emma peel

emma peel
Location
La dolce vita, Canada
Birthday
December 10
Title
Citizen of the world
Company
Inside my head
Bio
A writer is an egomaniac with low self-esteem. Disclaimer Please be advised that what you read here does not represent anyone at OS, or anyone else in the known blogosphere, or world outside the Internet unless specifically stated. I've spent most of my life as a journalist, arts and film critic, editor, educator and writing coach. I've been lucky enough to travel extensively and to meet many fascinating famous and ordinary people. I live in a beautiful part of the world that sustains my soul. I am blessed to have an understanding husband and loyal friends. I have a sharp edge, but underneath I am an idealist and a romantic. My heart breaks at all the stupidity, injustice and cruelty in the world. I will never stop fighting against it.

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NOVEMBER 5, 2010 10:18PM

All the lonely people

Rate: 85 Flag

Many years ago when I was a reporter for a daily paper I covered a visit by Mother Teresa to the small northern Alberta town of Lac la Biche. I have never been religious, nor have I ever been a supporter of hers, but she said something to the thousands who flocked to see her that hot spring day that has always stayed with me. She commented that while the land we lived in was vast, and vastly wealthy, we were poor. Poor in the sense that we suffered from the affliction of loneliness that causes so many of us to languish and waste away, hidden in nursing homes, trapped in our houses and apartments, shackled by sorrow, shame and self-defeat. Her words resonated with me because loneliness, then and now, has been a  part of my life for as long as I can remember. Yet I am one of the "lucky" lonely.

I am not part of the legions roaming the streets, invisible in their poverty, homelessness and despair, nor am I shut away waiting to die alone in a place where strangers are paid to take care of me. I am, however, a woman who is no longer young and rapidly becoming invisible in ways that underscore the fate of most women in a culture that reveres only fertile and beautiful females. Every year I age, I matter less. The same is true for men after a certain age, but it's true for women cruelly soon. The loneliness of no longer mattering is palpable when I walk through my mother's nursing home where women are predominant. It is a presence as thick and suffocating as a too-tight collar. I make it a point to talk to residents other than my mother there; the men, many of them too proud to make the first move, and the women, whose eyes focus and shine when they are spoken to individually. I often think of my favourite Katharine Mansfield short story, Miss Brill, when I wonder about the possibility of ending up a discarded old woman. Today, I haven't been able to get the lyrics of The Beatles' Eleanor Rigby out of my head. 

Being alone is not the same as being lonely

As Donna Carbone noted in her recent post, loneliness is an epidemic that infiltrates all age groups and income levels with devastating physical and psychological effects. Seniors are the most obvious victims, but many children, teenagers and adults also suffer its torments. But loneliness is not the same as being alone. I enjoy being alone, and have spent literally weeks by myself. I've gone on long trips to Third World countries where no one spoke English, not even the few tourists I encountered. When I first moved to Vancouver, I was so devastated by the loss of my career that I spent months in a grief-stricken fog with only my cat for company. The loneliest time of my life was when I was in a successful job and a long-distance relationship; the second-loneliest when I was a young teenager with no friends because I had just moved to a new city. I remember going to see The Who by myself and being taunted by a group of teens who seemed personally affronted that I was alone; indeed, as far as I could tell, I was the only unaccompanied person in the large arena. When I became a journalist and critc, I was already  used to travelling and eating alone, never mind attending films, plays and concerts by myself. As a woman, I was also used to being alternately harassed or ignored for the social crime of being a "lone" female. I was given bad tables in restaurants and overcharged, accused of being a prostitute and asked to leave when I entered the bars of hotels where I stayed, treated nastily by other women and men in authority –– it was all part of traversing the everyday world. 

I have been told that this ease of being alone, if not lonely, is not "normal." I once worked with a middle-aged woman who was terrified of spending a weekend alone because in 62 years, she had never been completely alone.  That is unfathomable to me. Even now, I spend a lot of time by myself because my workaholic husband is either at work, or shut away in his office when he is home. I'm still socially "single" most of the time even though I have many friends. 

Alone on a mountaintop

This is unheard of in some cultures. When I spent time in Indonesia and other Asian countries in the late 80s and early 90s, I was surprised that almost no one went anywhere or did anything alone. It used to annoy me when strangers would ask, "Where are you going?, or would sit right next to me at the top of a mountain when we were the only people there. Then I learned that not only were they just being friendly, practicing their English and occasionally trying to sell me something, they could not comprehend that I wanted to be alone. So strong was their sense of family and community that the thought of a woman travelling with no man and no children was utterly alien to them. 

We don't necessarily share that community connection in western culture where the emphasis is on individualism and materialism. The more we have, or don't have, the less connected we are to our neighbours and community. This is the spiritual poverty that leads to the terrible loneliness Mother Teresa spoke of, a loneliness borne of fear that ultimately robs us of lives well lived. 

