Understanding loneliness
Not all loneliness is the same — and understanding which type you're experiencing is the first step to addressing it. Different types require different responses.
Not enough people
Your social network is objectively thin — few relationships, rare contact, people you've lost touch with. This is the most visible type. The solution is structural: more regular contact with more people.
Depth is missing
You have social contact — colleagues, acquaintances, even friends — but nobody who truly knows you. No one you could call at 2am. This is the most common type in adults, and requires going deeper, not wider.
Triggered by circumstances
Caused by a specific event or change: moving to a new city, ending a relationship, starting a new job, having a baby. Usually temporary if addressed — but left alone, it can become chronic.
Follows you everywhere
Persists across circumstances and relationships. Not situational — it follows you into new environments and new connections. Usually involves cognitive patterns that filter out evidence of connection and amplify evidence of rejection.
The aloneness of being human
The philosophical recognition that no one can fully know another's inner world. This type doesn't resolve through social contact alone — it responds to meaning, purpose, and the honest exchange of human experience.
The loneliness of being always in character
When you're always a parent, a manager, a carer, a partner — and never simply a person. Your roles crowd out the you that exists independently of them.
Not sure what type you're experiencing?
Anonymous voice. One-on-one. No profile. No feed.