confronting loneliness

If I’m so connected, why do I feel so alone?

    “We are living in an isolation that would have been unimaginable to our ancestors, and yet we have never been more accessible… Yet within this world of instant and absolute communication, unbounded by limits of time or space, we suffer from unprecedented alienation..We live in an accelerating contradiction: the more connected we become, the lonelier we are.”   – from Atlantic: Is FACEBOOK Making Us Lonely?

The first thing I had to learn when I submerged myself in Internet culture back in 2005, is that virtual friends are, well, virtual.

This message came through even more clearly when I had a traumatic brain injury in 2008.  Virtual friends won’t be coming by to help out or to discuss your injury.  Best not to expect anything more than virtual concern.

A 2006 survey showed that American’s’ circle of close confidants has decreased dramatically in the past two decades, while the number of people who say they have no one with whom to discuss important life matters has more than doubled.

This study, published in the American Sociological Review, was the first national survey on this topic in 19 years. They also found the percentage of Americans who talk only to family members about important matters increased from 57% to 80% from 1985 to 2004.

After my own divorce back in 2001, I had recently moved, plus I worked 55 miles from my home.  I suffered some serious loneliness and depression back then, which only expanded after I lost my job and career a few years later.

Human beings need HUMAN CONTACT, and that is not what the INTERNET provides.  We need genuine, on the spot, caring and concern, the kind we can see in someone’s eyes when they love us.

That’s why I started writing my blog Midlife Crisis Queen, producing my various books and workbooks, and offering divorce and midlife counseling, to do what I can to make divorce, job loss or some combination of these human disasters somehow bearable.

I learned just how an epic midlife crisis can feel.  I felt the depression of divorce and the shame of job loss, up-close and personal, and know how tough these can be to negotiate alone.

Allow yourself to admit defeat and ask for help.

 

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Will I die alone?

I have a 55 year-old single friend who acts as an excellent reminder to me of exactly how lonely life can be without a significant other.

How quickly we forget!  You would think after my many years of singularity, I wouldn’t need any reminders, but apparently I do.

Yesterday my friend kept saying, “I wonder if I will die alone?”

I remember when I lived alone, the toughest part of each day was when I laid down to go to sleep.  I don’t know why, but I would always wonder if I would be going to sleep alone for the rest of my life.  And sleep is not so different than death in small ways.

I have been married for the past seven years, so I’ve had plenty of time to get used to fairly constant company.

My husband and I allow each other lots of space.  We agree with one of my favorite quotes about marriage that says something like, the best you can do for someone you love is be “the custodian of their solitude.”  But I now find it hard to even imagine him not being there most of the time.  Especially in the evening for dinner and for intimate talks at the end of the day.

Yes, I can remember wondering if I would die alone.  None of us know how or when we will die.  My lonely friend had a heart attack a few years ago.

Marriage is no guarantee of anything.  But the fact that my friend is thinking so much about love and death indicates to me that he needs to get serious about believing in love again.

Do the work you know you need to do, so you are ready to find love again.  Time’s a wasting, so take the risk.  Focus on what you really want this time.

I sincerely believe that someone is out there,  just dying to meet YOU! 

Believe and seek wisely.  What you seek is seeking you.    – Rumi

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The value of solitude

“And you, when will you begin that long journey into yourself?”   — Rumi

Loneliness scares most of us quite a bit; in fact, it may be our greatest fear, but I believe there’s a lot of power in knowing that you can live alone successfully.

Living alone for a few years, especially during or after a major life transition, allows us the time to process change. We finally have some time to breathe and search within for what’s missing or what definitely needs to change. As luck would have it, midlife often offers this time to rest up from relating to others constantly. Divorce, a loved one’s death, unemployment, an empty nest, or some combination of these common midlife circumstances can offer a natural breather to sit back and take a hard look at ourselves and where we are.

If you’re anything like me, you’ve been constantly distracted by the needs of others.  As natural caretakers, we just can’t stop tending to the needs of those around us, even when we aren’t being asked for help. That is why it’s so important now to find a way to spend some time completely alone.

Your tendency may be to immediately find new distractions, new people to care for.   Fight that impulse.   After a lifetime of chaos and caring for others, this is a very important time for you to be alone, as scary as it may feel at times.  How else will you have the time and fortitude to face yourself squarely and ask some tough questions about your previous choices and your future?

Introspection demands solitude and time. This may be why many of us never truly get to know ourselves until midlife, if ever.   It takes a lifetime to know ourselves well. The only way to your true self is through contemplation.  No shortcuts are available.  You may find that a good therapist is a great guide at this time, but the heavy lifting must be done by you. This is the beginning of self-responsibility.  Up to now, life has just happened, and in the chaos of it all you’ve done the best you could.   Now, if you choose, you can take full responsibility for your life, for your own process, for all future choices, and for your own solitude.

Why is solitude so important? We cannot learn and grow without personally processing what we alone have experienced within the context of our own lives. No one else understands our own internal experiences of loss and alienation quite like we do, and no one else processes these experiences into wisdom like we can.

Without personal processing at a deep level, we will continue to make the same mistakes over and over again.  We all go through periods of crisis—major changes, intense difficulties—as we age.   It’s best if we can intersperse these episodes with periods of solitude and deep learning, to integrate and consolidate what we have experienced in preparation for a new learning cycle.

If we learn with each cycle, we become wiser and more able to cope with the next difficulty.   If we never stop and spend some time alone, integrating lessons learned, we cannot accumulate wisdom or the ability to live a more comfortable life with more supple and adaptive coping skills.

Excerpted from Midlife Magic: Becoming The Person You Are Inside.

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Confronting the downward spiral of loneliness

“Learn to pretend there’s more than love that matters” - Indigo Girls

Abundance is how we live in each moment – the choice to be open, the choice to entertain the possibility that we can have, create, and attract what we truly want.

There are many people – especially women – who are single, middle-aged, and dealing with their kids leaving home as they watch their parents age and need ever increasing assistance.   They may want to have a positive, supportive partnership with someone new, but they feel that is completely out of reach for them.

It is sad when we feel this way, because it is quite possible to have fulfilling, successful relationships later in life.   I know.  I have one which began at age 49.   I believe it is better to have hope than simply resign yourself to loneliness, because the difficulties or risks feel insurmountable.

Research shows that loneliness is a self-defeating and infinite loop.   As people get lonely, they start expecting rejection, so they then become even more hostile towards strangers, creating a self-fulfilling prophecy.

If you are lonely, it is most important that you create a supportive social network of friends who truly care about you, much like an extended family.   And sometimes, a partner may emerge through this network of connections.

The choice of not trusting anybody and becoming ever more isolated and lonely is self-defeating behavior.   Lonely people die about ten years earlier than those who continue to trust others and be interested in social contact.

These are the reasons why I wrote: How To Believe in Love Again.    I saw how easy it can be to give up on trusting others and how lonely that path can become.   I found some solutions for myself to this serious dilemma, and then decided to share them with others.  Here I show how to get beyond your own very real fears, and find a new approach to love and human connection.

As human beings, we all need love and support, and we owe it to ourselves to make the effort and take the risk to change and grow into the kind of people who naturally attract positive relationships into our lives.  We can have the kind of relationships we desire and deserve as we age.   But only if we are willing to believe that is possible.   Maybe even inevitable!

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