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@bbd and sixty -- I'm sorry your initial comments got lost. They were much appreciated.
Loneliness and being alone, two different yet linked states of being. Interesting post, glad to see you again.
Mother Theresa's same thoughts have been echoed by the Dalai Lama when he says (paraphrased here) we have been too the moon but often don't know our neighbours across the street. Pity ...

I find the older I get I'm preferring to be alone more. But it is the good kind of alone at this point. That women become so invisible (also read disposable) is a very sad commentary on our culture. I believe the older women are the wisest among us.
Having friends with whom you can while away some time, preferably at a cozy local pub, makes a lot of difference. Solitude is fine so long as there are opportunities for good conversation. I'm sure OS fills that void for some.
This is a thoughtful post, Emma. I'm very familiar with "Miss Brill", thank you for the link. It was a difficult story to teach the teens because of the concept of loneliness and age. I think you're talking about a chosen loneliness when you say "lucky" lonely, as opposed to those who are lonely due to neglect. You're not really lonely, nor alone - you have an alternative and a choice. You need time and space for yourself, which is a luxury. Lonely people have no alternatives - they are discarded and left by themselves. I agree that loneliness is not akin to being alone; that one can be alone but not lonely, and vice versa. What I've come to see more and more in North American society is that individualism and materialism push people towards these states. I too enjoy being alone, but I dread becoming disconnected one day. ~R
I should clarify that I posted this accidentally before I was finished and the two initial comments and rates disappeared.

@Thanks, rita.
@Scarlett, I've heard that quote from the Dalai Lama. It's true -- I tried to get to know my neighbours, but one house doesn't speak any English and the other just wasn't interested. At least I tried!
@Abrawang: The pubs in England were great for that. I hear they're dying out tho.
Emma, I'm always up for a discussion about being alone, vs. lonely. When my marriage #2 cracked apart, I was both. Gradually, the loneliness lifted, and I've grown to appreciate the time I have alone. (Not least for catching up on the work that falls behind when I'm NOT alone.)

I was a pianist, a long, long time ago. Practicing 8-9 hours a day, I came to be happy with waves of aloneness, and waves of being with people. And since then, I've never been much of one to share my problems with anyone - I just got into the habit of working everything out one by myself, one note at a time.

Thanks for a thoughtful post.
@FusanA: Thank you for your comment. I have been truly lonely at times, and I know how alienating it feels. I've always been a bit of an outsider. But the loneliness of neglect is far worse, and it's something that worries me. I am always shocked by how lonely so many are, how marginalized. I don't want to be like Miss Brill, sitting on the bench living vicariously through others who mock her.
I am a 'lucky' lonely one as well. I enjoy my solitude but I do not always choose the solitude in which I find myself. Yesterday, I found myself in a bar that reminded me of my 20's and the need to be "SEEN". And I saw, as a woman over 30, that I am no longer visible to this segment of the population. It was an odd, yet liberating realization.
Although I enjoy good company, there are many people who - well, let just say my time could be better spent without them. If its a choice between being alone and spending time with an unpleasant person, I'll take "alone" any day.
I believe psychologists will attest to the fact that both men and women are equally affected by "invisibility" in this country. I wonder if this gradual loss of "visibility" is a natural process or a byproduct of our culture?
Very nice post. I'm glad that you pointed out the difference between being lonely and alone. I like being alone sometimes and I've also felt lonely in a room full of people. Great read!
@Divorce Bard: I think music and writing are two of the loneliest occupations, although musicians sometimes do work in the company of other musicians. I tend to work out problems on my own too, more out of habit than anything.
@Padraig: I never felt uncomfortable being a woman alone until someone made me feel weird about it if you know what I mean.
@True, Stellaa.
@mypsyche: It is liberating. On the flip side, sometimes I wonder who those old guys are looking at and then I realize that it's me! :)
glad to see you again ms peel. you were missed, and of course, as usual, a nice post.
In the words of Marilyn Monroe -- if I'm gonna be alone, I'd rather be by myself.
You might also appreciate this little ditty of mine:

Eloise

Life was not kind to Eloise
The glasses and the straggly hair
The playground hung with haunting taunts
That lingered ringing in the air

Life was not kind to Eloise
The boys who called for phantom dates
And watched her, laughing in their cars
While she could only lonely wait

And all those years behind her desk
And going home to no one there
And all those weekly payroll checks
And no one there to share ....

Life was not kind to Eloise
The funeral where no one came
And all that stock she'd bought and kept
And left in her cat's name
I'm not a by-myself type gal. I've often thought that if communes were in fashion....However, I can appreciate the difference between lonely and alone.

