Out of suffering have emerged the strongest Souls; the most massive characters are seared with scars.
โย Khalil Gibran
At some point, most of us spiritual wanderers, seekers, and lone wolves go through a phenomenon known as the Dark Night of the Soul.
Although we try to run from it, it is still there. Although we try to cover it up and smother it, it is still there. Although we try to put on a happy, smiley face and pretend it away, it’s still there.
While some of us seek reprieve in religious thought, others of us seek respite in spiritual philosophy or psychology, and still, others seek relief through addiction and mind-numbing external pursuits.
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The truth is that although we are all born with Souls, not all of us know how to fully embody and integrate them into our human experience. The reality is that in our modern world, we live ego-centrically rather than Soul-centrically.
Mystics, saints, and shamans throughout history have all referred to this ego-centric human struggle in different ways. But the one thing they all had in common was their tendency to point to the need for us to consciously grow into our Divine potential.
One of these people was Saint John of the Cross, a Spanish monk who coined the term “Dark Night of the Soul” (“Noche Oscura” the name of one of his poems) based on his own mystical experience.
These days, the concept of the Dark Night of the Soul has come to be used in a much broader way. What was once a term reserved for people actively going through a Spiritual Journey, has now come to easily label anything ranging from a few bad days and a period of depression to the death of a loved one.
But what really is the Dark Night of the Soul?
(Note: if you feel the need for further gentle guidance after reading this article, I recommend checking out our Dark Night of the Soul Journal which is a wonderfully supportive way of finding a continued sense of direction and healing.)
Table of contents
- What is the Dark Night of the Soul?
- Dark Night and Depression โ Is it the Same Thing?
- 7 Omens That Herald the Dark Night of the Soul
- Why Suffering is Necessary
- What is the Point of Living?
- Happiness Isnโt This or That, Happiness IS
- The Dark Night and The Spiritual Awakening Process
- Dark Night of the Soul Meditation
- Time to Go Into the Dark
First, we’ll start with a basic definition:
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What is the Dark Night of the Soul?
The Dark Night of the Soul is a period of utter spiritual desolation, disconnection, and emptiness in which one feels totally separated from the Divine.
Those who experience the Dark Night feel completely lost, hopeless, and consumed with melancholy.
The Dark Night of the Soul can be likened to severe spiritual depression (it’s a type of spiritual emergency.)
The concept of having a Dark Night of the Soul has existed for a long time, and spans back to the 16th century when poet and Catholic mystic Saint John of the Cross wrote a poem entitled, โLa noche oscura del alma (The Dark Night of the Soul).โ
Wrote Saint John:
If a man wishes to be sure of the road heโs traveling on, then he must close his eyes and travel in the dark.
Traditionally, the Dark Night of the Soul refers to the experience of losing touch with God/Creator and being plunged into the abyss of godless emptiness.
The modern understanding of having a Dark Night of the Soul, however, is not exclusively a religious one, but can often mean losing all meaning in life, feeling out-of-touch with the Divine, feeling betrayed or forsaken by Life, and having no solid or stable ground to stand on.
Some of the heaviest questions we ask during this period include for example, โWhy am I alive?โ โWhy do good people suffer?โ โWhat is truth?โ โIs there a god or afterlife?โ and โWhat is the point of living?โ
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Dark Night and Depression โ Is it the Same Thing?
The Dark Night of the Soul is not the same as depression.
Although depression shares many of its characteristics with the experience of having a Dark Night of the Soul, it can often be treated and sometimes cured with medications, cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT), mindfulness practices, lifestyle changes, and so forth.
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Furthermore, depression often has its roots in biological chemical imbalances and/or unhealthy thought patterns, and often comes as a result of personal loss, mental illness, physical illness, abuse, genetics, and so on.
However, while the Dark Night of the Soul isn’t the same as regular depression, it can be thought of as spiritual depression.
One of the biggest differences between the Dark Night of the Soul’s depression and regular depression is that the Dark Night is primarily a spiritual and existential form of crisis that canโt be treated or cured with therapy or psychiatry.
Therefore, those of us going through the Dark Night can often feel an increasing sense of hopelessness, unease, and despair as we discover that no one can save us but ourselves.
Inevitably, this makes us feel even more alone, frustrated, and confused about the world and about ourselves.
