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21 July 2007
21 July 2007

Do you ever feel lonely? If you do, you may spend a lot of time wondering what’s wrong with you. It may seem as if everyone else but you has lots of friends. It may seem like everyone else is always getting invited to go to exciting parties. And it may seem like you're the only one who is left at home, waiting for the phone to ring, wondering why no one ever calls you to invite you out. Actually, loneliness is much more common than you might think. There is actually an epidemic of loneliness in many societies today. This may surprise you.

After all, so many millions of us in the modern world are jammed close together in large teeming cities, and we have at hand all the technological conveniences that are supposed to bring people closer together, such as e-mail, telephones, faxes, and the Internet.

Why are so many of us more lonely than ever?

The reason is that society has changed very rapidly in the past two or three hundred years. Many of the social factors that used to make it easy to make and keep friends for a lifetime have disappeared.

Families have changed a lot in recent decades. A hundred years ago, most families were very large, with many children, aunts and uncles and cousins living close by. Family members often worked together on the farm or in a family business all day long.

Today, families have shrunk in size. Family members are now so busy with their own separate projects, they rarely see each other. Families break up more often than they used to, and it is now much more common for family members to move thousands of miles away, to new jobs, new wives, or new husbands.

In the past, people used to live in the same small community for their entire lives. They stayed in the same job for decades.

These factors made it easy to make friends and keep friends.

Today, many people change jobs every few years, and they move to new cities, and leave behind family members and friends.

And many people today are very, very busy. In many ways, modern technology has not freed us from having to work harder. It has actually had the opposite effect of making us work harder and faster just to stay in the same place.

Another factor that contributes to increased loneliness is modern entertainment and communication technology.

Before the advent of television and the Internet, people had ways of having fun together every day. Many of these primitive methods of having fun have almost disappeared in the modern world.

In the old days, people used to actually talk to each other! They would play games together. They would make music.

Now this sort of primitive entertainment only occurs during a power outage. Most people now feel lost without a TV set and computer. Even in the same family, people barely know each other.

The increase in these modern forms of communication have actually decreased other forms of human interaction.

As people spend more time on the Internet, or with their text messaging, or playing games on computers, they are spending far less time actually interacting with the people around them. It has become a lot easier for people to cocoon themselves in their homes, and never see anyone.

Many people are actually spending less time developing their social skills while they may be vastly improving their computer skills.

In the modern world it seems almost everyone is pressed for time. We are often far too busy at work to develop friendships, and when we come home exhausted at the end of the day, we are too tired to make plans to socialize.

Some of us live in neighborhoods where it isn’t really safe to go out after dark. It becomes all too easy to eat a quick supper and spend our evening hours mentally decompressing in front of the television set or computer.

Loneliness is a bigger problem for more people today than at any previous time in history. The truly ironic fact about loneliness is that if you are lonely, you are not alone!

Still, even if you have been lonely in the past, and even if you feel lonely today, it is possible to make new friends in this modern world.

If you have been suffering from loneliness, it’s time to stop blaming yourself, and it’s time to stop blaming the rest of the world. It’s time to do something to solve the problem of loneliness.

How to Deal With Lonelyness: [Credit]

  1. Realize that we all get lonely. It doesn't mean there is
    anything wrong with you or that you have to stay lonely. We're
    particularly prone to loneliness when we're making transitions,
    especially for the better. If you're changing, such as exploring
    new alternatives and paths for yourself, you're bound to get a
    little lonely as you look for people who share your new interests
    and thoughts.

  2. Call or get together with the people you know, even if they
    aren't who you want to be with right now. Human contact makes more
    contact easier. This includes your mother and the guy at the deli
    counter. Talk until the feeling eases. Make as many calls as
    necessary.

  3. Get involved in anything where you will meet people. If you are
    very shy, find a group for social anxiety, even if it has to be
    online (obviously it's better if it's not). Look on places like
    Craig's List for activities in your area. Volunteering can
    help.

  4. Challenge yourself to take the initiative in social
    relationships whenever you can. YOU ask the person if they want to
    chat, get a coffee, whatever. Remember how much you like it when
    people are attracted to you.

  5. Take risks about revealing yourself. Say what's on your mind,
    if it seems at all likely the other person will be receptive. It
    can hurt when it backfires, but it's worth it a million times over
    when it works out.

  6. Befriend someone lonelier than you are. This will not be the
    last friend you make.

  7. Remember that we are all alone inside our heads; we are born
    and die alone; it's nothing special. Every person who has ever
    lived has been lonely. Love wouldn't exist without loneliness to
    inspire it. Look at your loneliness with detachment.

  8. Notice the difference between loneliness and solitude. Imagine
    this is the last day you will ever be alone. What would you
    do?

  9. Join an online community, sometimes, it can help.

  10. When feeling lonely, don't allow yourself to bask in your
    loneliness. Do something, anything! Take a walk, ride your
    bike.



You can make new friends and have the social life you dream of. To have more friends you will have to learn new techniques of socializing and making conversation. You will have to make the effort to meet many more new people.

If you learn the secrets of those people who make friends easily, and implement these techniques into your life, you too can have a happy social life.

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This entry was posted on 21 July 2007 by Sarra Findsley at 7/21/2007 10:04:00 AM. You can skip to the end and leave a response.

5
Its an awesome Article.
comment by: Blogger Unknown at 7/22/2007  
yes... its not only very well written, but makes a lot of good points. Yet again, nice entry Sarrah
comment by: Blogger Glenn Lopez at 7/22/2007  
Well, loneliness leads to solitude and solitude helps to know yourself better. When you start enjoying your own company, you won't socialize because you want to run away from your loneliness but only because you want to socialize which in turn increases the effectiveness of the socializing. Hence, the key to me is to know yourself before trying to make the world know you so that you start reflecting upon your true self when you present yourself to others which ensures that you are what you are and not what others want you to be...! Not to mention, its just a personal opinion and the article was really good...
comment by: Blogger My life, my dreamzzz at 7/22/2007  
Hi VEry nice posts i'sure i'sts nice
comment by: Anonymous Anonymous at 6/18/2010  
And there is a similar analogue?
comment by: Anonymous Anonymous at 2/01/2011