“Turn to me and be gracious to me,
for I am lonely and afflicted.”
~Psalm 25:16 (NRSV)
One of the worst times to be alive
is during grief or fatiguing loneliness at a time like Thanksgiving or
Christmas—anytime there is much merriment and family fellowship, and it’s where
we feel we just don’t belong.
Add to this non-obvious truth the
more obvious truth of the many thousands of people who don’t have such access
to familial love, and Thanksgiving and other typically joyous events are never
lonelier.
Yet, whether we’re lonely in a room
full of loved ones or whether we have no loved ones to share it with,
loneliness is the pits.
The Physiology of the Ghastly
Loneliness is the stringentness of
thought—a clinginess of persistent nothingness.
It’s a stench within the thinking that appends itself and hardly leaves. This negativity is in one word, “vulnerable.”
When this ghastly sense—the void
of love—flitters off for a moment of two, a laugh can be enjoyed. But soon reality
returns—the actuality of unwanted seclusion. Sadness is inevitable.
It’s prevailing and deafening thought, then, that enlarges the nemesis:
this lonely heart. And loneliness has
nothing to do with being around people.
Indeed, being around people will merely reinforce a lonely person’s sense of deriding isolation, of being
hidden to and within themselves.
Spare a Thought...? – No, Do More
In many cases there is nothing
more we can do for people than let them know we’re there for them. Certainly this is the case for someone
grieving the loss of a loved one at a key family gathering.
It’s too easy to be flippant and
cliché about these things, disrespecting people in the process. Some people couldn’t see loneliness in others
if it stood there and smacked them repeatedly between the eyes. But others do
see. And those who do epitomise the injunction of Romans 12:15: they “rejoice
with those who rejoice, weep with those who weep.”
Remember the lonely at
Thanksgiving. Don’t just spare a thought or whisper a fleetingly insincere
prayer. Genuinely feel as they feel;
even do something about it. We may feel
doubly blessed, for we may not have the burdens that some presently do.
There is always someone worse
off... always.
© 2012 S. J. Wickham.
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