Loneliness Flashcards
be strong, heal, and adjust
Remember that next time you feel alone
A season of loneliness and isolation is when the caterpillar gets its wings
Nearly half of adult Americans feel lonely.
You are definitely not alone.
People with lots of good friends
still get lonely
People in the healthiest and longest-living regions, “Blue Zones,” have __________________.
“rituals of connection,” repetitive social activities, i.e., long social dinners.
Explore loneliness…
…instead of numbing it with comfort-seeking, this makes you a happier and more whole human.
Fear of loneliness keeps us in toxic situations.
When you stop molding yourself to others’ expectations, the positive feedback stops, and you lose “friends.” You might feel unsupported, and it’s tough to walk away. It’s one-hundred percent worth it in the long run.
Embracing our humanity is powerful.
If this is a feeling that I have, this is definitely a feeling other humans have. We are all human beings, not superhumans or machines, and our vulnerabilities bring us closer.
It takes great strength to be willing to be lonely for growth.
For people who look down on me when I’m alone on a Friday night, I realize how uncomfortable they must be for being unable to accept aloneness. They must be even more uncomfortable than I am.
We all feel lonely.
Many of us feel very lonely. People who deny this or look down on loneliness are not people you want in your life anyway. Pretending to be a perfect human does not lead to real friendships.
Vulnerability is courageous.
Telling the stories that only we can tell leads us to healing, forgiveness, and love. Embracing all emotions — even the awkward, uncomfortable ones — makes us great artists and great humans.
You deserve to be with people who are …
…more concerned with loving you than afraid of losing you.
People in toxic situations stay for so long…
…not because, deep down, we feel we deserve it. Being in toxic environments makes you feel worthless.
People don’t leave because they don’t have the support and fear the loneliness. These experiences are growing pains that lead to freedom.
You will not always be lonely.
Healthy relationships take time to grow.
The more we can let go of our unhelpful conditioning, own our fullest selves, and channel our unique frequencies, the more we will…
…the more we will find and be capable of deeper connections.
How I’m learning to overcome loneliness:
- Acknowledge that loneliness sucks and is often real physical pain.
- Remember that you are not alone in your loneliness.
- Release your stories and judgments about the situation and be very clear about who’s opinions actually matter.
- Embrace loneliness as part of growth and transformation.
- See the opportunity to connect with and own your whole Self.
- Visualize the types of relationships that you want, including the relationship with yourself.
- Have faith and be open to support and ideas from unexpected places.