Guest guest Posted August 13, 2006 Report Share Posted August 13, 2006 http://www.telegraph.co.uk/fashion/main.jhtml?xml=/fashion/2006/08/13/stlone13.x\ ml & page=1 Feeling lonely? You're not alone. With seven million people living on their own, Britain is turning into a nation of loners - and it's making us ill. By Jan Masters I remember a particular visit to my GP some years ago, when I'd been living on my own for quite a while. The ailment was minor: a twisted ankle. But as the doctor crouched down, asking me all relevant medical questions, he gently cradled my foot in his hand and without warning (and as much to my surprise as to his) I burst into tears. It was the concerned touch that did it, the uncomplicated physical connection. And in that moment I realised that no matter how many friends were at the end of a phone, how many stellar events studded my diary, however much I knew it was better to live solo than in a sour relationship (something I still wholeheartedly believe) and however well I was coping (which was pretty damn well as it happened) it was possible to feel lonely. And never admit it to others. Not even to oneself. After all, loneliness is hardly an acceptable badge for the cool and the capable. It's for misfits in bedsits, tweed-skirted spinsters of the parish, old soldiers relegated by relatives to retirement homes. Besides, we reason, everything's different now. How can anyone be lonely in a world where you can call your mother from a mountain top, speed-date 50 potential mates in an evening and speed-mail 20 friends in a second? Yet in a new study by researchers from Scottish and Australian universities, one in three adults say they feel lonely. And they're not the ones crocheting tea-cosies in their twilight years - loneliness levels start to rise at 20, peaking between 40 and 49. As one of the authors, William Lauder, professor of nursing at the University of Dundee, says, 'This study challenges the belief that people get lonelier as they get older.' And loneliness isn't just about stoically smiling by day and sobbing into your sauvignon at night: it makes you unwell. 'It can increase the risk of conditions such as heart disease and depression,' says Professor Lauder. 'Previous research has indicated that, health-wise, it carries a similar level of risk to obesity.' Indeed other studies show it can lower immune function and, as a cause of illness and death, is comparable to a sedentary lifestyle, poor diet and possibly even smoking. And although loneliness is a condition distinct from depression, it can be a causal factor - a lonely woman is eight times more likely to become depressed. Research by Dr John Cacioppo, a professor at the University of Chicago's department of psychology, has also established a link between loneliness and high blood pressure. In a study of college students, all of whom had similar blood-pressure levels, a measurement of the constriction of blood vessels - called the total peripheral resistance (TPR) - was higher in those who were lonely. While young, the body can compensate, but it becomes an important factor in high blood pressure as you age. One explanation is that lonely people react differently to stress. They're more anxious, and withdraw rather than solve problems. Another is that they sleep less well, failing to reap the restorative benefits of quality rest. No wonder some healthcare specialists believe we have to start taking the problem seriously. 'Tackling it is very important as it is a common and potentially health-threatening phenomenon,' agrees Professor Lauder. And it may become more so, especially as some researchers predict higher levels of loneliness will spread to older sectors of society once the baby-boomers hit retirement, partly because fewer of them are in long-term relationships than earlier generations. Certainly, more people are living alone now - seven million (four times as many as in 1961), and around 30 per cent of all British households are single occupancy. And though most people believe they won't live alone forever, many are destined to be disappointed. Projections suggest that by 2031, one in five women between 45 and 50 will never have married and will have no partner, knowing only short-term, informal relationships. What's more, once people live solo they are more likely to continue in that arrangement. Part of the reason loneliness is casting a longer shadow is that many of us move around for work, cramming into urban areas, far away from our extended family. Our closest friends may be the ones who live furthest away. 'I pour my energy into my job, which means a lot of socialising is quite superficial,' admits one of my friends. 'And with communication so instant and virtual, it's easy to think you're in contact with loads of people, when in reality you're living an isolated lifestyle.' Another confides she's suffering from a different brand of loneliness - what she calls 'white-flag loneliness' because the umpteenth relationship has failed and she feels too worn down to do much about it. 'At the moment it's easier to slump on the sofa with something nice from M & S, even though it means I don't see a soul all weekend.' But while circumstance can make you 'state-lonely', scientists say you can also be 'trait-lonely'- in other words, loneliness can be in your genes. A study in the Netherlands found that identical twins were far more likely than non-identical twins to share this trait. And when Cacioppo carried out brain-imaging tests on lonely and non-lonely young adults, he found physiological differences. For a start, when the lonely were shown positive images of happy, smiling people, the reward centres in their brains were less excited than in the non-lonely, suggesting they saw connecting with others as a less fulfilling experience. What's more, when shown negative pictures (for example, a battered woman) they registered a stronger threat/surveillance response. The upshot? The lonely tend to anticipate negative outcomes from social exchanges, so they engage in self-protective, distancing or even hostile behaviour - a cheery hello from a stranger is met with suspicion; cheeky chat-up lines from the new guy at work, with derision - which in turn elicits the very cold-shoulder response they fear. The good news is that whatever the trigger, it is possible to leapfrog loneliness. 'If you're born with the loneliness trait but are taught to manage it, you might never become lonely.' In fact, Cacioppo sees loneliness as a valuable emotion, a drive that, in evolutionary terms, has long motivated humans to do something about their social isolation, whether propelling them to the safety of the fold to share hunting stories and sabre-tooth tiger steaks, or encouraging us to get off the sofa and go salsa-dancing. 'Loneliness isn't a death sentence or a life sentence - it's a signal,' says Cacioppo. Some advice from Professor Cary Cooper, professor of organisational psychology and health at Lancaster University: cut down on text and email. ' Relying on these things stems from a need to fill the gap from the loss of community but, ironically, what starts out as a need to reach out can isolate you more. It's a kind of CAVE syndrome - Communication Addiction in a Virtual Environment. You're only maintaining friendships, not investing in them - and there's a difference.' Another tack some therapists suggest is to accept and face loneliness head-on, the contention being that an inability to spend time alone can make matters worse, encouraging you to cling to empty friendships or unsuitable partners. Enjoying 'positive solitude', the theory goes, can act as an antidote to loneliness. Although I've never been chronically lonely, I can see how this works, because when I became bored of being Ms Gooseberry and tired of girlie get-togethers, I took the decision to go out more alone - to embrace my single status - not by propping up bars, but by taking myself off to films, the theatre and comedy gigs. Difficult at first; pleasurable (and self-esteem boosting) once you get used to it. On one such outing, after giving an almost-solo standing ovation to a dancer at the Royal Opera House, I got chatting to a man, also out on his own. We clicked. We dated. And now I'm in the most rewarding relationship of my life. But had I not got the hang of being happier in my skin, (a) I wouldn't have booked the ballet, (b) I wouldn't have felt confident enough to stand and cheer and © he wouldn't have warmed to me, nor approached me. The fact is, I've never been uncomfortably lonely since I learnt to be comfortable being alone. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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