Are there lonely women




















This is especially true for the nearly 50 percent who work full time. We might be tempted to evaluate ourselves and our friendships based on these random and often superficial interactions, interpreting rejection where there is none. When this happens, a hole begins to form within us that, often, causes us to become more social media-obsessed.

We can start to believe that if only we share a cute picture or post an insightful comment, everyone will know how competent and thoughtful we are. But whatever fulfillment or assurance we receive in the moment soon fades and can leave us lonelier than ever because what we truly need is community.

We need quality more than quantity—to spend time with those who know us deeply yet love us anyway. I travel the country speaking to women, often on topics relating to loneliness and rejection. And this is true for women of all ages and backgrounds. One might assume those who are older have reached a certain level of confidence and therefore ability to form deep connections with decreased defensiveness.

To move past those self-defeating and imprisoning lies, we need to mourn our hurts with Jesus, ask Him to reveal our false perceptions, and to give us the courage to embrace relational risk. The solution: Learn how to resolve conflicts and push through relational difficulties to develop deeper friendships.

God created us to live in community, and as such, we find our truest, healthiest, and most fulfilled selves in the context of Christ-centered relationship. Scripture says church members are family and part of one body, united by God to feel deeply connected with one another.

When our sister rejoices, we should as well. This necessarily implies a certain level of authenticity and transparency—of revealing our vulnerabilities and admitting that we need one another. The solution: Share your needs with others, let them help you, ask about their needs, and find ways to help them. Our typical response? But this only increases our isolation by keeping us strapped to our computers and living superficially.

However, when we take the time to connect with others face too face, we discover most of us experience hurts, conflict, and moments of loneliness and isolation. We may even find the friend our hearts long for. The study found a "stigma" attached to loneliness, with young people fearing it would be seen as "failing". There were young people who used social media to "cover up" their feelings and pretend their lives were not lonely.

The study from the ONS looks at the extent of loneliness among people aged between 10 and The research looked at factors that seemed to make loneliness more likely - and found it was particularly associated with times of transition in young lives. The move from primary school to secondary school and from school to university were both likely to be associated with loneliness. Young people in cities were more likely to be lonely than those in rural areas or smaller towns.

Another unfortunate issue about loneliness is we blame the victim. And so, we pepper the lonely with advice: you should go for a walk, go to the library, join an adult education class, go to a meetup group, do volunteer work. No, it requires you, the lonely person, to spring into action.

It has largely to do with time and circumstances of life in our modern world. I grew up in a loving family and had a small town, active childhood filled with connection. As an adult, I adored the full, energetic family years of raising my children and being active in my community. Then came a divorce. The children grew and flew. Parents die. People move. Career ends. World Canada Local. More millennial women say they feel lonely — despite having friends.

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