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Guest post: “I had never been lonelier in my entire life and I had no idea what to do about it.”

61 replies

MumsnetGuestPosts · 17/06/2019 12:39

It’s a really hard thing to do, to admit you’re lonely. ‘Admit’ being the operative word in that sentence. You admit blame. You admit defeat. You admit eating the last chocolate Hobnob. It’s a shameful act, to admit something. And to admit that you haven’t been able to foster human connections, for whatever reasons, is no different.

And so, last year, in the fourth hottest summer on record, I sat in my new house in a new town, with my new baby and my two-year-old son, and wept. For I had never been lonelier in my entire life and I had no idea what to do about it. But I certainly wasn’t going to say anything.

Loneliness is a pernicious emotion. The one thing you need is a meaningful human connection, someone you can talk to about how you’re feeling. And yet the shame and embarrassment of revealing that you don’t have that connection drives you to mask the problem. For me, it was also pride (“I’ve always had friends,” I said to myself. “I don’t want people to think I don’t have friends.”), not wanting to burden mates who have their life own pressures, not wanting to worry parents who live 300 miles away, and not wanting to add to the stresses of a husband who was already commuting three hours a day to support our tiny family. And on top of all that, it was simply too hot to leave the house.

So, instead, I sat on the floor of our lounge with a red-faced breastfeeding baby and an unbiddable, sweaty toddler in crippling 32 degree heat and I sobbed. And sobbed. And sobbed.

Little did I know then that loneliness is actually incredibly common across every section of society and affects most of us at some point in our lives. And, that while I felt hideously alone, ironically, I belonged to a very large group. Research has shown that over nine million people in the UK (that’s nearly 14% of the population) report to be lonely. Statistically, that means that around 15 people in your train carriage, about 13,000 people in a packed Wembley stadium, and perhaps most alarmingly, someone in your close circle of family and friends.

The trouble is that we don’t talk about it. And we don’t want to talk about it, because it sets off a large flashing beacon above our heads that we’re potential social cyanide, someone to be avoided, already clearly rejected by the rest of society. So people suffer for weeks, months, sometimes years, and the problem exacerbates.

The late Jo Cox felt that loneliness was a problem that desperately needed addressing, and it’s off the back of recommendations from the Jo Cox Commission on Loneliness that the Government published its loneliness strategy. It was appointed a Minister for Loneliness, Mims Davies MP, and set in motion the ‘Let’s Talk Loneliness’ campaign together with a whole host of charities including Mind, the British Red Cross, the Marmalade Trust, and the Co-Op Foundation.

It’s launching this week, to tie in with Loneliness Awareness Week (17-21 June), and its primary aim is to neutralise loneliness, to show it for what it is - a human emotion as normal and natural as joy, frustration and excitement - and by doing so, make it a more comfortable topic for people to talk about. Because by sharing our stories, using the hashtag #letstalkloneliness, we can see, if nothing else, that we’re not on our own no matter how alone we feel.

And, for me? Well, one day, I galvanised myself, smothered my two tiny, heat-rashed children in SPF50 and went to the park. And there was another woman there with two, tiny heat-rashed children smothered in SPF50. We moaned about the heat. We swapped numbers. We now hang out most weeks. That day was a good day.

OP posts:
RoRosmama · 18/06/2019 18:31

I love this post. Thank you x

Sparkles57 · 18/06/2019 19:16

What a beautiful post Flowers

I am autistic so I really struggle to make friends (and keep them) which can be cripplingly lonely at times.

RoseGoldEagle · 18/06/2019 21:32

Wheresmrlion I could have written your post! I have a 2 year old and a newborn, and it’s so hard. I look back on the newborn days with DD (probably with rose tinted glasses to an extent!), and think how much easier it was, I had a lovely group of friends and we’d go to classes, go for coffee, chill out in each other’s houses. I go to one class with DS, and just as you say last week they all arranged to go for coffee afterwards, and I couldn’t go as I had to go and collect DD. And somehow the connection isn’t quite there anyway. I looked up NCT classes for second time mums when I was pregnant- they do run them, but didn’t have any near me. I wish there was a way to meet mums with same-aged children more easily!

TheoriginalLEM · 18/06/2019 21:56

I'm lonely. I work full time and am surrounded by people. I have a dh and one adult and one teenage daughter. I don't fit in and have no friends. Ive never really fitted in, i describe myself as a periphery person.

