The Loneliness of Hiddenness
Self-portrait of loneliness
January 2011
Malibu, CA
A few weeks ago, in a course I'm taking on Henri Nouwen, the instructor asked us to consider our current experience of loneliness. It was an invitation from the heart of Henri Nouwen, one so deeply acquainted with loneliness in his own life, to turn our loneliness to solitude. This is a movement that requires our identification of the lonely places in order to move torward solitude.
When I received that question, my mind immediately flew to several instances in my life's journey where I have experienced acute and painful loneliness . . . except the question didn't ask about my past. It asked about my present. Where am I experiencing loneliness right now?
The truth is, I didn't realize I was experiencing loneliness until asked that question. But once I saw my current loneliness, I saw it everywhere. It is now overwhelmingly present to me. Loneliness has become my companion.
I'd like to share about this loneliness with you.
I've written here about my prayer to become God's hidden one. This is a prayer that took root in my heart in July 2009 and led into a strenuous, often chaotic, but ultimately beautiful journey to surrender and peace. It's a journey I still walk to this day.
Since the time in late October when I realized God has been answering that prayer, I've experienced an overwhelming stillness at the very center of my being. I feel God and I communing together in that place all the time. It's the place I live from most of my days. It forms the central root of my being. It's where I belong with God.
But I've realized that it's also lonely. No one else is there but God. And no one else, no matter how I have tried to describe the reality and beauty and peace and joy of this experience . . . no one else seems to fully understand what it's like to really live there.
I wish they did.
I've journeyed a lot of places in my life, and I have always had friends who companioned with me in those places. They may not have experienced exactly what I was experiencing during those times, but they were with me. I felt it. I knew it to be true. And it was enough.
But in this place, for some reason, it isn't enough. For the first time, I find myself really longing for companions on this journey who know what that still-center-life is really like. I want to meet people who have asked God to teach them how to die and to become hidden and have experienced God's answer to that prayer.
I want companionship . . . but I have none. I've found a few companions through books written years ago by people no longer alive who experienced this, but that hasn't felt like enough in this place. I've wanted real, live human beings who know.
But God is only giving me himself, and he's asking for that to be enough right now. It's been tough to say yes and let that be enough, but I have, and God is and will continue to teach me much in this new place.
Labels: Learning to Die

8 Comments:
This is beautiful, Christianne.
I know a little, of the journey you're describing, though it wasn't one I asked for. In myself, I was much to proud to ask to die, to become hidden. For me, the beginnings at least, of that journey towards a deep intimacy were forced upon me and, well, I was dragged, kicking and screaming.
These days I have fleeting moments of knowing that still center place you describe, and I wait and move more intentionally towards the day where it will be less fleeting. And I'm learning to trust that that day is coming, and to long for it, and not fight that dying so hard. I'm terribly bad at that last part, but slowly, oh so painfully slowly, am seeing growth, even there.
Lisa,
Your comment brought tears to my eyes. Thank you. I felt the knowing in your words. It meant a lot to me to learn of it.
xoxo,
Christianne
...I too have been actutely aware of the lonliness of the hidden journey. Yet, I am finding that as much as I long for human companionship in that place, I also desire to keep it a secret garden where only He and I meet.
...I love those thrilling moments, when I feel that no one in existence has ever felt such closeness to Him. When, I believe He feels this too, and is as blown away by it as I am.
...The way to bring others into the courtyard, for a visit together with our Dearest, is to write...to share...just as you have, sister. To open that gate to us, so that we can see the beauty of your lonliness, and can make more room for such a place in our own lives.
...Thank you for reminding me of the beauty of it.
Dawn
Thank you for your comment, Dawn. It truly is a beautiful intimacy, one that doesn't lend itself toward adequate words and really isn't meant to be shared with anyone else in many ways.
I do plan to share more of this journey here. You use the image of a garden ... it meets me in a similar organic image God has given me for this place: that of a pathway through the woods.
Good to know these words meet others with encouragement in their own journey.
xoxo,
Christianne
Christianne,
I have an intense desire to be in that place!
I'm amazed at how God works...I shouldn't be, but He never ceases to amaze me. For a few weeks now, I have been asking God to take me to that place you described. It's a deep desire to be alone with Him...noone else! And as I ask Him for that, I picture myself laying on the floor with my face down as He breaks me and transforms me into the instrument He created me to be.
I am so glad that you shared this with us. I know now that what I'm asking for does exist and I can't wait to be there with Him and stay for as long as He wants me to. So, not only are you not completely alone in that hidden place, but you're also letting us know that it really does exist!!!
Love you!!!
Wow, Carla.
Your words here completely floor me. I have goosebumps all over to hear that you've been praying for God to take you to that place.
I can tell you, Carla, that it is a prayer that touches the deep delight of God's heart. I can see him smiling over you as he receives that prayer from the deep delight and desire of your own heart.
When I began to pray that prayer a year and a half ago, Carla, I didn't realize it would be lonely. All I could experience when I began praying for it was the deep desire to give God all of me and be vanquished by him. I prayed it with a huge smile on my face.
I didn't realize it would bring loneliness, and I also didn't realize it would bring a season of utter confusion as God began to darken my experience of his working in my life. What I mean is, to get me utterly dependent on him, he had to take away my reliance on myself ... and that meant chaos ensued. I was learning a new way of being that I didn't know before. When that happens, it's like we're toddlers learning to walk for the very first time. We stumble and fall. We bang our heads and scuff our knees in the stumbling. It's confusing and hard, but it's also good. Toddlers are meant for walking, and eventually running.
God is so pleased to have brought you to this place where your own heart's cry is to be totally intimate with him. Keep staying with him on the floor, Carla. He will accomplish in you the work he wants to do.
xoxo,
Christianne
I've been thinking about this post, and some of these comments all week. They've sort of been rolling around inside my head as I pondered that hiddenness and intimacy again.
Thinking about meeting Jesus on the floor - I've done that at times, stretched out, sometimes with a blanket drawn over me, covering me from the world, and waiting for Jesus to come.
Thinking again about how painful and unexpected the beginnings of my own journey towards this place were, and how those wounds are slowly healing, but leaving behind that desire to pursue deep intimacy with Christ...
Just pondering, and feeling thankful for words from others to roll around inside of me, and let shapes and thoughts form.
Lisa,
I've been thinking about these comments all week too. What a blessing it is to hear the yearning of other hearts for the same God!
I'm glad these words are helping new things form in you.
xoxo,
Christianne
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