TLDR: The dark night of the soul is a state of profound disconnection, alienation, and meaninglessness that can strike anyone. It manifests both emotionally and mentally, characterized by a pervasive sense that life is hollow and the self is fragmented. The mind's constant commentary typically intensifies this darkness rather than alleviates it. However, there exists a quiet but transformative power in awareness itself—not as another thought, but as the witnessing space in which all thoughts and feelings are observed without identification. By learning to recognize this state and distinguishing the witness from the thinking mind, it becomes possible to find the first small opening toward genuine freedom.
What Does the Dark Night of the Soul Actually Feel Like?
The dark night of the soul is often described in spiritual literature, but Eckhart Tolle emphasizes the importance of understanding what it feels like from the inside. This is not merely sadness, grief, or temporary depression. Rather, it is a profound sense of alienation—a disconnection not only from the world and other people, but from oneself. The person in this state experiences a pervasive meaninglessness that colors everything; even activities that once brought joy or purpose feel hollow and mechanical.
This darkness operates on multiple levels simultaneously. On an emotional level, there is a heaviness, a flatness, sometimes an aching emptiness that cannot be easily identified or located in the body. On a mental level, there is a corresponding disconnection from clarity, from the ability to feel genuinely present with anything or anyone. The world becomes gray and distant. The person may continue functioning—going through the motions of work, relationships, daily tasks—yet feel as though they are observing their own life from behind thick glass.
One of the defining characteristics is that this state feels permanent. Unlike acute grief or a bad day, the dark night creates a conviction that nothing will ever change, that this is simply how reality is and always will be. This sense of inevitability deepens the despair.
Why Does the Mind's Voice Make the Darkness Worse?
Eckhart points to a critical distinction: the dark night of the soul is difficult enough in itself, but the mind's constant commentary about the situation amplifies and perpetuates it. The voice in the head tells stories about what the darkness means—"You are broken," "Life is meaningless," "You will never recover," "Something is wrong with you." These thoughts feel like truth when the person is already in a fragmented state, because there is no clear separation between the thinker and the witness of thoughts.
The mind, operating from its habitual patterns, treats the dark night as a problem to be solved through more thinking, more analysis, more attempts to understand or escape. This very effort keeps the person locked in the mental narrative. The voice promises that if you just analyze deeply enough, figure out the cause, or think your way through it, you will find the answer. But the dark night is not primarily a problem of understanding; it is a state of being that requires a different kind of response.
When belief is given to these mental narratives—when the person identifies completely with what the mind is saying—the darkness becomes compounded by a secondary layer of suffering: suffering about the suffering, judgment about the state, resistance to what is. This is the mechanism by which the mind deepens the darkness rather than illuminating it.
What Is the Role of Awareness in the Dark Night?
The transformative power Eckhart emphasizes is awareness itself, but this must be understood correctly. Awareness is not another thought, not another mental process layered on top of what is already happening. Rather, it is the space in which thoughts, feelings, and sensations are witnessed. It is the context in which experience occurs.
In the dark night, when the person is caught in identification with the mind, there is no real awareness—only thinking about the darkness, analyzing it, being consumed by it. The shift begins when even a small gap opens between the observer and what is being observed. This gap is awareness. It is always present, but typically it is obscured by identification with the content of the mind and emotion.
This witnessing awareness has a quiet but profound quality. Unlike the mind's agitation, which promises relief through understanding or action, awareness simply observes what is, without adding interpretation or judgment. When you witness a thought—"I am broken," "This will never end"—without identifying with it, something shifts. The thought is still there, but it is no longer you. You are the space in which the thought appears and dissolves.
This is not a technique for positive thinking or for reframing the situation. It is not adding something good to override the darkness. Rather, it is recognizing that beneath the mental and emotional turbulence, there is a witnessing presence that is not caught in the turbulence. This presence is always available, even when the darkness feels absolute.
How Can You Recognize the Witness Separate from Thinking?
The key to beginning this shift is learning to recognize the difference between the thinking mind and the witnessing awareness. The mind produces an endless stream of thoughts, judgments, and narratives. It is active, seeking, comparing, judging. The witness is still. It does not judge. It simply sees.
In the dark night, the mind may be saying, "This is unbearable. Something is fundamentally wrong." But can you notice that awareness? Can you notice that even in this moment, there is something aware of the darkness, something that can observe the thought or feeling without being completely identified with it? This noticing, this very observation, is the beginning of freedom.
It is not about trying to achieve this state or making effort to find the witness. Effort and striving come from the mind. Rather, it is about allowing the natural awareness that is already present to be recognized. Sometimes this recognition happens in a moment of pause, a breath, a second of not struggling against what is. In that pause, the quality of awareness—the space itself—becomes apparent.
Can Recognition of the Dark Night Lead to Liberation?
Eckhart's teaching suggests that recognizing what is actually happening—truly seeing the dark night not as a personal failure or a sign of spiritual deficiency, but as a state that is passing through you—creates an opening. This recognition itself does not make the darkness disappear immediately. But it does change your relationship to it. Instead of being completely collapsed into the darkness, identified with every thought about it, you begin to stand in the witnessing awareness.
From that position, the very intensity of the darkness can become paradoxical. The anguish that seemed like pure suffering begins to be experienced differently when it is witnessed rather than believed. This does not mean that pain ceases, but the secondary layer—the suffering caused by resistance to pain, by mental judgment about pain—begins to dissolve.
The small opening toward freedom that Eckhart describes is not a dramatic escape from the dark night. Rather, it is the first real glimpse that you are not the darkness itself. You are the awareness in which the darkness moves. And awareness, by its nature, is not bound by what it witnesses. This fundamental distinction is the seed from which genuine freedom can grow.
Where to go from here
If you are currently in a dark night of the soul, the invitation is to begin observing the voice in your head without fighting it or believing every word it says. Notice the space in which thoughts arise. That space—that awareness—is always available to you, even now. You might begin with simple practices: pausing for a few breaths and simply noticing what is present without trying to change it. Observing the thoughts and feelings that arise, but not identifying with them as ultimate truth. Over time, this distinction between the witness and the thought becomes clearer, and the dark night, while it may still be present, loses its absolute claim on your sense of self. For deeper exploration of this teaching and practical guidance through the dark night, consider engaging with Eckhart's course "From Suffering to Spiritual Awakening," which provides ongoing support and systematic teaching for those moving through this profound transition.




