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Understanding loneliness

Types of 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

Social loneliness

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.

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Social isolationIs it normal to have no friends?How to make friends as an adultLoneliness in big cities

Depth is missing

Intimate loneliness

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.

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Lonely in a relationshipLoneliness in marriageDeep conversation questionsI have no one to talk to

Triggered by circumstances

Situational loneliness

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.

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After a breakupPostpartum lonelinessAfter graduationLoneliness while travelling

Follows you everywhere

Chronic loneliness

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.

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Chronic lonelinessLoneliness & self-esteemFear of rejectionLoneliness & confidence

The aloneness of being human

Existential loneliness

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.

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Loneliness & purposeAlone without lonelyWhat is loneliness?Feel like nobody cares

The loneliness of being always in character

Role-related loneliness

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.

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Loneliness as a parentLoneliness at workLoneliness as a freelancerFeeling unwanted

Not sure what type you're experiencing?

Why am I lonely?Signs of lonelinessFull guide →

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