My grandmother died alone and lonely in a Home; it was not her children's' fault, but seeing that on our periodic visits scared me and I hope against hope to avoid it.
There are all sorts of people. I am one sort. Somehow different. As a kid I never ran with a gang or a crowd. I found most other people rather peculiar, needing approval from other kids. I never gave a damn. I have spent a long life and never found anybody who was interested in the same things I am fascinated by and now I am quite old and have stopped looking. I don't feel superior to people, merely different. I relate to animals. I feel sympathy for young trees that are viciously broken by kids who like to destroy things merely to feel the power of destruction, to make meaningless messes. When I walk by people walking their dogs the dogs and I look at each other and they strain at their leashes wanting to come over and say hello and their owners walk by restraining them.

I know a few people and when I spend time with them the things they talk about have little or no interest for me. It's a waste of time and a nuisance.

I live alone with a sparrow and a swift that came to me as babies and that I raised to keep them from dying on the street. I feed wild birds and they know and welcome me and there is no misunderstanding as to why. When people see me feeding wild birds they scream at me and make me feel criminal so I do it at lonely places where the birds and I can enjoy each other in peace.
In general, I don't dislike people, but I find them irrational and dangerous and frequently unpleasant and boring.

I don't miss people. Am I lonely? I really couldn't say.
Thanks for the Mother T story. I photographed her once in India at her
center and she came over to me and held a little cow statue i was carrying and and made a moo sound. Now thats the sign of a true Mother as the hindus would put it. Thanks for this. Indeed we have become poorer with all our material wealth.
Emma, you are so gifted. xox
@THERANGER1: I'm with you about preferring being alone to being with unpleasant people, or people I don't like. I think our culture's emphasis on youth does make us more invisible. Old people are revered and powerful in many countries, just not ours.

@Thanks Roger!

@Don, thanks for stopping by. Always a pleasure.

@Tom: Love the ditty and the Marilyn quote. Classic.

@Blue in Tx: That is what scares me. I am the only one there for my mother, and I didn't have children. Who will be there for me?

@Padraig: Thanks for understanding.

@Jan: What you wrote has moved me very much. You are a kind and sensitive person, and most people are afraid of what they don't understand. You remind me very much of my brother. He had a special touch with animals and usually preferred them to people. Animals always come to me as well. The world is a boorish place much of the time, but there are gentle people in it too who manage not to be crushed by it. My brother spent most of his life alone, not always by choice, but like you, he came to prefer it in the end. Thank you for visiting my blog and sharing your story with me.

@tomreedtoon: You make an interesting point I hadn't thought of but I don't think that I am out of touch with my anger. I have a pretty healthy sense of who and what is to blame for a lot of things and don't mind saying so. I can be sentimental, but I'm a pragmatist at heart and I don't confuse the two. There is a culture of denial and self-blame in our culture, but I find that it's often disguised as misplaced anger and entitlement.

@Algis: That's a great story! How is your kitty by the way?
Great distinctions and ideas laid out nicely. The invisible part, the annihilation of vast swaths of humanity - yes, that needs to be acknowledged at least. Thanks for another great post.
As a white-knuckled male in a sea of family and friends, who chooses to live alone, mostly, I relate.
As a level man who tries to read broadly, tries to travel widely, I find remarks like tomreedtoon's " stupidity and coldness " ( of the human race ) insular and confusing.
It doesn't help, I don't think, to paint the world one colour.
All up and down these streets where I live are folk who welcome company, and those who don't. It's up to each of us to figure this out : who, in our community, could use a friend.
This is it. This is all we've got. We can be invisible or loved.
I'm sorry to read, Emma, that you're married to a workaholic.
Jesus fucking Christ. Really?

People who are lonely either reach out or they don't. I worked in a nursing home while in high-school (think smelling urine every time I clocked in) and the folks that had NO visitors, the ones that I fretted over, had no visitors for a good reason.

As the summer progressed, I learned that the folks that I was so worried about, the ones who were so lonely, the ones that had no visitors, were lonely for good reason. They were bitter assholes.

Life lesson at 17 years old? We reap what we fucking sow.

Look up, look out, be interested and interesting and upbeat, and you will never be lonely. Smile!!! Get your game face on and make the best of your interactions, and the folks making the best of THEIR interactions will gravitate to you. Positive is good, right?

"Lonely" is self imposed.

You know that I adore you, Emma, but to suggest that everyone who is lonely is somehow a sad, innocent victim of modern society is silly. I say that they marginalize and disenfranshise their own damned selves.

(But don't get me started on the aging women thing......because that's whole 'nother kettle of stinking fish.....)

Did I mention that I love reading you?
This was a truly excellent aqnd well written post. I also am not religious one whit, have a certain negligible amount of distaste even for the Roman Catholic Church, but still have always revered Theresa as a true saint by any standard even secular, and revered her for her life-long service to those who could not reward her for her help.

