Categories
Depression Relationships Resilience Wellness

What to Do When You Feel Lonely in a Crowd

Jan and Mike’s Road Trip

Jan and Mike (not their real names) looked forward to their weekend get-away.  All week their jobs, household responsibilities and other commitments kept them from feeling personally connected.

As the couple set out for their three-hour road trip Mike felt happy to get away from work and chatted freely about:

  • the weather
  • the health of a man at his office
  • how he might fix the plumbing
  • politics
  • his questions about a teen they both knew

Jan felt dissatisfied with their experience. She finally said, “I don’t feel connected to you. We haven’t had a personal conversation all week and nothing we’ve talked about this morning helps me feel close to you now. I feel lonely even though we’re together.”

Melissa’s Attempt to Connect

Melissa (not her real name) retired from work and felt isolated. She hoped to connect with other women by joining a local book club. For months she read the assigned books, attended meetings smiled and chatted cheerfully with other club members.

Still Melissa never felt connected in the club. Long-standing friendships among several members seemed obvious and no one there seemed anxious to know Melissa better. Pleasant conversations at the meetings focused on the book read, impersonal news and the exchange of other information. Melissa felt lonely at these meetings.

We Can Feel Lonely in a Crowd

We live in an individualistic, achievement-celebrating culture. Many of us get together with others for a variety of worthy purposes without ever being together. People can be together and still feel lonely in:

  • families that shame vulnerability, emotion and independent thinking
  • marriages built around practical function more than soul connection
  • structured meetings that limit personal sharing
  • places where screens and entertainment curtail conversation
  • recreation & volunteer programs that organize parallel (vs. interactive) activity
  • sit-and-learn education settings

We Need Intimacy

God created us for physical, spiritual and emotional intimacy. The original Hebrew word yada reveals the emotional intimacy of the first marriage (Gen 4:1). Scripture celebrates many deeply personal and loving friendships including those of:

God made us so that loneliness depletes health and closeness fortifies vitality.  Psychological benefits of intimacy include resiliency and reduced risk of mental illness. Physical benefits include lower risk of disease and improved outcomes (including lower mortality rates) once disease strikes. God wants His people connected.

How to Build Personal Connections

Connection takes intentional time and effort. Here are four steps to connecting better when you feel lonely in a crowd:

1. Develop self awareness

Intimacy happens when two people share their deep selves and that requires self awareness. I seek self awareness through prayer, journaling and feedback from others. Read this for help with self awareness.

2. Identify emotionally-available people

Most gatherings leave room for brief conversations that let us us detect who wants to get better acquainted and who doesn’t. People who do:

  • show interest and listen carefully
  • ask questions about you
  • make eye contact and use open body language
  • respond with empathy and stick up for you
  • offer acceptance and affirmations
  • share things about themselves
  • invite you to do things
  • offer to help you

Look for emotionally available people and act available yourself. If you don’t connect in the groups you frequent over time try out some new groups. Look for meeting structures that leave space for personal connection and for leaders who understand that people just want to be together (thanks for teaching me this Ellen Cook!).

3. Create opportunities to connect

If your schedule keeps you busy with things that afford only superficial connection try scheduling events that foster conversation like:

  • A walk in the park
  • coffee or lunch
  • an old-fashioned telephone visit
  • a road trip together
  • meeting to share and pray
  • running errands together
  • doing low-concentration tasks side-by-side that enable conversation

4. Take conversations to a personal level

Emotional intimacy happens when conversation goes deeper than chit-chat and the exchange of information to focus on:

  • current feelings
  • personal meaning made of events & circumstances
  • expectations and plans for the future
  • hopes, dreams and desires
  • worries, fears and concerns
  • personal needs
  • present challenges and struggles
  • greatest joys

Conclusion

I hope you enjoy emotional intimacy with a few trusted others. If you do, guard against  stagnation and keep your relationship personal. If you don’t have intimate relationships, take steps to get closer to someone soon.

God made us for emotional intimacy. Closeness feeds our soul and blesses our bodies. Life is short so don’t miss the yada God intends for your life!

Cheryl

Categories
Depression Grief Parenting Personal Growth Relationships

Why You Should Come Out of the Cry Closet

 

Two weeks ago I blogged about the day I started crying in church. A song reminded me of my late brother and I decided not to push back my tears but to have a good cry in the ladies’ room. I didn’t share what happened next.

Categories
Depression Grief Parenting

Why You Can Cry if You Want To

I was still a teenager when I sat in a Sunday communion service irreverently looking around instead of praying. Looking back I don’t think God minded that I looked around because of what I saw.

Categories
Depression Marriage Parenting Personal Growth Relationships Wellness

Do You Get Tired of All the Blaming?

Mark felt seriously disgruntled with his life. He lived next door to John and often showed up at John’s house to “shoot the breeze.” His neighborly visits typically turned into Mark’s personal gripe sessions.

Mark complained about his ex-wife and blamed her for their divorce. He criticized his adult children for not staying in touch. He used a quiver of arrows to take shots at his boss, co-workers, the church he left, politicians and the coach of the local baseball team. Unable to bear it any longer John finally confronted Mark about his complaining and blaming.

Categories
Depression Marriage Personal Growth Relationships Wellness

Why Everyone Needs a Confidant (and How to Get One)

Photo by Cole Hutson on Unsplash

John’s wife and two children stared blankly at the living room walls after expending all the tears and angry words they could muster at the moment.  Together they sat wondering, “What happened?”

Categories
Depression Grief Marriage Parenting Personal Growth Relationships Wellness

The Truth about Feelings

 

Have you ever heard the words, “You shouldn’t feel that way?” Do you sometimes feel guilty about your feelings? Life is made up of thoughts, feelings and actions. We know the right way to think (rationally) and the correct way to act (lovingly). But can we know the right way to feel? 

Categories
Depression Personal Growth Relationships Resilience Wellness

Do You Need Group Power?

In the beginning God said “It’s not good for the man to be alone” (Gen 2:18) so He created Eve. Before long the first couple landed outside the garden where they struggled with the same hardships and family dysfunctions we face today.

Categories
Marriage Relationships Resilience Wellness

What You Need to Know about Domestic Violence

Valentine fun fell a little flat for most people this year. We had to digest news of the Florida school shooting on 2/14 as well as reports of 9 police murders taking place between 2/5 and 2/21.

Categories
Relationships Wellness

Sure-to-Please Gift Ideas for Valentine’s

It’s February! Let the season of chocolates, roses and romance unfold!

Are you ready for Valentine’s Day? I just returned from our neighborhood store (Dollar Tree) with a fist full of affordable cards to send to people I love. I’m preparing gift bags for my grandchildren and wondering how to best love my husband when the holiday arrives.

Categories
Personal Growth Resilience Wellness

10 Life Lessons from a 90-Year-Old Who Jumped Out of an Airplane

It’s my pleasure to know a special 90-year old man named Carl. We go to the same church and everyone I know who’s met him loves and admires Carl.  He decided to follow Jesus as a  very young man and spent his life loving God and others well.

Last November Carl marked his 90th birthday by jumping out of an airplane. I watched him reach this milestone and wondered what  I could learn from his experience so I recently sat down with him to ask some questions.