Many people, especially codependents,
are haunted by inner loneliness. Twenty percent (60 million) of Americans
report that loneliness is the source of their suffering. In fact, our emotional
reaction to rejection emanates from the area of our brain (the dorsal anterior cingulate) that also responds to physical pain. (Cacioppo and Patrick, 2008)
Loneliness is associated with living
alone, which surveys indicate has
steadily risen to 27 percent in 2013 and to 50 percent and higher in parts of
Florida, West Virginia, and especially California. However, being alone only
describes a physical condition. We don’t always feel lonely when we’re
alone. Individual needs for connection vary. Some people choose to live
solo and are happier doing so. They don’t suffer the same sense of abandonment
caused by the unwanted loss of a partner through a break-up, divorce, or death.
They may also have greater inherited insensitivity to social disconnection,
according to recent research.
Loneliness in Relationships
Although loneliness is greater among
people living alone, it can be felt while in a relationship or group. This is
because it’s the quality, not the quantity, of social interactions that
determines whether we feel connected. As the number of work hours and household
television sets has increased, family dinners have declined. Today, although
the quantity of interactions has increased, due to the proliferation of cell
phones, screen time is replacing face time. People spend more time on their
digital devices than in face-to-face conversations, contributing to more
loneliness. (Cacioppo, 2012) A UCLA study shows that
social skills are declining as a result. There’s a 40 percent decline in
empathy among college students due to new technology, and 12-year olds are
socially behaving like 8-year-olds. (Turkle, 2015) Recently, Pew Research Center found that
82 percent of adults felt that the way they used their phones in social settings hurt the conversation.
Codependency and Lack of Intimacy
The absence of someone nurturing to
listen, care, and affirm our existence makes us feel isolated or emotionally abandoned.
Although intimate connections are the remedy, characteristically, codependent
relationships lack of intimacy. Codependents have difficulty with intimacy due
to shame and poor communication skills. Often they partner with someone
addicted, abusive, or just emotionally unavailable
(and they may be, as well.)
Whether alone or in a relationship,
codependents may be unable to identify the source of their unhappiness, feeling
depressed, sad, or bored, yet not knowing that they’re lonely. Others know, but
find it difficult to effectively ask for their needs. Their relationship
dynamics and loneliness may seem familiar, like the emotional dysfunction in
their childhood. We want and need emotional closeness from our partner and
friends, but when an intimate, emotional bond is lacking, we experience
disconnection and emptiness. (For more on emptiness and healing, see Chapter 4,
“There’s a Hole in My Bucket” in Conquering Shame and Codependency.!
)
Years ago, I believed that more shared
activities would create that missing connection, not realizing it was something
less tangible–real intimacy, which
was absent in my relationship. (See “Your Intimacy Index”). Instead, like most
codependents, I experienced “pseudo-intimacy,” which can take the form of a
romantic “fantasy bond,” shared activities, intense sexuality, or a
relationship where only one partner is vulnerable, while the other acts as
advisor, confidant, provider, or emotional caretaker.
The undercurrent of loneliness and
fear of loneliness stem from chronic lack of connectedness and loneliness in
childhood. While some children are neglected or abused, the majority grow up in
families where parents don’t have the time or sufficient emotional resources to
honor their children’s feelings and needs. Children feel ignored, unloved,
shamed, or alone. Some feel like an outsider, that “No one gets me,” even
though their family otherwise appears to be normal. To cope, they withdraw,
accommodate, rebel, and/or take up addictions, and mask, and eventually deny,
what they feel inside.
Loneliness and Shame
Meanwhile, children’s growing sense of
separation from themselves and lack of authentic connection with a parent(s)
can breed inner loneliness and feelings of unworthiness. “The awareness of
human separation, without reunion by love–is a source of shame. It is at the
same time the source of guilt and anxiety.” (Fromm, E., The Art of Loving,
p. 9) As adults, codependents can get caught in self-defeating cycle of
loneliness, shame, and depression. Repeated break-ups and abandoning
relationships can foster a worsening cycle of abandonment. (See “Breaking the Cycle of Abandonment.”)
The greater is our loneliness, the less
we seek to engage with others, while our anxiety around authentic connection
grows. Studies show than
prolonged loneliness breeds low self-esteem, introversion, pessimism,
disagreeableness, anger, shyness, anxiety, lessened social skills, and
neuroticism. We imagine negative evaluations from others, called shame anxiety. This leads to anxious,
negative, and self-protective behaviors, to which other people respond
negatively, fulfilling our imagined outcome.
The shame associated with loneliness is
directed not only against ourselves. Loneliness carries a stigma–so we don’t
admit we’re lonely–but is also experienced from others with gender differences.
Lonely men are perceived more negatively than women, and more negatively by
women, even though more women than men report feeling lonely. (Lau, 1992)
Health Risks
The strong association
between loneliness and depression is well documented; but, loneliness also
triggers serious health risks,
impacting our endocrine, immune, and cardiovascular systems, and accelerating
death. According to a recent study, the
lonely have increased risk for cancer, neurodegenerative disease, and viral
infections. Perceived loneliness triggers a flight-or-fight stress response.
Stress hormones and inflammation rise,
and exercise and restorative sleep decrease. Norepinephrine surges, shutting
down immune functions and ramping up production of white blood cells that cause
inflammation. Meanwhile, it makes us less sensitive to cortisol that protects
us from inflammation. In commenting on the research, neuroscientist Turhan
Canli points out that loneliness one year affects our genetic inflammatory
response the following year, confirming the self-reinforcing, negative,
emotional spiral discussed above: “Loneliness predicted biological changes, and
biological changes predicted changes in loneliness.” (Chen, 2015)
Coping with Loneliness
For many of us, when we’re lonely, we
tend to isolate even more. We may not feel like talking to someone, even though
it would help. Now we have the data to explain why biological, even
genetic changes make loneliness hard to overcome. We may turn to addictive
behavior instead of seeking social connection. There is a high correlation
between obesity and loneliness.
We really have to fight our natural
instinct to withdraw. Try admitting to a friend or neighbor that you’re lonely.
To motivate socializing with other people, commit to a class, meet-up, CoDA or
other 12-Step meeting. Exercise with a buddy. Volunteer or support a friend in
need can to take your mind off of yourself and lift your spirits.
As with all feelings, loneliness is
worsened by resistance and self- judgment. We fear experiencing more pain if we
allow our heart to open. Often, the reverse is true.
Allowing feelings to flow
can not only release them, but also the energy expended in suppressing them.
Our emotional state shifts, so that we feel invigorated, peaceful! , tired, or
content in our aloneness. For more suggestions, read “Coping with Loneliness”
in Codependency for Dummies.
© DarleneLancer 2015
John T. Cacioppo, Stephanie Cacioppo, “The Phenotype of Loneliness” European
Journal of Developmental Psychology, 2012 Jul 1; 9(4): 446–452.
John T. Cacioppo and William Patrick, “Loneliness: Human Nature and! the Need for Social
Connection,” The Wall Street Journal, Nov. 28, 2008.
Angus Chen, “Loneliness May Warp Our Genes, And
Our Immune Systems,” NPR, Your Health, November 29, 2015.
Lau, S., & Gruen, G. E. (1992). “The social stigma of loneliness: Effect of target
person’s and perceiver’s sex.” Personality & Social
Psychology Bulletin, 18, 182-189.
Turkle, Sherry, “Stop Googling. Let’s Talk,” The New York
Times, Sept. 26, 2015.
No comments:
Post a Comment