One of the reasons that I value this forum so, is that finding it difficult to make friends in the normal world where you might state something clumsily as preface to a larger overall thought, we are usually offered a chance to flesh out a generalization eventually, and find a true virtual community when little such remains available in the "real" world.
I usually think in paragraphs, and in verbal conversation others think I'm finished because I inhale.
Don't have to worry so much about that in here because you can get it out before you hit Post this!
Which makes me less lonely.
Sorry for the typos, I'm getting blind apparently.
And P.S. perfect musical choice as illustration, the genius that was the gestalt of the Beatles perfectly encapsulated the loneliness of a disparate selection of human archetypes.
Giving the nod to such exalts us all.
Fred, did you read my (sadly, but honestly profane) comment?

Lonely folks need to friggin' own their situation........change it up.

Look UP and OUT.

Life is always about choices.
My daughter complained about not meeting any "cool" people in Seattle, and I said, "Volunteer." You care about Global Warming, you are passionate to the point that you refuse to drive a car.

VOLUNTEER! You will meet people that share your passion!

Are you freaking kidding me? Step up and get engaged and quit your fucking bitching. No matter what you are interested in, I promise you that there are groups where you live that you can volunteer to work with that will not only help the friggin' world (and even directly help folks where you live) but will provide you with opportunities to connect with cool people.

Get all over this volunteer business.......and stop moaning about being "lonely."

Get out there and do good work for your community, and reap the benefits by engaging with cool people that think like you.

Win WIN, as I see it.
I read this post twice. There is so much here to think about. I appreciate my time alone and am rarely lonely. But I love my family and friends and know that I have the luxury of *not* being alone if I choose.
I am also healthy and "young" enough to enjoy life. In other words, I appreciate the luxury I have of being alone when I choose now, but wonder as I get older, will I still feel that way? There are so many elderly people who are lonely and disconnected and solitude is anything but a pleasure.
This is such a thought-provoking piece~ it makes me want to run to the nearest nursing home and find some people to visit.~r
A very interesting meditation on solitude. I agree that being alone can be a real pleasure, yet so many people think there's something wrong with that. My mom is amazed that I can go to see a movie alone. As for older women being excluded, even now I'm starting to feel that way. It's so sad what society dictates. Thanks for something to reflect on. And I hope you'll be able to find a silver lining. At least you're strong enough to appreciate being alone, and thus probably have a good sense of self. R.
Very interesting post. I too remember when Mother Teresa observed that poverty takes more than one form, and I agree that the western culture's emphasis on individualism and materialism causes our disconnect from community, and a resulting spiritual poverty. Much to think about in your post.
Thank you for adding some perspective to this difficult subject which so often occupies my thoughts. I am most comfortable being alone, yet complain to myself that I am lonely. I have a reason - people make me uncomfortable. But I must do something about it before I am too old to. Because age does make contact harder.
Well done, Emma. I couldn't agree with you more. (As you may know I wrote the book "Solo Traveler" and am on panels talking about becoming independent rather than lonely.) Alone is not lonely. Some people, alas, never find that out.
"Language... has created the word loneliness to express the pain of being alone. And it has created the word solitude to express the glory of being alone." - Paul Johannes Tillich, The Eternal Now
This is just terrific, Emma. Rated.
Nicely done, Emma. I LOVE being alone and I really hate when people just "show up." I'm waiting for someone to distribute doormats that don't say WELCOME; instead, I want one that says, DID YOU CALL FIRST? I also think there is a difference between the state of being alone and being isolated--often the latter can lead to loneliness, such as nursing homes.

My first trip abroad was with a group. After that, I said never again and all my subsequent trips abroad were happily ALONE!

Rated.
I love Katherine Mansfield. ...and loved this post. I actually enjoy being alone very much. It's the flipside of my long days with hundreds of people in small spaces and classrooms. Valuable views beautifully woven. thanks!
I am fine being alone when travelling but despise it home due to spending so much time alone when ill. However I was most alone in my second marriage. Outwardly it looked like I had a companion but I did not.
Great Song. Great Post.
I've missed your posts Emma, and I was glad this morning to see I had a new one to read.
This is a very interesting piece, and certainly thought provoking. There are so many different forms of lonliness, being lonely and being alone. You've scratched the surface, but perhaps thats the best thing to do. As I read through the comments, I see everyone has a slightly different take (the mark of a good piece!).
I remember being a "popular" teenager who felt so terribly lonely that I would often climb up on rooftops just so I could go deeply into the lonliness I felt while surrounded by people. It took many years to understand and accept just how very different we all are and that the sensitivity I felt was both a blessing and a curse. And I remember thinking - Eleanor Rigby - the Beatles are the most popular people in the world and even they get it!
The cultural contrast you draw is fascinating. I do think that we in the West are taught to value our individuality so much that, to a degree, we shun community as invasions of privacy, viewing other social arrangements as bee- or ant-like loss of personal identity in the communal mind. There are gains in that, of course: opportunities to explore individual creativity. Here you show the flip side.