I am intensely aware of what it is like to experience complete psychological and spiritual desolation and although the feeling seems endless, there is a light at the end of the tunnel if you just know where to look.
7 Omens That Herald the Dark Night of the Soul
I am a forest, and a night of dark trees: but he who is not afraid of my darkness, will find banks full of roses under my cypresses.ย
โ Friedrich Nietzsche, Thus Spoke Zarathustra
“What’s the difference between the dark night and depression?” you may still wonder.
Even back in the 16th century, Saint John of the Cross himself was at great pains to distinguish the Dark Night from mere melancholia (depression).
After all, the symptoms of the Dark Night of the Soul are not that different from depression.
But while depression is psychological/neurological/biological, the Dark Night heralds deep-seated changes occurring within us known as spiritual transformation.
Here are 7 “omens” that you might be going through a Dark Night of the Soul:
- You feel a deep sense of sadness, which oftenย verges on despair (this sadness is often triggered by the state of your life, humanity, and/or the world as a whole)
- You feel an acute sense of unworthiness
- You have the constant feeling of being lost or “condemned” to a life of suffering or emptiness
- You possess a painful feeling of powerlessness and hopelessness
- Your will and self-control is weakened, making it difficult for you to act
- You lack interest and find no joy in things that once excited you
- You crave for the loss of something intangible; a longing for a distant place or to “return home” again
(You can also take our free Dark Night of the Soul test to help you discover whether you’re going through this experience or not.)
The ultimate difference between regular depression and the Dark Night of the Soul’s depression is that regular depression is usually self-centric, whereas the Dark Night’s depression is philosophical in nature and is accompanied by existential reflections such as “Why am I here?” and “What is my purpose?”
Also, when depression ends, not much changes in your life in terms of your beliefs, values, and habits.
However, when the Dark Night of the Soul ends, everything in your life is transformed, and life becomes wondrous again.
Why Suffering is Necessary
My desire to live is as intense as ever, and though my heart is broken, hearts are made to be broken: that is why God sends sorrow into the world โฆ To me, suffering seems now a sacramental thing, that makes those whom it touches holy โฆ any materialism in life coarsens the soul.
โ Oscar Wilde “Letters“
Polish psychologist Kazimierz Dฤ browski once coined the term Positive disintegration, which views tension and anxiety as a necessary part of the process of spiritual and psychological maturing.
In other words, it is the friction within us that causes the mirror of our Souls to be polished enough for us to glimpse our True Nature.
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I often hear people speak of the Dark Night as some kind of problem they have to “fix,” or something they “went through a long time ago, that is now over, thank God.”
But what these people thought was a Dark Night may have just been a glimpse of the darkness within them, especially when they speak egotistically about it as if it were a badge of honor.
A true Dark Night of the Soul leaves a long-lasting impact on you โ it changes you completely.
When you exit a Dark Night, you will discover that something is always taken away from you (for the better), such as your beliefs, your perceptions, your former meaning in life, or even in rare cases, your ego identification.
The metaphysician Ananda Coomaraswamy put it this way:
No creature can attain a higher grade of nature without ceasing to exist.
Have you ever seen a butterfly begin to emerge from its cocoon? It must struggle in order to strengthen its wings.
If someone frees the butterfly from its cocoon prematurely, it won’t be able to fly because its crucial tempering stage will not have occurred.
The same is true for trees. Trees need wind in order to build their structural strength to stay upright.
Your Dark Night of the Soul is your wind, your cocoon; it is an ego death whereby you shed the ego that prevents you from embodying your Soul.
If you try to avoid the hard work of, as Ananda put it, “ceasing to exist,” or breaking down your old confining structures, you won’t have what it takes to truly embody your essential nature.
What is the Point of Living?
Here’s another central question and concern that emerges over and over again during our Dark Night of the Soul.
What is the point of living?
Such a question weighs down on us like lead, oppressing us constantly.
Each day, we might obsessively search for an answer, but find to our greatest dismay that the answers to such a question are as expansive as the waves on the ocean.
Some people tell us, โthe point is to serve God,โ others tell us, โthe point is to make a difference,โ and others tell us, โthere is no point: you make your own meaning.โ
These are only three of hundreds, even thousands of possible answers.
