It’s the holiday season, and 1 in 3 of us is lonely
Robert Waldinger
Director of Harvard Study of Adult Development | Zen Master | Author of “The Good Life”
Many of us will be gathering with family and friends at Thanksgiving. In my own family, we’ve gathered in the same way for so many years that I’ve come to take it for granted. But millions of people around the world have no one to be with on this holiday.? Think about that for a moment – what it feels like to watch those around you celebrating while you are alone.
When you’re lonely, it hurts. And I don’t mean that metaphorically. Loneliness has a physical effect on the body. Feeling lonely is associated with:
Research has shown that loneliness is twice as unhealthy as obesity, and chronic loneliness increases a person’s odds of death in any given year.?
Recent stats are alarming:
The cure for loneliness is elusive.
Alleviating this epidemic of loneliness is difficult because what makes one person feel lonely might have no effect on someone else. Because loneliness is a subjective experience, we can’t rely on easily observable indicators like whether or not someone lives alone. One person might have a partner and too many friends to count and yet feel lonely, while another person might live alone and have a few close contacts yet feel very connected. The objective facts of a person’s life are not enough to explain why someone is lonely.?
Loneliness arises from a gap between the kind of social contact you want and the social contact you actually have.? That gap can arise from many different causes, including shyness or fear of others, geographical isolation, poor health or physical disability, and even overwork that leaves no time for connecting with others.
How can loneliness be physically harmful when it’s a feeling?
Answering that question is easier if we understand the biological roots of the problem. We humans evolved to be social. Fifty thousand years ago, being alone was dangerous. If someone was left at her tribe’s river settlement by herself, her body and brain would switch into “fight-or-flight” mode. The need to recognize threats would fall on her alone, so her body would prepare to meet threats by increasing heart rate and blood pressure and increasing levels of stress hormones in the bloodstream to help keep her more alert.
If her family or tribe were away overnight and she had to sleep by herself, her sleep would be shallower; if a predator was approaching, she would want to know, so she would be more easily aroused, and she would experience more awakenings in the night. If for some reason she found herself alone for a month rather than a night, these physical processes would continue, morphing into a droning, constant sense of unease, and they would begin to take a toll on her mental and physical health.?
The same effects of loneliness continue today. The feeling of loneliness is a kind of alarm bell ringing inside the body. At first, its signals may help us. We need them to alert us to a problem. But imagine living in your house with a soft but steady fire alarm going off all day, every day, and you start to get a sense of what chronic loneliness is doing behind the scenes to our minds and bodies.
There is now a vast body of research revealing strong links between health and social connection, associations that we believe trace back to the origins of our species. Our basic relationship needs are simple: we need love, connection, and a feeling of belonging. But we now live in complicated social environments where meeting those needs is a challenge. And each of us can do something to help.
Who in your life might be lonely?? Reach out to them.
As we move into the holiday season, think about the people in your life – people at home, in your community, at work. Consider reaching out to one person who you suspect is more alone than they want to be.? Ask them how they’re planning to spend the holidays.?Might they welcome an invitation to Thanksgiving dinner, or just a casual suggestion that you two get together for coffee??
This gesture is not just for their benefit, but for yours.? As the Zen teacher John Tarrant reminds us, “Attention is the most basic form of love.”? Giving your attention to someone who is lonely can be life-giving and even lifesaving.?
Let that one simple action be your contribution to easing the loneliness epidemic. ?
Happy Thanksgiving.
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3 个月I just published Coping with Loneliness: Building Inner Strength and Connections #loneliness #innerstrength https://link.medium.com/XRr0Z9N1ZOb
Founder of Mental Health Simplified - Leveraging Lived Experience - Coach | Speaker -
4 个月Reaching out can truly make a meaningful difference for someone.
Product Designer and Founder @ iTribe Community Platform
4 个月Disappearance of local community in the developed world is a modern plague in my opinion.
Professional coach, mental health advocate, and effective altruist. Passionate about helping ameliorate the global mental health crisis.
4 个月I've sent this message to many friends and family. I've found the best way to have a 4am friend is to *be* a 4am friend: "The Harvard Study of Adult Development (https://www.adultdevelopmentstudy.org) found there was a single yes/no question that could predict whether someone would be alive and happy at age 80: “Is there someone in your life whom you would feel comfortable reaching out to at 4 AM to tell your troubles to?” The good news is all of you have at least one 4 AM friend: me. Reach out at any time if you need someone to talk to. [insert your phone number here]
CEO & Founder at Mind Storms | AI Thought Leader l Serial Entrepreneur
4 个月Very helpful. The health problems as a result of lomliness is something I didn’t know.