Perhaps monasteries had it right: the balance between individual spiritual exploration and communal life.

Interesting piece here, emma.
I have to agree with Ginny that people who are hopelessly lonely may need to work on their social skills. Having said that, though, I think you can end up in marriages (my first one) or regions that are chilly, self-obsessed and which place very little value on connection and intimacy.

We've just come back from five days with my best friend from high school (!) who lives in rural Canada. It astonishes me how easily we share intimacies while the people I "know" in NY where I live skate along on faux cheer and facade. I hate it.
I know hundreds of people here but often feel lonely....while my Canadian friendships, even by phone or email, remain nurturing and sustaining...Who knows why? But it may well determine where we choose to retire.
Hello Emma...The essay is beautifully written, nonetheless sad. I do understand the depth of those feelings. In our society, women are discarded wel before men and this is a fact I cannot accept.

I'm fortunate, perhaps more than most because of my creative life, both in the studio, and at my computer. Creativity has always saved me. When my brother died suddenly, it was writing...working with my dear friend Stave Arney on a rediculous stroy that saved me from the depths of lonliness and depression.

In the late 70's I wrote a phrase to a dear friend in a letter that seemed to serve as a balm for the mind and for summoning a better outlook. Years later she wrote the words back to me and told me the words helped many times:

"I feel creativity calling me back from a long voyage of uncertainty.
The slow tides of everyday existence begin to churn with the eruptions of the mind. From a distance, I gaze into my mind's best parts for guidance, and in the silence of my studio, I observe the birth of many dreams."
Very well written post. Thank you.

As food for thought, I find, as time goes by, I appreciate my solitude more and more. There seem to be two reasons. First, it is becoming more vital to have undistracted time to clarify my thoughts, my understanding of the world around me. Second is that I seem to have a "daily quota" of human interaction. Once I reach that quota, any further interaction feels like "borrowing from the future." Eventually, I come to the point of needing to stop "borrowing" in order to retain a sense of proportion.

But that's just me.

-R-
When I was a La Leache League breastfeeding counselor, I posted my name in about 20 places around town, urging people to call me 24/7. No one abused the offer, though many new moms didn't call when they should have. If you need to call someone, email me (address on blog description) and I will send you my phone number. I don't check private messages often enough, but I always check email. Don't call between 1 AM and 6 AM. My home phone through cablevision offers 24.7, 365 days at the same low place, so I could call you if you pay for long distance.
I was VERY lonely yesterday - no internet access. (Upgrading to hi-speed in the boonies - apparently not entirely straightforward). Today I'm back on the net...but got stuff to do all day. Tonight a small kinda party. Next weekend a small kinda conference - than a trip with a good friend for a couple of weeks. Come December I will be happy to be alone again and re-charge.
I have often thought about the very subject you wrote about in this very good article. It seems, though, that I am never alone and would like to be sometimes. Your fear of ending up a discarded old woman is shared by me and many others, I am sure.
Now that I too am invisible I always carry a little digital camera when I go outside.
This is an eloquently written, astute observation. Anyone doubting the deleterious psychological effects of loneliness need only read Atul Gawande's piece in the 30 March 2009 New Yorker about solitary confinement, a most popular punishment in the United States. You have pointed out that it is inflicted on more than the officially imprisoned.

http://www.newyorker.com/reporting/2009/03/30/090330fa_fact_gawande
And this is precisely why I wish you'd write more, Emma. Thought-provoking and profound.

Your insight into other cultures' approach to loneness fascinated me. And I am in complete agreement about the ageing factor as it affects women and men. One sees it in the dismissive attitudes of everyone from shop clerks to politicians. If you're old, you don't matter, is the message.

But ... we can make a difference, even now. Over my desk is a framed memento from a group of women called the "Amazing Greys", who meet weekly to knit clothing for people in Ukraine.