What the hell are we supposed to do?
Who is right, who is wrong โฆ if there really is any โrightโ or โwrongโ answer? We walk down one path and immediately become dissatisfied, disillusioned, and repelled by what we discover.
Then we walk down another path and history repeats itself again and again until we realize with horror, โEvery path is meaningless to me,โ and we collapse in grief and despair, winding up at square one again.
Such a cycle repeats itself over and over again during the Dark Night of the Soul, so much so that it can become like torment. I know because I have experienced it.
The strange thing is that although we get to a point of complete desolation, we still hold a glimmer of hope that pursuing the same path over and over and over again will somehow bring us to a deeply satisfying meaning one day.
We seem to think that the mind is the solution to our problems; that utilizing the mind will release us from the original prison created by the mind that feels the need to quantify, measure, and define everything.
What most of us fail to do, however, is to question the actual questions we are asking and pursuing the answers to. Have you ever tried asking:
Why must there be a point to living? Instead of, What is the point of living?
I’ll elaborate on this below.
Happiness Isnโt This or That, Happiness IS
Earlier today I opened my email and received a poignant message from one of our long-time readers asking:
I don’t understand. Why am I alive? Why do I experience life? I don’t know why I am here now. I don’t see the point of living my life. I don’t want anything, not material /physical achievements, not relationships, not entertainment, nothing. I don’t know what to do with this body, mind, and feelings. Or maybe I just experience this life too intensely until I am numbed. But why?
My answer to anyone experiencing this is that although you might feel cursed, you are actually blessed. It sounds absurd, even insulting, but this is the truth.
Before any true growth or healing can occur, there must be a process of destruction and complete annihilation of everything you thought would bring you happiness.
Most people experiencing Dark Nights realize this: that nothing makes them happy anymore; not bodily, not sexual, not emotional, not material, not political, not social, not even spiritual. And this is the start of the purification process.
Conditioning vs. reality …
Since birth you have been conditioned to believe that money will make you happy, a sexy/rich partner will make you happy, a high IQ will make you happy, a big house will make you happy, a thriving career will make you happy, a perfect life will make you happy.
But this is all a lie because whenever you pursue happiness, you are immediately losing touch with the fact that happiness is already here, right now, in this very second, without you having to do anything or question anything. Happiness IS.
This sounds like the most ridiculous thing you might have ever heard, and yet deep down you might sense the truth in it.
If this is the case the first layer of your illusion has been peeled away; what a blessing!
A blessing in disguise …
In reality, it is absolutely terrifying to have the ground beneath your feet ripped out from beneath you, and this is precisely what we experience during the Dark Night of the Soul.
And yet, this experience is the greatest teacher of all to us because it illuminates what is fragile, transient, and subject to change, growth, and decay.
We are subsequently left with a feeling of great inner emptiness, but within this emptiness, we eventually come to see what can never come, go, change or die, and that is the truth of who we are: pure, peaceful, and blissful conscious essence.
The mind is always frantically searching …
The mind is a product of our evolutionary development: it protects us and structures our existence, and through it, we can experience the beauty of life.
But in order to truly come to any closure during our Dark Nights we must understand that the mind is limited, narrow, and finite โ and therefore so is our reasoning.
Why must there be a โpointโ to living other than the experience of being alive in all of its fascinating and shocking diversity? Why must we โpursueโ or โfindโ something rather than simply experiencing each moment fully and completely in the simplicity of Being?
That is why I say that happiness isnโt this or that, happiness IS.
What exactly are we seeking when we want to answer the question, โWhat is the point of livingโ? We want a satisfactory answer that will appeal to the mind and “GIVE” us happiness.
But happiness canโt be given because happiness IS. This might all sound like fancy rhetoric, but I recommend that you let it sink in and really look into it more.
For me it took years, but these six questionsย helped to solidify the understanding that happiness and fulfillment are already here, now. Please read them to continue your journey.
The Dark Night and The Spiritual Awakening Process
As humans, the prospect of change is avoided and resisted because it is unknown territory. Therefore, we fear it. For this reason, we require a Spiritual Awakening.
There are three ways that Spiritual Awakenings can occur:
the first is at the hands of wise spiritual teachers, the second is through the spiritual drive of soulfully mature people, and the third is spontaneouslyย due to life experience.
