Solo Joy: The Art of Being Happily Alone
BY NICOLE LAU
You Are Complete Alone
"Can I be truly joyful alone?"
Yes.
Not just "okay" alone.
Not just "surviving" alone.
But joyfully, completely, radiantly alone.
This is not loneliness.
This is not isolation.
This is alonenessβthe art of being happily, wholly, joyfully by yourself.
This article explores:
- The difference between loneliness and aloneness
- Building self-sufficient joy
- Solo celebration practices
- Internal locus through solitude
- Why you don't need others to be complete
Because the deepest joy is not dependent.
The deepest joy is autonomous.
I. Loneliness vs Aloneness
A. Loneliness: The Suffering
Loneliness is:
- Feeling incomplete without others
- Craving connection you don't have
- Suffering in solitude
- External locus ("I need others to be happy")
- Painful, empty, desperate
Loneliness is suffering because:
- Your happiness depends on external source
- When alone, you feel the void
- You're incomplete without others
- This is Theory 2's external locus
B. Aloneness: The Choice
Aloneness is:
- Feeling complete by yourself
- Choosing solitude
- Thriving alone
- Internal locus ("I am happy within myself")
- Peaceful, full, free
Aloneness is joyful because:
- Your happiness comes from within
- When alone, you feel whole
- You're complete in yourself
- This is Theory 2's internal locus
C. The Shift
From loneliness to aloneness:
- Not about having people or not
- About your relationship to solitude
- Loneliness = suffering in solitude
- Aloneness = thriving in solitude
You can be:
- Lonely in a crowd (surrounded but empty)
- Alone and joyful (by yourself and complete)
The difference is internal locus.
II. Building Self-Sufficient Joy
A. What is Self-Sufficient Joy?
Self-sufficient joy means:
- You can generate joy without external input
- You don't need others to be happy
- You don't need events, achievements, validation
- Your joy comes from within
This is not:
- Never enjoying others (you can!)
- Never wanting connection (you might!)
- Being cold or closed (you're not!)
This is:
- Being complete with or without others
- Choosing connection from wholeness, not need
- Autonomous joy
B. The Practice
Building self-sufficient joy:
1. Solo dance (daily):
- Dance alone, for yourself
- No audience, no performance
- Pure self-expression
- Generate joy from within
2. Solo celebration:
- Celebrate your wins alone
- Don't wait for others to acknowledge
- You validate yourself
- Internal recognition
3. Solo rituals:
- Create your own ceremonies
- Mark transitions, seasons, milestones
- You are your own priest/priestess
- Self-sufficient spirituality
4. Solo pleasure:
- Enjoy beauty alone (sunset, music, art)
- Savor food alone
- Pleasure doesn't need sharing
- You are enough audience
5. Solo adventure:
- Travel alone
- Explore alone
- Experience life solo
- You are complete company
C. The Test
Can you:
- Spend a day alone and feel joyful?
- Spend a week alone and thrive?
- Spend a month alone and be complete?
If yes: You have self-sufficient joy.
If no: Build it. This is crucial.
III. Solo Celebration Practices
A. Daily Solo Joy
Morning solo dance (10-20 min):
- Wake up, put on music you love
- Dance alone in your space
- No one watching, no performance
- Pure self-expression and joy
- This is your daily celebration
Why this works:
- Generates joy from within
- No external validation needed
- Builds self-sufficient happiness
- Starts day from internal locus
B. Weekly Solo Ritual
Solo celebration evening (1-2 hours):
- Prepare space: Clean, candles, beauty
- Cook yourself a feast: Your favorite foods
- Dress up: For yourself, not others
- Dance: 30-60 minutes, full expression
- Gratitude: Journal what you're celebrating
- Rest: Savor the evening
This is dating yourself. This is self-love. This is autonomy.
C. Monthly Solo Retreat
One day alone (or weekend if possible):
- Unplug: No phone, no internet
- Nature: Go somewhere beautiful alone
- Silence: No talking (even to yourself)
- Movement: Walk, dance, stretch
- Reflection: Journal, contemplate
- Celebration: Mark the day as sacred
This deepens your relationship with yourself.
D. Annual Solo Journey
Week-long solo retreat or travel:
- Go somewhere alone
- No agenda, no schedule
- Just you and your practice
- Deep solitude
- Profound self-intimacy
This is advanced practice. This is mastery.
IV. Internal Locus Through Solitude
A. How Solitude Builds Internal Locus
When you're alone:
- No external validation available
- Must generate worth from within
- Can't rely on others for happiness
- Forced to find internal source
This is powerful:
- Solitude reveals where your locus is
- If external: You'll suffer alone
- If internal: You'll thrive alone
- Solitude is the test
B. Solitude as Medicine
Solitude heals:
1. Codependency:
- Learn you're complete without others
- Break enmeshment patterns
- Establish autonomy
2. People-pleasing:
- No one to please when alone
- Discover your authentic desires
- Build self-trust
3. External validation addiction:
- No likes, no comments, no applause
- Must validate yourself
- Internal recognition develops
4. Fear of abandonment:
- Realize you can't abandon yourself
- You're always with you
- Self-companionship
C. The Paradox
Paradox of solitude:
- When you can be happy alone
- You're free to choose connection
- Not from need, but from desire
- Healthy relationships come from wholeness
You must be complete alone before you can truly connect with others.
