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Do You Feel Lonely / Desire To Be Alone?

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pandora

Diamond Member
In the last couple of months, well actually it started last year with a friend staying with me and then us moving in together...moving again and then having so much stress staying with a relative....

I now find that now that it is just my son and I...I prefer the peace and quiet. I am not worrying about everyone else...I am lonely but the stress I find in having so much drama around me was really quite draining.

Do you find that it is easier to be alone???? I know a lot of people here are in relationships or married but the stress I feel with others around...UUUGGGHHH....or is this just me isolating?????
 
I understand what you're talking about. There are times when I hear a group of people laughing and feel lonely because I'm not part of that group. But when I think of everything it would take to be part of that group...it's preferrable for me to be alone.

I'm married with two daughters (only one of which is living at home) and there are still times that I need to be alone. I ususally 'go inside' of myself when the outside world gets to be too much. And there's times when I have a house full of people and still feel lonely.

Stress is the biggest factor for me. The more stress I have, the more I need to be alone.

Lisa
 
Absolutely...

I prefer to be alone most of the time... I prefer the simple life, because my life is already too stressful. When I'm the stressed at my maximum...I need to completely alone, with no people, no contact, no things that need to be done... I literally just need me and my mind. Or rather, that is not a need for it... but a need not to have anything else...

Meh. I sound like a right loner now!
 
I can't stand to be alone. I need to be around people, but not necessarily talking continuously or interacting with anyone. When I get lonely and my husband is working, I go shopping to be around others but not engaging. I can take a book or puzzle to a coffeeshop and sit for hours, not alone, but not in anyone's face. If I can;t manage that, I stay home and keep the tv on for voices.
 
I live alone and I am glad. Have had the relationships, marriage routine, and for me it's just way to much stress. Yes I do get lonely, but like being alone too.....
 
I like being alone, I spend a lot of solitary time. But when I need to be around people I get very proactive about calling friends. This is always a good time to catch up with people I haven't seen in a while.

I am also involved in groups that meet regularly (soccer teams and mountain biking groups), these help me get out and be social for periods of time so even if I'm being anti-social I have commarodary (sp?) with friends. Also it helps me to hang out with people if I'm feeling anti-social when there is something we are doing so the focus isn't on socializing as much.
 
I have always preferred to be alone. Now that my children are grown it's just DH an I. He travels frequently so I'm home alone quite a bit. My job required me to be responsive to at least 10 people at any time and I think it's part of the reason I developed PTSD. I'm like 2quilt - I always have a tv or radio on for some quiet noise when I'm alone.
 
I live alone, which I'm glad of. I don't think at the moment I could deal with the daily stress of having anyone around me too much. Even when I'm feeling relatively 'well' I am quite happy in my own company.

I find that another persons company is too stressful. I feel like I have to smile, when I don't feel like smiling, and laugh when I don't feel like laughing etc. Maybe that is because I don't feel totally comfortable being me (warts and all) with anyone other than myself.

I do sometimes wonder whether I isolate myself too much, but I just think I do what is necessary to survive all this crap.

I am stressed and low enough, without other people adding to it. If that is selfish, then so be it. I can't deal with other people adding extra stress to my life.

But on the other hand, I do feel totally alone. When I have tried to share my problems in the past, things have never worked out. So, until someone comes along, who is willing to try to understand, I am on my own.
 
I am so glad I am not the only one...I hope that this will change but I think that with my son and his disabilities...this could be a good thing right now to just coast.....I am so glad I am safe and not dealing with that psychotic landlord....
 
Being alone in your own space seems to be very important to a lot of us. I know, it was hard to give that up when I had to move mother in with me. But it is working becayse I transformed a 2 bedroom townhouse into bascially 2 little apartments. I live upstairs in 2 rooms and mother lives downstairs. we turned the dining room into her bedroom and it is working out so very well. So I am actually alone in my own little world. But if I want company I just go down stairs.