Spontaneous awakenings arrive in a number of ways: a terminal diagnosis, old age, a near-death experience, a physical accident, the loss of a loved one, a romantic breakup, the destruction of your home or homeland, suicidal depression, or the complete loss of your religious faith.
The Dark Night is a herald, an omen, of change. It lets us know that we can’t continue living the way we have been living. There is no growth, no awakening in life, to life, without first seeing and acknowledging our existing disappointment.
Acknowledging our disappointmentย means becoming aware of the deeply held sense of “incompletion” that we all carry; it means becoming aware that something is desperately missing from our lives.
Those that have experienced, or are currently experiencing a Dark Night of the Soul will know that something very fundamental at a core level is out of focus or completely lacking in their lives.
Those going through a Dark Night will sense that so much more is possible in their lives, even though they don’t exactly know what that “so much more” is.
Paradise lost and found …
One of the common reasons why Dark Nights occurย and are prolonged is due to mystical experiences, or short glimpses of the divine, which spiritual teachers often refer to as “grace” or samฤdhi.
Soon afterward, the person “loses” this experience, and is plunged into unhappiness again. This is called the “halo effect,” “afterglow” or what the Sufis speak of as the “sobriety of union.”
Why does the “halo effect” happen? It happens because of the stark contrast between one’s rediscovered Divine Self and the return to one’s disconnected and tormented Ego self.
To the spiritually mature person, the halo effect sets the stage for a future encounter with the transcendental, with God.
However, for the less prepared seeker, the glimpse into the Divine stirs up even more distress as old habits, obsessions, thoughts, and behaviors reappear. Now, such a person realizes that he has a long, complex, and demanding task of purification and transformation ahead of him.
In Spiritual Alchemy, there is a word for this experience called solutio; putting all the hard stuff in the waters of reflection (your ideas, your habits, etc.), where it dissolves and breaks apart, shows itself for what it is, and gives you the opportunity for a fresh start.
Find freedom through purging …
The solution to one’s suffering and disconnection from the divine realm can be any method of cutting away, dislodging, disintegrating, and clearing old pieces of your life so that you can begin afresh.
Essentially, the Dark night is a process of shedding away your old home and going in search of a new one.
Understandably, this process requires a huge leap of faith into the unknown which can come at quite a sudden and frightening pace.
If you think you might be going through this journey, it’s important to understand that many of us have been where you are. Many people still are.
There is no map, there is only the flickering luminescence of your Soul to light the way.

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Dark Night of the Soul Meditation
While every experience of the Dark Night of the Soul is different, the one common thread is that it is a path of initiation.
You are in the dark so that you can understand what Light is. You are disconnected so that you can know what connection is. You are lost so that you can find your way back Home.
If these explanations of the Dark Night don’t resonate with you, please go ahead and discard them.
I’m not here to tell you what the Dark Night of the Soul shouldย mean because, ultimately,ย youย must figure that out for yourself.
You need to be the one to make meaning out of your experience. I can only offer my own understanding.
If you have read up until this point you are probably looking for additional help, and that is completely understandable.
However, the Dark Night of the Soul is a complex and profound experience and it cannot be solved by reading a “six-step” formula or bullet list.
What Iย canย offer you, however, is a simple meditation which may provide you with some level of relief.
When you can dredge up enough energy (I know how exhausting and depleting the Dark Night can be), try experimenting with the following Dark Night of the Soul meditation:
Find a quiet and undisturbed place. If you like, play some celestial or ethereal music in the background to set the mood. Lie down and close your eyes. For a minute or two focus on your breath. Feel your chest rise and fall. Once you feel connected with your body, shift your focus to creating an image of yourself walking through a dark forest. Imagine that you are looking above to see the dark tangled branches of the forest obscure the sky. What does the forest feel like? Is it cold, hot, balmy, humid or icy? Can you smell, feel, or taste anything?
As you keep walking through the dark forest, the path in front of you seems endless. The atmosphere feels deathly and melancholic. Suddenly, a white wolf emerges from the trees. It looks at you with intelligent and kind eyes and begins to accompany you as you walk. Your feeling of loneliness lifts slightly as you enjoy the company of your animal friend. Suddenly, the wolf beside you stops and stares intensely into the dark trees ahead of you. You peer ahead but cannot see anything but dark shadows. Suddenly, your wolf companion lifts up his head and lets out a loud and haunting wolf call.