V. Why You Don't Need Others
A. The Uncomfortable Truth
You don't need:
- A partner to be complete
- Friends to be happy
- Community to awaken
- Family to be whole
- Anyone to validate you
This is uncomfortable because:
- Society tells us we need others
- "No man is an island"
- "You need community"
- But this creates dependency
B. The Liberation
When you realize you don't need others:
- You're free
- No one can take your happiness
- No one can complete or incomplete you
- You're autonomous
This doesn't mean:
- You can't enjoy others (you can!)
- You can't love others (you do!)
- You can't connect (you will!)
This means:
- You choose connection from wholeness
- Not from need or desperation
- Healthy, free relationships
C. Historical Examples
Many awakened beings were primarily solitary:
- Ramana Maharshi: Years of silence, minimal interaction
- Desert Fathers/Mothers: Hermits, alone with God
- Milarepa: Tibetan yogi, caves, solitude
- Thoreau: Walden Pond, two years alone
- Many mystics: Awakened in profound aloneness
They didn't need others. They were complete.
VI. Common Objections
A. "But Humans Are Social Animals"
Objection: We evolved in groups, we need connection.
Response:
- Yes, connection is valuable
- But need vs enjoy are different
- You can enjoy connection without needing it
- Autonomy doesn't mean isolation
B. "Isn't This Just Avoidance?"
Objection: Maybe you're just afraid of intimacy.
Response:
- Possible, requires honest self-inquiry
- Are you choosing solitude or hiding?
- Healthy solitude feels peaceful, not fearful
- If you're avoiding, that's different
The test:
- Can you connect when you choose to?
- Or are you rigidly avoiding all connection?
- Healthy: Flexible, can do both
- Unhealthy: Rigid avoidance
C. "What About Love and Relationships?"
Objection: Don't you want love?
Response:
- You can have love AND autonomy
- Best relationships come from two whole people
- Not two halves seeking completion
- Love from wholeness, not need
Rumi: "Let yourself be silently drawn by the strange pull of what you really love. It will not lead you astray."
But first, be whole alone.
VII. Practical Guidance
A. Start Small
If you're not used to solitude:
- One hour alone: No phone, just you
- Half day alone: Morning or afternoon
- Full day alone: 24 hours solo
- Weekend alone: 2-3 days
- Week alone: Extended solitude
Build gradually. Don't force.
B. Notice What Arises
When alone, you might feel:
- Anxiety ("I should be doing something")
- Loneliness ("I need someone")
- Boredom ("Nothing to do")
- Restlessness ("Can't sit still")
These are signs of external locus. Sit with them. They'll pass.
Eventually, you'll feel:
- Peace
- Completeness
- Joy
- Freedom
This is internal locus emerging.
C. Create Your Solo Practice
Design your own:
- What brings you joy alone?
- What practices resonate?
- What rituals feel meaningful?
- Build your unique solo path
This is your practice. Make it yours.
Conclusion: The Freedom of Aloneness
You are complete alone.
Not incomplete.
Not half.
Not waiting for someone to complete you.
Whole.
Your joy doesn't depend on:
- Finding the right person
- Having friends
- Being in community
- Anyone's validation
Your joy comes from:
- Within
- Your own practice
- Your own celebration
- Your own being
This is freedom.
This is autonomy.
This is internal locus.
So dance alone.
Celebrate yourself.
Be joyfully, completely, radiantly alone.
You are enough.
You always were.
This is solo joy.
This is the art of being happily alone.
Welcome home to yourself.
Next in this series: "The Introvert's Light Path" β exploring how introverts can practice joyful spirituality in ways that honor their nature.
Related Articles
Friendships: Approval and Belonging
Explores social worth and people-pleasing in friendships. Learn why approval-seeking destroys authentic connection an...
Read More β
Reggae: The Musical Light Path
Discover why reggae is the Light Path in musical form. Explore the offbeat as revolutionary rhythm, reggae vs blues, ...
Read More β
Breakups and the Value Vacuum
Explores why breakups feel like annihilation for those with external locus. Learn the difference between grieving the...
Read More β
Attachment and Locus: The Developmental Link
Explores the developmental link between attachment styles and locus patterns. Learn how secure, anxious, avoidant, an...
Read More β
Romantic Relationships: Love as Worth
Explores codependency in romantic relationships, the romantic value vacuum, and secure love from internal locus. Lear...
Read More β
Relationships as Worth Containers: Introduction
Introduction to the Locus and Relationships series. Explores why relationships become worth containers, the relations...
Read More β