I thought they were terrific and did a story, not long before I chucked it in, saying they were running out of wool; they were swamped with donations from up to 200 miles away. In appreciation, they sent me an adoption certificate. It's one of only two things from that life that I have on the office wall.
Enjoyed reading this very much, emma, as well as the many comments... having lived all over this country I would agree with the thought that certain areas might be more chilly than others, but to my observation it's more the fit between the area of the country and the personality of the individual that would create loneliness in that case.
While I can be lonely here in the Pacific Northwest, others in my family have moved here and fit right in. And yes, Ginny, thanks for such compassionate encouragement to those who are lonely-- I do volunteer, I do get out, I work, I play-- I just don't relate very often to what is appealing to people here. In other areas where I've lived, I've been content while others in my family couldn't relate to the area and became lonely, no matter how involved their lives were there.
I'd suppose this country's large size plays a part, the individualism here plays a part-- Latinos we've met while living all over this country have been befuddled by our large houses for one or two people, while Grannie's in the old folks home??
Hell, even attitudes about work and how often, or being at home with kids and how long, to how late is late on a weekend evening can play a part in finding company or a friend...and Americans are good at judging what's NOT for them-- walking away from a friend who's imperfect is more prevalent here than many places around the world.....
There are as many reasons for loneliness as each lonely person I'd guess...
A thought-provoking post, Emma. There are times when I enjoy being alone; in fact, I "require" it on a fairly regular basis.Being lonely is an entirely different matter. I've been both. As you stated, choosing to be alone is quite different from being lonely. I think loneliness has reached epidemic proportions in the US, for a number of reasons. And what a sad state of affairs that is.
Great post, Emma.
thoughtful piece, variations in individual temperament may make the difference between experiencing loneliness or blessed solitude, and some of those who are never lonely seem unable to empathize with the desolation of others

my own experience tells me that loneliness is tied to feeling unloved
I have always marveled at how I can be surrounded by people and yet still feel so all alone. I understand this so well.
So many great comments. So much food for thought. I intend to answer each one, but will have to do it in stages!

@Robin: Thank you!
@Delia: I appreciate your stopping by.
@Kim: What you write makes a lot of sense. If there is anything that I've learned, it's that just when we think we've got things figured out, it all changes. Re hubby: I knew that going in, I just didn't realize the scope of it. According to his friends, he's slowed down a bit.
@Ginny: It's true that we create our own reality, but being "positive" is a bit too simplistic. People who are ill, disabled, old, poor or "different" often find themselves alone and lonely through no fault of their own. My cultural thesis is a broad stroke -- there are always exceptions -- but in general, I find North America to be more alienating than many other places I've lived and travelled.
@skypixieo: I'm looking forward to reading your story.
@Fred: Thank you for your comment, especially the parallels to the online community. Eleanor Rigby has always been on of my favourite songs for all the reasons you mention.
Came back to read this again and the comments. I would add this: Maybe it's less a North American thing than a northern thing. I grew up in the Midwest but have lived in the South the past nearly four decades. Whether it's because of different ethnic enclaves in the northern and southern states or the traditional lifestyles - industrial, north; agrarian south - southern families are closer. My German/Scandinavian heritage is probably partly to blame for the fact that my relatives on both sides feud more often than they forgive, and they scatter. Here in Virginia I know people my age who are educated worldly in outlook but have been content to stay pretty much in the same place all their lives. Family reunions here are warm and joyous events, with tolerance for the curmudgeons and misfits among them. In Wisconsin virtually every get-together resulted in new feuds that lasted years , some unto death.

As for me, I prefer solitude but would go nuts without a few close friends, including family, within easy reach. And I agree with Fred that the OS community provides a venue for getting to know people more carefully without the frenetic pressures and snap judgments of physical proximity.
I think often about this kind of loneliness. I have felt it, and it's almost always a kind of intellectual isolation or, occasionally, a spiritual one. Rarely am I literally alone. But yeah, I totally get this. I've always loved the Eleanor Rigby song b/c it's so profoundly true for some people. It makes me sad sometimes to think about the lonely people all around me. They are everywhere, I'm sure of it. Just last night in the ER, I talked to whomever made eye contact and wanted a conversation rather than read my book. I just had such a sense of wanting to feel connected and to let them--a few whom were old and dying to talk--feel connected. The whole thing makes me melancholy.
I get what Ginny is saying, but I think we can hold two truths in our head at the same time: people can be prickly and alienating but still feel lonely as a result of their personality. Some are genuinely confounded by the outcome, not understanding what went wrong. Do they not deserve compassion as well? That feeling of loneliness, that specific awful feeling, is simply something I don't wish upon anyone. I am very sorry for anyone feeling that way.
And post-post script let me add that even if I am a bitter old asshole who; knowing the difference between solitude and loneliness and who by choice lives a third of a mile out in the middle of a huge river so I can record music at 3 a.m. at the top of my lungs without neighbors to complain about it, and who usually just sings to fish, gators, my cat, and the occasional itinerant manatee, let me say this about that...
My cat loves me.
Great post. Terrifically thought-provoking and unfortunately so true today. I always keep in mind that alone is not the same as lonely.