The hairs on the back of your neck stand up. Just after the wolf stops howling, a white light slowly emerges from deep within the forest. At first, the light is tiny and like a pinprick. But as you walk towards it, the light becomes bigger and brighter. A feeling of hope begins to fill you.ย Tentatively, you start jogging towards the light. You notice that the faster you run, the bigger the light gets. The closer you move to the light, the more open and expansive you feel. You pick up your pace. The feeling is exhilarating! Far behind you, the white wolf howls again. A feeling of wildness and freedom starts to warm you from the inside out.ย As you continue running, the light begins to consume your vision. The dark forest begins to quickly fade. As you look down, you notice that your legs are the legs of a wolf โ without knowing it, you have experienced a total transformation โ and it is liberating! Picking up your pace, you keep running and you let out a loud howl. The piercing sound of the howl dissolves all hopelessness, sadness, and darkness left within you. The howl has completely purified you. All that remains is pure light, love, hope, power, and peace. You feel spacious and open. You are free!
Enjoy the feeling of freedom for as long as you wish. When you are ready, wiggle your fingers and toes and return back to the room. You may like to journal about your experience.
Feel free to record this visualization, get someone to read it out to you gently, or change the meditation to your own liking. It has been created to ultimately benefitย you.ย
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Time to Go Into the Dark
To end this article,ย I’ll leave you with one of my favorite Dark Night of the Soul quotes by David Whyte โ a man who understood the value of making peace with the darkness:
… Time to go into the dark
where the night has eyes
to recognize its own.There you can be sure
you are not beyond love.The dark will be your womb
tonight.The night will give you a horizon
further than you can see.You must learn one thing.
The world was made to be free inGive up all the other worlds
except the one to which you belong.Sometimes it takes darkness and the sweet
confinement of your aloneness
to learnanything or anyone
that does not bring you aliveis too small for you.
โย “Sweet Darkness” by David Whyte
Now, over to you:
What has your experience been like with the Dark Night of the Soul? Please share below to help others not feel so alone.
P.S. If you’re experiencing the Dark Night and desperately need more guidance, see our Dark Night of the Soul Journal for extra help. Our article on Soul Work might also be of assistance to you.
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I’ve been experiencing la noche oscura since I was 17. Long story short I was kicked out of the house at 16 and then spent almost ten years alone, studying, traveling, with people, and working low-wage jobs and living on little to nothing and splurging on the pleasures of youth every moment I got. Now I am older (mid 20s) and see the world different and see freedom as acceptance of biology, society, and excellence in all things that make us whole: these things together are truly antagonistic and multiply the difficulties of living one’s authentic life. I believe apt word here is: weltschmerz.
There are times when I am happy to exist and I honestly feel at peace, and then I oscillate back to this despair where I feel and see that the world is hell and that souls are simply thrust in this cycle that is, for some unknown, egalitarian in nature.
I think la noche oscura can exist for an individual without the questions of meaning or purpose behind them. I know I used to ask these questions the author specified, but now that I am older I do not ask the questions, yet that does not mean la noche oscura has ended for me either. I want to state that for anyone who is dealing with this phenomenon that this state of being can exist without the questions. Spiritual crises need not be prompted by questions, I think, but they certainly do arise. I do not think the author implied that they need questions, but I do think that I needed to state this for anyone reading. But maybe I am simply on the wrong post to be commenting on.
I don’t wonder so much as to the purpose of life, its meaning, or the why am I here, or the where I am going. The answer to me has always been death. Death. Death. Death. Death. I don’t know what Death is, but the notion of absolute cease seems to me the most supreme anomaly man has ever encountered. Why it’s even stranger than the notion of God. I am not an atheist, but I am not an agnostic either.
And though I do not ask those questions anymore I do know when I feel myself, and therefore I do know when I am betraying myself, too. I have always been connected with myself, although, at times, behaving otherwise, but always feeling the connection. I do think life is difficult, and even dislodged from monetary concerns, life is still utterly difficult and full of not merely directions and questions, but a significant pull to a certain unknown. It is utterly infuriating, I might add, and cosmically droll, but that is besides the point.
