Loneliness
Friendship is a lot like food. We need it to survive. What is more, we
seem to have a basic drive for it. Psychologists find that human beings
have fundamental need for inclusion in group life and for close
relationships. We are truly social animals. The upshot is, we function
best when this social need is met. It is easier to stay motivated, to
meet the varied challenges of life.
In fact, evidence has been growing that when our need for social
relationships is not met, we fall apart mentally and even physically.
There are effects on the brain and on the body. Some effects work
subtly, through the exposure of multiple body systems to excess amounts
of the hormones of stress. Yet the effects are distinct enough to be
measured over time, so that unmet social needs take a serious toll on
health, eroding our arteries, creating high blood pressure, and even
undermining learning and memory.
A lack of close friends and a deficit of broader social contact
generally bring the emotional discomfort or distress known as
loneliness. It begins with an awareness of a deficiency of
relationships. This cognitive awareness plays through our brain with an
emotional soundtrack. It makes us sad. We might feel an emptiness. We
may be filled with a longing for contact. We feel isolated, distanced
from others, deprived. These feelings tear away at our emotional
well-being.
Despite the negative effects of loneliness, it can hardly be
considered abnormal. It is a most normal feeling. Everyone feels lonely
sometimes--after a break-up with a friend, when we move to a new place,
when we are excluded from some social gathering.
Chronic loneliness is something else entirely. It is one of the surest markers in existence for maladjustment.
In children, it leads to all kinds of problems. Failure to be
socially connected to peers is the real reason behind most school
dropouts. It sets in motion a course on which children spin their way
to outcast status and develop delinquency and other f orms of
antisocial behavior. In adults, loneliness is a major precipitant of
depression and alcoholism. And it increasingly appears to be the cause
of a range of medical problems, some of which take decades to show up.
Psychologist John Cacioppo of the University of Chicago has been
tracking the effects of loneliness. Recently he performed a series of
novel studies and reported that loneliness works in some surprising
ways to compromise health.
• Perhaps most astonishing, in a survey he conducted, doctors
themselves confided that they provide better or more complete medical
care to patients who have supportive families and are not socially
isolated.
• Lonely individuals report higher levels of perceived stress even
when exposed to the same stressors as non-lonely people, and even when
they are relaxing.
• The social interaction lonely people do have are not as positive
as those of other people, hence the relationships they have do not
buffer them from stress as relationships normally do.
• Loneliness raises levels of circulating stress hormones and
levels of blood pressure. It undermines regulation of the circulatory
system so that the heart muscle works harder and the blood vessels are
subject to damage by blood flow turbulence.
• Loneliness destroys the quality and efficiency of sleep, so that
it is less restorative, both physically and psychologically. They wake
up more at night and spend less time in bed actually sleeping than do
the nonlonely.
Loneliness, Cacioppo concludes, sets in motion a variety of
"slowly unfolding pathophysiological processes." The net result is that
the lonely experience higher levels of cumulative wear and tear. In
other words, we are built for social contact. There are serious
--life-threatening-- consequences when we don't get enough. We can't
stay on track mentally. And we are compromised physically and mentally.
Social skills are crucial for your health. So, see your Compeer friend,
take the time and work hard at establishing a meaningful relationship.
It is good for both of you.
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