Figuring out who your soul group is can help to change your sadness into joy. This raises your soul vibration and can allow people from your group to find you such as soulmates and others. These are your kindred spirits or your soul family and these can be friends, families, loved ones or even lovers.
You might have found relationships at your jobs, in your community, at your church or even inside of your family that bring you a lot of peace and joy. These can be people or animals.
The soul group might be limited and the people in your soul group might only be there for a season. But no matter how long they are with you, they will be your biggest fans and will support you the most.
Finding Your Soul Group
Here are some of the ways that you can figure out if you’ve met your soul group!
- What Brings You Happiness?
Think about the things that you are the happiest about in your life right now or even in your past. You can even write these things down to see if there is some kind of pattern.
When you do this, think of the people that were there with you during these times and run through the times that people around you brought you the most peace and the most joy.
Write down these people and then know that these are people that are likely part of your soul group from the past or even might be with you still.
- Think About When You Die
People can come to you while you’re alive and you don’t have to imagine them being with you. But think about those that will come to you when you die. Imagine being in your casket and think about those that would come around you and weep over you being gone.
These are the people that will come to you when you die, and they will bring light to you. What kind of faces do you see when you use this visualization? You can write this down in your journal and these are the people that are probably part of your soul group. Even think about the ones that you’ve visited as well.
- Put Your Happiness First
Try to put your own happiness first and then when someone comes into your life, you will see that this can increase your joy. Use positive mantras such as, “I am going to always put my happiness above everything else.”
This will raise your vibrations and it will bring new people into your life that might be part of your soul group. Or, if you’re in relationships, see if they get stronger when you try being positive and healthy about who you are.
These people in your soul group are there to support you and want your vibrations to be high. They want you to have peace and joy like none other.
Final Thoughts
Keeping your vibrations high can help you to come together with your soul group easier because they are attracted to vibrations.
‘Raise your vibrations’? What is this, an energy drink commercial or spiritual advice? Next thing you’ll tell me I can find my soul group by downloading an app!
“Keeping your vibrations high can help you come together with your soul group”… This concept aligns intriguingly with certain Eastern philosophies regarding energy and consciousness. While not scientifically proven per se, there’s historical precedent in cultures worldwide for exploring such ideas spiritually.
“Raising your vibrations” seems like another way of saying, ‘Focus on positivity.’ While the language might sound mystical, it could just be encouraging people to maintain a positive mindset and surround themselves with supportive individuals. Not so far-fetched if seen from that perspective.
“Put your happiness first”—typical self-help drivel masquerading as spiritual wisdom. Life isn’t about finding some mystical ‘soul group’; it’s about navigating absurdity with what limited time we have.
This article offers a profound, albeit overly simplistic, view of relationships. The notion of a ‘soul group’ is interesting from a metaphysical standpoint, but it would benefit from more intellectual rigor. The idea of vibrations attracting people is hardly substantiated by scientific evidence—perhaps a more nuanced approach to human connections would provide clarity.
“Imagine being in your casket…” Seriously? What morbid nonsense is this? Life should be enjoyed in the moment rather than obsessing over who’s gonna cry at your funeral.
@EpicurusFan97 It’s not necessarily morbid; it’s more about appreciating who really cares for you deeply and how you impact others’ lives. Sometimes death makes us reflect on life’s true connections.
*Visualizing* people mourning over your casket as a way to figure out your soul group? Seriously? This whole article reads like an emotional manipulation tool rather than practical advice.
This was such a beautiful read! It’s inspiring to think that we are all connected on such a deep level with our soul group. It’s a reminder to cherish the people in our lives who truly bring us joy.
“These can be people or animals.” I absolutely love that it includes animals in the soul group! My dog has been my biggest support and brings me more joy than most humans ever could!
‘Think about those that will come to you when you die.’ That line really hit me hard. It’s such an intimate way to reflect on the connections we’ve made in our lives—who truly matters at the end of it all. A deep, soulful read.
‘Think about those that will come around you when you die.’ An interesting thought experiment, indeed. It aligns well with the concept of existential reflection—who we are can often be defined by the relationships that linger after we’ve left this world.
The idea of ‘vibrations’ attracting people from your soul group actually parallels certain quantum theories where everything in the universe operates at its own frequency… though I doubt this article was aiming for quantum mechanics here.
@QuantumCuriosity101 Exactly! There’s something fascinating about how energy fields might connect us—even if it sounds too ‘new age’ at times!
*Really?* Soul groups? It sounds more like wishful thinking than anything grounded in reality. How exactly do these ‘vibrations’ work? I’d love to see some actual evidence before jumping on this bandwagon.
I’m sorry, but this is all just wishful thinking. There’s no scientific basis for ‘soul groups’ or ‘vibrations’. It feels like an attempt to make sense of random relationships by assigning them cosmic significance.
@Skeptical_Simon Not everything needs to be backed by science to be meaningful. Sometimes it’s about what resonates with our own experience.