I don’t know what it means to lose the ego or want to lose it, because I think the ego serves a social function that, albeit distasteful, does serve a biological purpose, but not a spiritual one. I don’t think there is an end to spirituality. Even if we should be nothing, that does not detriment spirituality in any way. It is our business to ‘know thyself” and “everything in moderation”. But I don’t truly think we ever glimpse beyond angst (which I think is a result of spiritual destitution attempting to spiritual connection) until old age wrinkles out struggle to grasp life and the journey with questions and searching for answers. I think the author made a choice use of words: “happiness IS”. I do believe so. But I don’t think that persons who are philosophically inclined once this journey of la noche oscura has begun will ever sense an end from the questioning and angst.
I sometimes wonder if the belief in a human who has achieved enlightenment, or the witness of an enlightened being, is enough to live but that this does not necessarily means that what I deem “enlightenment” exists; can it not be that life is a wheel on a linear space where the wheel is, at times, oblique, rotund, oval, and even square? that existence is not about anything, but as simple as nature can deduce: a rock at the center of a rushing stream eventually erodes? that, as Heraclitus handsomely put it, anything static ceases? But maybe these notions are in themselves difficult to grasp because their veracity naturally aggravates what may be a lazy nature beneath our biological necessities, what may be our lack of contemplation in nature.
Call me unpopular, but I truly believe whatever the force pushing us for more is, it is likely disliked by our very nature, and therefore the path is ever-changing and never-ceasing, yet its likely end may be its unbecomely opposite: nothing. I am still maturing, but as you see, these notions and questions are not for naught here. And I do think that the right question can off set an answer better than any answer could suit: fuck the binaries.
Bless
I agree with a lot of the things youโre saying here. I think once the dark night has shown its existence and you actually become aware of it, it is dark all the time. But, at the same time, the light always exists as well. A push and pull between ego and soul, brain and heart, humanness and divine essence – whatever you want to call it. I started my dark night a long time ago I donโt question the purpose of life anymore – rather I think, I am here. Just like the author states of happiness – it IS. I AM. We ARE. So, we walk our path and ride our waves. This is a ride we have to understand is not black or white, light or dark, soul or ego – it is all of it, all the time, in ebbs and flows. This is the awakening, and it can go on for life (which is beautiful, because it always leads to expansion, and if we are t expanding then we are just stagnant). Understanding that the ebbs and flows just ARE, and when we deny or resist them, we are lying to ourselves about the ultimate truth and reality of human life. Itโs only through full acceptance of both light and dark that the understanding of โhappiness ISโ can even begin to be grasped. I heard something once that has resonated with me. It isnโt that โblissโ is just a joyous, happy, excited, exuberant zest for life. Bliss is โokayness.โ Loving acceptance, peaceful awareness of knowing that whatever arises is just a part of the whole. Not separate from you, but it IS you. So ultimately, our only answer is to learn to love. And love is our divine essence…but we are still human, where lots of other mind-created feelings exist. How can we merge the two to peacefully coexist without a longing for only the divine, and resistance to the humanness and illusion that we live? I suppose this is the ultimate question :)
I have just recently been reading through many of your interesting articles and came upon your suggestion for meditating about meeting a wolfe in the forest. This meditation exercise is almost exactly same as a dream I experienced in July of 1995 when I was on my honeymoon in Tofino, on Vancouver Island, BC. There are only small exceptions. I was the dark brown greyish wolfe from the beginning, and I could look down and see my legs as I ran toward the light in the forest. I met Brother Bear on the path, and looked into his golden eyes, and he telepathetically told me he wouldn’t bother me tonight because he knew I was on a quest that couldn’t be interrupted. At the end, when I reached the light, the light was a fire, surrounded by Natives Indians, who were chanting and drumming…calling me because they needed me, and I transformed from my wolfe state into a female shaman of the tribe. My dream ended there when my husband woke me because I was whimpering and crying out in my sleep. I have related this dream many times to friends and family, and they can vouch for the authenticity of my story. For many years, I believed this to be a simple dream, although I can still tell you to this day every smell, sound, the bend of the trees, the stars through the branches, the crackling of the fire, as if it was a true life experience that happened yesterday. It was only later, when I was talking with a fri be they suggested it sounded like a soul regression and not just a dream. I truly believe now, after other research, that this was actually a past life memory/regression that began my spiritual awakening in my current life. Thank you for sharing this most amazing web site!