Eighteen months ago a (now ex-) friend told me I was "the loneliest person she knew" among other not-so-nice remarks. (This may sound familiar as I posted about this in "A Friendship Ends..." I don't think she understood the different between lonely and alone. It was true that I didn't have a plethora of friends, but I also enjoyed my solitude more than most people I knew. Today, I have widened my social circle and that makes me appreciate my time to myself even more. I have acheived a healthy balance that Ilacked before.

P.S. If you can get it, the Ocrober, 2010 Psychology Today has a fascinating article, "Revenge of the Introverts" extolling the benefits of the introverted personality.
Thought-worthy post, as usual Emma :).

This from Ginny can't quite let pass 'uncommented' on though :

**As the summer progressed, I learned that the folks that I was so worried about, the ones who were so lonely, the ones that had no visitors, were lonely for good reason. They were bitter assholes.**

Some truly are yes, but many of them just need a little work - if you care enough to argue them out of their bitterness they'll come out eventually. Most bitter folks have learned to be that way - and they can unlearn it if you make a concerted effort to help :).

Rated for we all know lonely and alone now and then.
True post of sorrow. I fight this battle each day.
Rated.
As someone who needs a good balance of social and alone time, I found this piece really interesting. I always say I'm a people person -- I'm just picky about the people.
"It is a presence as thick and suffocating as a too-tight collar." emma-I am late to this post but it is very true and so profound. This definition is spot on when you speak of the nursing home, souls aching for a simple hello. I have an Eleanor Rigby quote in my profile. Mother Teresa had that ability to touch someone, no matter his or her belief. Good post Emma.
R
Mother Theresa's comments are true of the USA as well. Like you, I note my increasing invisibility and irrelevance. It's so hard to connect with people in any real way. This virtual connection (via internet) can be comforting but is certainly limited.
I have lost most of my support group because of death or refusing to play into old roles. I lost many old, decade -old friends when I quit drinking and hanging out in bars-a poison pill in this culture here. I was no longer fun. I do think being alone and loneliness is partly choice. Older men also know the discarded thing. It is like being invisible at times. Most men are terribly lonely especially as they age because most of our interactions are based on activities--fishing, sports, golf, coaching kids etc. and when you are less able or no longer motivated to do such things the contacts diminish. Very fine essay, Emma.
Your blog has touched a sensitive part in the human heart.I think we all feel lonely regardless of the size of the famiy or living alone.Deep in his heart each of us is afraid of being alone but maybe not everybody knows that
I love being alone....but fear irrelevance so much...This, as usual, was beautifully written.

Hard to be a woman sometimes. I wouldn't have it any other way, and I am not saying men have it easy, but man, sometimes, it's hard.
It's true, as women and men age they become less visible to those who are sexually fertile and seeking signals of sexual fertility in those around them. And yet, if you take the time to look people right in the eye and smile at them, you'll be very surprised at how visible you suddenly are.
I admit to being a bit overwhelmed by all the incredible comments to this piece. So thoughtful, so personal, so insightful -- I am privileged to have read all of them. Roy's comment sums it up best for me and I'm paraphrasing here -- no one feels lonelier than someone who is unloved, or who has never known love. Thank you all for visiting my salon.
I'm a married, mom, heavily-friended, highly-involved "loner" -- which may sound strange, except that everyone respects my need for solitude, even my dogs! I'm great with people, friendly and outgoing, intuitively giving, but I get really really weird when I've had too much human contact. Still, I understand that forced isolation, relentless isolation, is different. I hope that I'm always given the ease and fluidity I have now. I know that's not likely.
I know that this is very late in the game (as OS has just a flicker of time in the feed) but I wanted to respond anyway:

A comment from Seer:

"This from Ginny can't quite let pass 'uncommented' on though :

**As the summer progressed, I learned that the folks that I was so worried about, the ones who were so lonely, the ones that had no visitors, were lonely for good reason. They were bitter assholes.**

Some truly are yes, but many of them just need a little work - if you care enough to argue them out of their bitterness they'll come out eventually. Most bitter folks have learned to be that way - and they can unlearn it if you make a concerted effort to help :)."

The thing that I LEARNED that hard summer, the thing that broke my friggin' heart, was that these were folks that were hard wired to resist love.....to fend off any efforts of loving and nurturing. To criticize any efforts to alleviate their suffering:

"My foot hurts and no one seems to care. Everyone here is totally incompetent."

"What can I do to help?"

"You can't help me, you've NEVER helped me!"

"I am here, I love you, and I want to help you. What can I do?"

"You are an idiot. You've never done crap for me, why would I think that you can help me now!"

THAT is the alienating behavior that I am talking about, that I saw at 17. THOSE are the people that had no visitors, that broke my heart because they were so lonely........and I learned WHY.

We love, we love, we forgive and love, and we will hopefully be forgiven and loved.