In some ways id choose to live completely isolated rather than being alone watching everyone else having friends and socialising.

This sort of loneliness is invisible

Cryalot2 · 18/06/2019 22:20

I frequently don't leave the house or speak to anyone bar the dog.
No public transport where I live and I don't drive ( can't for medical reasons) .
I regularly go with Dh on any errand just to get out.
Tonight dd and I went to park and it was the only time I spoke to anyone in days .

CallMeOnMyCell · 18/06/2019 22:27

Agree with a PP that it’s much harder to make friends if you’ve moved away from the area where you grew up as the people you meet at work or baby groups etc usually already have a good social network of friends and family so aren’t looking for new friends.

dragonway · 19/06/2019 02:18

This thread has really hit a nerve for me. I moved hours away from my home for my DHs job. Now we have small DC but I’ve struggled to make a “tribe”. It just hasn’t happened for me. I’m excruciatingly lonely. I just don’t seem to be the type of person that people want to hang with. My best mate (only mate!) is hours away and I miss that easy friendship with somebody I trust. I’ve had a couple of really bad experiences with new friends and it’s really shaken my confidence to make friends now. Marriage problems with my DH mean I don’t want to bring home women I don’t know that well so I’m stuck really. I’m a SAHM but thinking about going back to work just so that I’ve got some people to talk to!

Ragwort · 19/06/2019 10:46

I totally agree with Babdoc (not for the first time, you speak a lot of sense Smile) it is much easier to find an interest or hobby, do something you enjoy and then, hopefully, from there you will meet like minded people who may or may not become ‘good friends’ but at the very least you will be spending time doing something you enjoy.

I have moved a lot, due to my DH’s work, and I always threw myself into local groups and volunteering & found it a great way to meet new people. I’ve been on 4 different PTAs, yet I know PTAs are frequently sneered at on Mumsnet. I do all sorts of volunteering, yet another thing people often say is ‘I can’t volunteer because I’ve got a baby/young child’. Find something you can do, I used to deliver meals on wheels & drive old folk to appointments, they loved the social contact & meeting my baby. There is always something you can do.

And don’t assume that the only people you can be friends with are other mothers with young children, I have a huge range of friends from much older women to a young Thai woman who has ended up here after an abusive relationship, be open to new ideas & different people.

SnuggyBuggy · 19/06/2019 10:53

It does help if there is something that you can go out and do that you will enjoy with or without good company. I'm very cynical about forcing yourself out of your comfort zone to do things you don't enjoy.

If I could go back in time and advise my lonely self I'd say to just focus on hobbies even if solitary, it makes you a rounded person and keeps you from getting too boring. Trying and failing to "get out there" and going to groups that didn't work for me was worse than doing nothing.

Dowser · 19/06/2019 11:08

Glad Lucy found her solution .
For elderly or disabled people who are less independent it’s much more difficult. Anyone who lost their partner later on in life.
I’ve had lots of times in my life when I’ve been very lonely.
It drives you bonkers.
No one teaches you had to deal with it.
I remember Esther rantzen saying how lonely she felt after the death of her husband. Cilla Black too.
Horrible place to be

SupermassiveBlackHo · 19/06/2019 14:55

There is always something you can do

No there isn't.

HarperIsBazaar · 19/06/2019 16:10

This reply has been deleted

Message withdrawn at poster's request.

Squeee · 19/06/2019 16:24

I've felt lonely off and on most of my life. Parents divorced, multiple moves away from family, just never felt I belonged anywhere. When I was young I had good friends which helped a lot as home life wasn't great due to abuse. Moved abroad in my 20s and found it very hard to settle in and make friends when I had children. Moved to different town en in my 40s and it is so hard to make friends in later life. I eventually made friends with one lady. So it's a start. I do everything suggested to lonely people. So I'll settle for friendly aquaintances rest of time. I think as well I find it lonely as most of people I know have very different opinions and likes to me and I always feel like I have to suppress myself or not share things with them. People always say be yourself, they obviously fit in with the ones around them better.

Geegle · 19/06/2019 16:35

Great post which has rung a bell with me.
We have recently moved areas. Dc are both secondary school age so I haven’t met parents from school. DH works long hours in the city. I do contract work so I’m away for a few days at a time but home & not working for long stretches. I’ve joined a gym locally but haven’t managed to make any friends yet. No idea how to make some local friends but I will persevere

SnuggyBuggy · 19/06/2019 16:51

I agree, sometimes there isn't anything you can do. I mean for joining a group to work there have to be groups of the right people in your area and a lot of volunteering is crap for this, maybe half an hours training then sent off to volunteer alone, not going to be very helpful for expanding your social circle.