I moved to another state with my husband a year and a half ago and somewhere in that process of moving, my Dark Night began. It hasn’t ended yet. I have experienced depression, loss, sadness, shame, and so much more. I lost my faith – or rather, lost the belief in the faulty structures of religion that try to hold up narrow definitions of God. I decided to stop pretending. My spouse and I are in the process of separating, and my belief in the institution of marriage has also dissolved. Despite all these changes I feel that I am going in a direction that will eventually lead to the light. But as I have read and been told, the only way out is through. So I walk in the shadows, finding friends to lean on along the way, and try to trust the process that I don’t fully understand.
I’ve been in the dark soul of the night for many years. I thought my joy. My happiness and even my peace were linked to my partner. But being put in jail at Christmas time opened my eyes to the point. I make my own happiness, joy and peace. All my life has been nothing but pain and chaos. My own parents couldn’t love me. I have gone through things that would’ve destroyed most people. I have died 3 times. OD numerous times some was because all people cause me to OD. Death has stalked me all my life. During a 6 hour seizure. I woke up to seeing a huge golden eagle on the ceiling. I also have seen angels and demons my whole life. Angels have divinely protected me all my life. I died first time at 4 years old. I was giving too much anesthesia on purpose. My dark night of the soul was the most intense, battle of my life. I just wanted to go home. I was sick of people. Sick of life. Sick of seeing evil people getting away with everything. And so blessed. While I struggle with bills, someone to truly love me, and somewhere to live. In the last 3 years I am constantly under attack by witches. Why I don’t know. They consider me a threat. Where I live drugs are being prayed over by witches. And users act like walking zombies. Their stuff has no effect on me. I am nobody important. I just me. Nobody else. All my life people fear me, do me wrong or call me a freak. One of my ancestors was a female Indian shauman. I have been told, she was very powerful witch. She walked in the trail of tears when the Indians were forced to leave. Nothing has ever made sense. The loneliness, and never fitting in. Sitting back and watching people. Knowing their true intentions. Knowing things no matter what it is just comes to me. Being a expert with a gun or defensive driving comes natural. I am not afraid to die or afraid of death. Every time I should’ve died. God said No. I have stayed in the background for numerous years because I didn’t want attention drawn to me. I have seen even religious people treat me like a leper. Sorry my mind kept bouncing from one thing to another
Could it be possible that a psychiatrist mistakes your symptoms for a depression and treats you as such, which has the effect on you that you feel better but your mind only seems to work for like 10 to 20% of its capacity?
If so, would it be better to stop the treatment and get rid of the AD you are taking?
Hello luna, mateo and fellow lone wolfs. I am currently going thru the dark night of the soul. I am happy to have found this blog and newsletter because you are bringing so much insight to my body, mind and soul. Thank you.
On another note- my personal story;
As i am currently going through my dark night, i have been experiencing myself breaking away from religions, mysticisms, and even spirituality. But as scary as it may seems, i am happy to say that i am excited for this stripping of oneself and ego. Because even i found myself to be involved with having the inflated spiritual ego! Friends, it is so scary at first, but its worth the jump! I am happy to say that i am not afraid to face myself and face others so that i may help myself and others reach peace. Inside and out.
Lots of love. Thank you. I hope that whoever is reading this finds everything theyve been needing.
The Dark Night is a herald, an omen, of change. It lets us know that we canโt continue living the way we have been living. ย There is no growth, no awakening in life, to life, without first seeing and acknowledging our existing disappointment.
I feel alone, empty and no clear sense of direction.
I know exactly how you feel, Sometimes i feel like im going crazy, im glad I found this page, i was able to understand why I feel like this.
I feel purposeless, lost , alone. I feel selfish for feeling….
Go easy on yourself. Try to find the reason to why you feel selfish for emotions which are your humane right. Inspection of core beliefs and other inner aspects of the self can help to overcome such feelings after realizing why the guilt exists. Good luck on your journey!
I feel inferior. Like is what I’m going through the DNOTS like am I even blessed to have such a holy experience or am I even wise enough to do so. I’m just 17 and this bothers the hell out of me