• Home
  • About
  • Contact
  • Blog
  • A Relaxing Stroll Through the Book of Revelation
Menu

Rob Carmack

  • Home
  • About
  • Contact
  • Blog
  • A Relaxing Stroll Through the Book of Revelation
Screen Shot 2013-11-13 at 8.45.30 AM.png

On Forcing Myself to Make New Friends

November 13, 2013

I like to spend time alone. I’m not necessarily a hermit, but I certainly have the makings of one. You might say that, under the right circumstances, I’m a bit of an “Old Hermit Starter Kit.”

Don’t get me wrong; I love people, and I value my relationships. It’s just that there are times in my life when I really want to be left alone.

While isolation and solitude can be healthy (more on that tomorrow), there is no substitute for life-giving relationships.

A few months ago, I attended an event called 2 Days with Rob Bell in Laguna Beach, California. There were about one hundred of us in attendance, and the setting was designed to be small and intimate.

In spite of the event’s size and structure, I was still trying to remain somewhat invisible. I enjoy anonymity in a crowd of strangers.

However, in spite of my best efforts to avoid personal interaction, there was a moment during one of the sessions when I felt like I needed to raise my hand and ask a question (I have written elsewhere about what happened when I asked my question, and I will repost it on this blog later this week). And, in asking my question, I drew attention to myself.

When the session broke for dinner, a guy named Mike came over and introduced himself to me and invited me to get dinner with himself and a few other people who were attending the seminar.

Mike told me that he had wrestled with some of the same questions I had raised during the session, and he wanted to talk with me a little more.

So I broke my code of anonymity and went to dinner with the group.

This was the single best decision that I made during my entire trip to Laguna Beach. Not only was the conversation interesting and the beer delicious, but it actually helped me work through some of the major questions I had been struggling with.

It is an amazing thing to learn that you are not alone—that there are other people in this world who are asking the same questions as you are, who have been just as confused and disoriented as you feel.

I have stayed in touch with those guys since returning from Laguna Beach, and they have continued to encourage me from all over the continent.

So to Mike, Chris, Greg, and Ty: Thank you for forcing me out of my anonymity.

 

As it happens, one of the guys in this story made a video about this very thing: the value of human connection, and it’s very good. You can watch it below.

 

 

Do you struggle to open yourself to new connections? Why do you think it’s so difficult for us to engage with other people in our lives?

--

ALSO: You can find Mike’s blog at www.mikemchargue.com, and you should totally read it, because this guy is wicked smart.

Tags Life, Community
← How Solitude is Good for the SoulHow I'm Learning to Enjoy My Life →

Latest Posts

Featured
Dec 17, 2021
And Also With You...
Dec 17, 2021
Dec 17, 2021
May 6, 2019
The Voice We Needed: A Lament for Rachel Held Evans
May 6, 2019
May 6, 2019
Apr 17, 2017
In Search of the Next Word
Apr 17, 2017
Apr 17, 2017
Jan 12, 2017
Best Books of 2016
Jan 12, 2017
Jan 12, 2017
Sep 29, 2016
Don't Waste Your Privilege
Sep 29, 2016
Sep 29, 2016
Sep 26, 2016
"I Asked For Wonder"
Sep 26, 2016
Sep 26, 2016
Sep 21, 2016
There Is Only 'Us'
Sep 21, 2016
Sep 21, 2016
Sep 16, 2016
Book Review: Finding God in the Waves
Sep 16, 2016
Sep 16, 2016
Sep 15, 2016
Tolerance Is Weak
Sep 15, 2016
Sep 15, 2016
Sep 6, 2016
"I Am Not the Gatekeeper" - Holiness and Keeping Your Distance
Sep 6, 2016
Sep 6, 2016