this post was submitted on 29 Nov 2024
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Basically what the title says, two questions:

  1. Do you feel lonely or socially isolated?
  2. If you are, what are you trying to change that?

According to the WHO it's an epidemic,

I've been emigrating to different countries about every 15 years and had to rebuild a network of friends from scratch every time. The younger I was the easier it was obviously. But that is a lot of work and you need to invest time and energy which I sometimes don't have so much, especially now with a small child which needs a lot of attention.

We meet up as a family with other families about once a month and it's really great, but while my wife keeps in contact with the other mothers in between online, somehow we dads don't even have a group chat where we would do that and perhaps propose to meet up, it's always the women who propose it.

It's kind of weird that its like that and I should change it.

While the WHO doesn't call it outright an epidemic, it seems they think it's such a big problem that they created a specific commission to foster social connection: https://www.who.int/news/item/15-11-2023-who-launches-commission-to-foster-social-connection

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[โ€“] Moonguide@lemmy.ml 4 points 4 days ago (1 children)

T.L;D.R: I used to guilt trip myself into fitting in so I wouldn't be left out, now I enjoy staying in my little corner, because I went to the shrink.

So, keep in mind I've got ADHD, GAD, and SzPD; though I suspect that might've been a misdiagnosis due to the psychologist's explanation of autism, and that instead I might have AuDHD. But I digress. I've found that with the years I've grown content with being alone, because I've come to understand that being alone isn't necessarily being lonely.

I had written a couple paragraphs, but I'll make it short. I discovered I spent far too much time and effort trying to fit in with folks I didn't even like because I didn't want to feel left out, or worse, different. Cue the pandemic, where I didn't need to mask anymore during lockdown, a year of therapy, and I've come to appreciate solitude as much as I do the precious few times I get to see my friends, since half live abroad. The thing I had a problem with was myself, not other people or the lack thereof.

I get to spend hours homebrewing stuff for my friends and I's table, painting stuff I'll never be motivated enough to finish, going down rabbit holes while reading something new, and going from old country to post-hardcore punk. It's the closest thing to heaven there is, imo.

[โ€“] jeena@piefed.jeena.net 3 points 4 days ago* (last edited 4 days ago)

I've come to understand that being alone isn't necessarily being lonely

I hope more people can realize that.