Dowser · 19/06/2019 18:28

If I didn’t have dh and he wasn’t retired I’d be very lonely.
Love some alone time..but too much and I miss interacting with other like minded people.

BjornAgain81 · 19/06/2019 20:49

I moved to an entirely new city three years ago where didn't know a single person. I still don't see my friends in the week (and at the time was largely wfh).

What helped me was joining a local powerlifting gym where I got to know the members well. I don't see them outside of the gym but I know I'll have a good chat 3-4x a week which is enough to get me through.

Ragwort · 19/06/2019 21:00

I am sorry if I sound unkind and patronising but in my experience, which I appreciate may be different for other people, there are lots of voluntary roles than can be done from home. Maybe they don’t particularly interest people on this thread but examples include - editing local newsletters, collating information, numerous admin roles, research, fund raising, tons of social media, internet roles etc etc. I am involved in a number of voluntary roles & could easily find things for people to get involved with. In all my years of volunteering I frequently hear every reason under the sun why people don’t want to help out.

I understand that this is maybe not the sort of thing people are looking for but many voluntary groups are desperate to find different ways of getting people to engage with them and if people do feel isolated at home and, for whatever reason, can’t leave their home maybe it might be worth looking into possible opportunities rather than just saying ‘it can’t be done’.

Xmr1986 · 19/06/2019 21:36

How does that help them with lonliness @Ragwort Hmm it's no different than talking online to strangers. It doesn't solve the physical lonliness and interaction.

jessicawessica · 19/06/2019 22:04

I think it is expected of everybody nowadays to have a full social life.
People posting on Facebook and instagram, etc, about how they have such busy fulfilled lives is a bit fake TBH.
Why does everyone feel this need to have lots of friends? Why do we all believe that everyone on social media is having a better life than we are, purely because they have 678 FB "friends"?
I had a group of friends at school but we all drifted away when we left school. Never really had any really close friends since. However, as a single parent with 3 DCs I find my time is eaten up by their needs and wants. When they go to their dad at the weekend I relish the calm and silence.
Do I miss interacting with other adults? Sometimes. But not enough to make me feel the need to join some random club in order to meet likeminded people as I feel that's just a bit fake and desperate, and apparently desperation can be spotted a mile off.
Maybe we should embrace being alone as it offers us the opportunity to do what we want, not what we think other people want us to do in order to "fit in".

NomDePrune · 19/06/2019 22:52

I was about to start a similar thread last week. I was feeling low with a nasty head cold, my days off were midweek and apart from DP the only meaningful conversation I had was with my hairdresser. If hadn't had an appointment I would not even have had that (much needed and appreciated) conversation. My DC are on their 20s and I just don't have anyone I can call and say "I need to get out - can we meet up?" Making new friends is really difficult and it definitely doesn't get easier as you get older.

SnuggyBuggy · 20/06/2019 09:14

I think what's often missing from most discussion on loneliness is what to do when it cant be alleviated. I mean for all the people preaching how "the opportunities are endless," there are people either can't "get out there" or those who try and find there is nothing there.

Sadly I think there needs to be more effort on helping people figure out the best way to live with it.

mommydragon · 20/06/2019 21:29

Thanks for the post... I have been feeling so down about my 'lonely' situation for years now. Humbling to see that I am not alone. What I find particularly hard is that I do actually have cousins and brother who live close by, but they have made it quite clear they don't want to socialise with my little family of 4... so I can't make an effort as I would just be putting them through a tricky situation.

I don't have close friends but do speak with other parents, go to the gym classes twice a week, and my work colleagues. They are just acquaintances. But I am grateful to have them.

Tommo75 · 23/06/2019 20:56

Nobody I know talked about being lonely with babies. For them maternity leave was great. Now I am beginning to feel a different loneliness...my children are teenagers and I am needed less. I've given all my time to them and now I'm not needed I feel lost. Facebook doesn't help cos everyone posts about their great days out but mine don't want to go on days out anymore. It's sad....feeling lonely in a house of family.

purpleme12 · 23/06/2019 21:09

Oh that does make me sad I can see why you feel that way I am always doing my days out with my daughter but she's only 5 I feel for you

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