But I do prefer to live alone. It is less stressful, I agree and having done the roommate thing and hubby thing I personally think we do better in our own space---alone in our own space
 
Alone VS Lonely

IMHO I prefer to be alone, yet I'm not lonely. I have scheduled specific times to socialize and I enjoy those parties, meetings and group get togethers yet I always enjoy coming home to the peace and quiet.

Now that I'm retired, I enjoy getting up everyday knowing that I no longer have to do so many pressing, time contrained, stressful, anxiety causing deadlines. Fighting the daily grind of commutes in and out of the city. I moved out to the country, no more urban car traffic all hours of the day and night. We live far off the road so that even the loud logging trucks and vehicles with no muffler are not so loud.

If I need company I get online and write a quick note to a friend or relative, call a friend or relative on the phone or just get dressed, get in my car and go somewhere. I'm basically a loner at heart, never have been much of a people person but still did all sorts of work, volunteer work and club work to offset that tendency.

I came to realise, regretably much too late in life, what co-dependency was and had several girlfriends through school and also during adulthood who were too co-dependent upon me to occupy their time. I came to a point where I resented them (never said that to them though) always wanting me to be their "end all be all" friend. I had so much to do and why didn't they? There I was with a husband, four kids, four horses, one cat, one dog, teaching Sunday School, Vacation Bible School, PTA school activities, work activities where one is required to voluteer during their off time, club activities and each of the children's various sports activites, being the "mom taxi" and neighbor hood watch coordinator, not to even mention all the daily cooking and cleaning duties. My calendar was way too full, at times I just wanted to go crawl into a hole. I was so stressed I wanted to pull my hair out. I was chronically people pleasing. I was a door mat of a wife.

I have days now where I don't even turn on the TV, the birds can be heard twittering outside in the trees and if I open the windows on nice days it's the wind rustling through, at night it's the crickets chirping and frogs croaking. I read books or cook or clean around the house (in and outside) play with my dog, plan a home improvement project, just about anything I want to do. I have learned to judiciously say "No, thank you" I do so politely, and I don't feel like I have to give a reason. It's my business anyway! Not theirs. I no longer am plagued with guilt if I say no. That complex has been shattered. YEA!

I too understand, as the others have stated, that one needs to have company, as long as it's good company that's just fine, the emotional vampires can take a hike. Daily drama can suck the life out of even the most emotionally healthy soul, as people with PTSD we cannot afford, even for one moment, to allow this to happen to us. That brings in the discernment factor. To learn to quickly size up the wheedlers, the users, the abusers, the bullies, the emotional vampires, the whiners, the continuously needy, the back stabbing two faced good buddies, the fair weather friends and the down right selfish. Like a virtual broom, sweep them right out of your life. Set your boundaries, be discreet about who you allow into your life and into your time.

I cannot emphasize this one aspect enough. It was the most freeing, spiritually uplifting, and most soul satisfying moment of my life when I learned to say no to these people who were on me like ticks. My oldest sister was one of the very worst and to have finally told her, unequivically, unabashedly and with no compunctions that I would no longer be associating myself with her (she was one of my abusers and her husband was one of the pedophiles) and to never call me, write to me, email me, come over or even acknowledge my existance. I shut the door for once and for all to the originators of my personal problems.

Learn to love yourself, be appreciative of what all you have done, enjoy the quiet moments of solitude. Learn to meditate, learn to breath, learn to balance what is out there with what is inside of you. Give thanks to your ownself for getting to where you are right now.

OK, I wound up being on my own little soapbox and the preaching is over. HA! Love, map9
 
I need a lot of alone time in general, but when times are really stressful/emotional/hard I tend to isolate myself to extremes and that can be damaging in and of itself. I call it the 'chew my hand off my wrist to get out of the trap' in that it seems I will do what I can to get out of stress, things that aren't necessary. That often means isolating myself.

I am going through a very difficult time in my marriage right now and am trying with every ounce to not isolate myself. That means forcing myself to go to school and making phone calls and even talking to people. However, my tolerance for people in my space, like my house, is nearly non existent.

I think this is the hardest part of all this at times, things can hurt so much and I can get so raw and thin that I can't handle anyone around that might hurt me and not even know it. It is the hypersensitivity during stressful times that really gets me.
 
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