Because we love and need love, but, boy-howdy, in the end, there it is. And I learned that lesson at 17.
I have alternated between loneliness and feeling so comfortable being alone that I didn't understand why someone thought it was strange when I went somewhere by myself. I remember telling a friend that I went out to eat, and she clucked with pity when she heard I was alone. Then she said, "I would have gone with you if I'd known." I thought, "Why?"
I remember how I would occasionally run into someone traveling and would travel with them for a while. It was then that I realized that I did miss something when I was by myself. Another person made me less self-absorbed and brought something out in me. I still don't want to be the kind of person who can't go somewhere by myself.
I'm sorry that I can't read all of the comments, so forgive me if I am repeating what others have said. The kind of "spiritual poverty" Mother Teresa spoke of has also been noted by those who treat the severely mentally ill -- the separation from God, or the feeling of it. Perhaps that is why so many tip the scale to the extreme in their most florid stages. It is just one of the many conditions that isolates us from one another. The tech age may be another.

This was very thought provoking. Thank you. (R)
Don't ever stop writing Emma. So much here, it warrants a double-read.
Being alone and being lonely are anything but equal. I often feel sorry for people who cannot find satisfaction within themselves and are always seeking others to feel complete.

Some of the loneliest times in my life were spent in the home I shared with my then-husband when the relationship was coming apart. We could be in the same room, and I felt lonely because there was an emotional wall of rejection between us. In that same room, when he was at work and I was home, I did not feel the same loneliness.

My current S.O. and I each lived alone and had independent lives for years before we got together. Sometimes we do things together, sometimes separately. There is much more freedom and no loneliness.

Some of the best trips of my life have been solo trips where I've spent some time with other people and some time by myself. One of the best gifts I ever discovered was the ability to feel complete within myself, not dependent on others for validation.
Lovely thoughtful post. I know the invisibility that you write about. I distinctly remember being in my late forties when men stopped looking at me, then others followed. The early 60's feminists used to say that woman were treated according to the amount of estrogen they still had. It's true.
Fusun has said everything I wanted to say. No point in repeating it. Thank you for a very timely post...as the holiday season approaches. -R-
I find the phenomenon has 3 dimensions:
1. Solitude - the preference to be alone and benefiting from the privacy

2. Loneliness - the intermittent point at which solitude becomes wearisome and one needs company

3. Depression - a murky and distorted emotional state resulting from an inability to banish loneliness in a satisfactory manner.

It helps me to distinguish between these three dimensions at any given moment.
Great piece. I was just having a similar conversation recently with a professional acquaintance who remarked that for younger people, online social networks more and more seem to not just supplement face to face collegiality, but supplant it. Some people send their holiday greetings over Facebook, for crying out loud. When I was in the UK, I noticed how easily people paired up and how frequently they did so. Men in business suits might meet for a daily luncheon walk and sometimes hold hands, and that did not necessarily have anything to do with gender identity. Rather, it was a sign of a close bond and friendship that here in the United States would largely be perceived as inappropriate. Another friend was on business in a distant city last week and took some free time to visit an art museum. She found a stranger in her meeting group and they toured together, which, according to my friend, immeasurably improved the experience. Of course it did. I'm good at enjoying myself by myself, but two heads really are better than one. At home, I would be spiritually poorer if I couldn't chat across the back fence with my neighbors once in awhile. But that, too, seems less achievable in general, these days.
I'm sad I got to this post so late! But thank you for writing it and being so open in it.
This reminds me of a book that was written about in the latest issue of BITCH Magazine (#49) called "Lonely: A Memoir" by Emily White. I haven't gotten a chance to read it yet but it seems like it'd be something really worth picking up.
"Once you really dissect loneliness and look at all the ways it can affect a life, it becomes harder to dismiss it as a passing mood." - page 10 of the magazine.
Now I want to find the book, read it and write about it on OpenSalon....maybe I will :)
Very interesting post...my mother was a loner, a recluse in her latter years. I always thought it was strange, since she was so beautiful and charming when I was a child. What happens to people that makes them want to hide behind closed doors?

It's funny, at 52, I can almost see myself heading in the same direction, and I swore I would NEVER be like my mother!


Thank you so much for making us aware on this invasion of loneliness. I'm hoping I can ward it off!
Very interesting and so very true. When you are both lonely and alone the difference is not always so clear, but I do know what you mean. As for women becoming increasingly invisible as they age, I definitely understand. And when you are a woman and you are alone in public that really seems to disturb people. Either that or they feel sorry for you.
Good post.
Emma ,was always so impressed with your writing .Been on hiatus..addicted actually ,and thought about how wonderfully you write.I'm coming back to this .So much to think about .Thank you for all the heart you put in the piece.xoxo
thank you so much for this well thought out report!