themselves. There is a huge self-love deficit in our society which is reflected in every layer of our lives. As a result, those of us who struggle with loving ourselves tend to sabotage our relationships with others. How can a person who doesn’t know how to love themselves show love towards others? It doesn’t happen. Understanding this can help you to better empathize with others, or at the very least, comprehend why they behave the way they do.
2. You are a victim of circumstance, but you don’t have to pity yourself
I discovered this the hard way: the more you victimize yourself and romanticize your pain, the more you will stay stuck in cycles of misery and resentment. It’s tempting to use our stories of abandonment and mistreatment to make us secretly feel righteous and special, but the truth is that this does more harm than good. Mourning what we lost is a natural part of the grief cycle, but constantly revisiting and dwelling on our stories is unhealthy and even self-destructive. I’ve found that accepting what happened is vital to the process of inner growth and transformation, WITHOUT self-pity.
3. Everyone has a different soulful capacity
Just as everything in life goes through varies stages of maturation, so too does the soul. Why is it that some people are born with old souls, and others remain young at heart until death? I believe the answer lies in something I call soulful maturity. I explore this concept more in depth in my book. Soulful maturity determines how much capacity we have for forethought, compassion, empathy and unconditional love – and these factors all have an impact on the way we treat others. For example, some people are naturally pack-orientated and blinded by fear of the “other,” while other groups of people are open, accepting and peace-making.
So what does any of this have to do with feeling unwanted and abandoned? Well the point is that some people just don’t have the capacity to be genuinely kind, considerate and faithful – at least for now. They haven’t reached that point in their soulful maturing yet. Thus their behavior can come across as insensitive, reckless and even cruel.
Understanding that everyone has a different soulful capacity has helped me to personally become a more lenient and forgiving person.
4. It is possible to fill that empty hole YOURSELF
It sounds crazy, right? How can we fill the empty holes within ourselves? Don’t we need other people by default to do that for us? No, we don’t. As children we did, but as adults we don’t. Unfortunately many of us still carry the unconscious belief that we need to find another person to help us become whole and complete. But have you ever questioned the validity or truth in this belief? Don’t get me wrong, other people can provide you with immense support and assistance, but they can never authentically fill that void within you. Only you can.
But how? One of the best ways I have learned to do this (particularly if you were abandoned as a child emotionally, mentally or physically), is by learning how to re-parent your inner child. However, if you are dealing with the pain of feeling unloved as an adult (perhaps as a result of divorce or breakup), self-love is the ultimate way to overcome this trauma. In another article, explore how to love yourself more.
Final Thoughts …
Learning how to love yourself is hard – so is learning how to re-parent your inner child – however they are both vital tools that will help you to become vulnerable again, and therefore receptive to giving and receiving love.
What is your opinion on the advice given in this article? Have you managed to deal with your feelings of being unwanted, and if so, how?
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Hello, thank you for providing comfort in a dark time. I am a Christian and am suffering rejection by family/friends/church and I am sorry you were hurt too. Thank you for helping others see we are not alone.
Wolves are beautiful and strong!
Speaking of feeling unworthy, this is just a hunch, and I haven’t gone out of my way to mathematically count all the criticism in the comment section for both of the two authors, but is it me or people are more likely to criticize Aletheia Luna than Mateo Sol? It almost feels like there’s twice the criticism involved, or more, when there’s a woman involved rather than a man. Maybe people just feel more uncomfortable, consciously or unconsciously, when a woman speaks out around these controversial issues than a man, or perhaps people just find it easier to confront one side over the other? I’m not really intimidated by Mateo, and I don’t find Aletheia “particularly wild,” over the other. It’s just one speaking out against the norms breaks gender norms more than the other, hahahahaha. Again, I haven’t mathematically and scientifically counted all the articles and comments to be sure about this, but it’s still a strong hunch I have to share.
I’m 49 and completely and utterly alone. Everything in the article sounds great but I have tried it 1,000 times already. I never succeed. I’m just biding my time till I die. My family history of breast cancer cements the fact I’ll end up with it too, so I don’t go for mammograms. I am hoping to find out when it’s too late so I can just wither and die.
With losing our daughter and then 11 months and 4 days after laying her to rest, I found myself burying my wife, I now find myself alone. Never really had many friends in life, now none at all, I find every day is a lonely one. Get along with people at work really well but outside, I dont exist. Fill my days in with whatever I can just to pass the day so I can get back to work since its all I have left. Feelings of unworth and loneliness are a daily thing for me and often find myself retracting from any kind of interaction with people and if I do, I hide myself in the shadows. I dont really think I am alone, only unwanted and thats why i hide in the background of those more precious then me because even though Im not out front, its better being something than it is to be nothing at all.
I recognize the ways you say you feel, in the ways I find myself feeling. I hope you have found your path…
I am 60 years old now and although I have had so much going on over the years I see now how I dismissed all the important feelings that I really needed .Instead I tried to hard to find them by making other people happy ,taking the load off their shoulders as it piled up on top off mine ….I’m still figuring things out now but so much of what you have here has made sense to me x
I have no problem showing love, being rejected is very painful specially people who supposedly love you. The quality of returned love is zeros across the board, Over the years continually giving amd giving takes a whole lots from you mentally and physically. I feel it’s a wasted of good energy knowing that people is emotionally empty. Asking to be treated fairly and accept is a normal request. Nowadays people just couldn’t care about love or neither empathy.
There’s absolutely no doubt in my mind that I agree with #1. I stopped accepting myself years ago because of reasons that I’m not willing to divulge (unless the owner of the site wants to contact me so I can explain further). I have absolutely no self esteem. My ego has suffered permanent damage, and I have ceased communicating with my grandma who I lived with since I was 10 or 11 years ago. I loathe criticism unless I consider it to be constructive. But regardless of that, I received absolutely nothing but berserker barrage after berserker barrage of negative criticism from both my grandma and my dad (who’s no longer around, thank god for that). I stopped hanging out with others like myself who have a disability, and I stopped accepting myself altogether. I’m nothing but a huge broken human with a mishmash of bits and pieces scattered all over the place. After I lost my dream job of fixing and testing pinball machines and video games for a living (through no fault of my own, thankfully), I’ve never been the same. I used to be bright, enthusiastic, spontaneous……. but now, I’m just a human who wants to self… Read more »
Yes i feel really unwanted and unoved
I’ve abandoned my children because I wanted to party.