At our heart, humans are social creatures. It has been argued that it was not just our large brains that allowed us to thrive as a species, but also our ability to work together in groups to do and accomplish more than any of us could have done alone. We need other people. We crave other people. And we are getting less and less time with them.
There is an obvious culprit here. I’m looking at you, COVID, with all your quarantining and social distancing protocols. And yet, what is obvious is not necessarily true. The pandemic of solitude began well before any of us had ever heard of COVID-19. Pundits were sounding the alarm bells of our American loneliness since at least the 1990s, and 2000’s Bowling Alone brought even more attention to this worrying trend. By 2018, two years before any lockdowns, one in five Americans reported always or often feeling lonely or socially isolated.
Certainly, a pandemic that legally forced us to spend time away from others did nothing to help ameliorate this negative trend. Since 2020 we have seen this sense of loneliness grow across the board, such that by 2021, 36% of Americans reported feeling serious loneliness, with that number climbing to an astounding and worrying 61% for young adults.
But…does being alone have to be a bad thing?
We certainly seem to think it is. In multiple studies, participants actually chose to receive electric shocks rather than have to sit alone with their thoughts.
It doesn’t have to be this way. Just as we need calories to fuel our bodies to keep us alive, but calories from the wrong sources are literally now killing us by the millions, perhaps our time alone is just the wrong kind time alone.
In his A Calendar of Wisdom Leo Tolstoy wrote: “Temporary solitude from all things in this life, the meditation within yourself about the divine, is food as necessary for your soul as material food is for your body.” But just as not all material food is created equal, so too does solitude have its varieties in quality and desirability.
We can get energy from processed foods that are dense in calories and “shelf stable,” but it is SAD to do so (SAD of course being the acronym of choice for the “Standard American Diet”). This can provide us the count of calories we might need to get through the day, but our bodies do not process these calories the same way as they would whole foods, and we are feeling and seeing the results as more than two-thirds of Americans are now overweight.
So too can we have time alone, as in not in or near the physical presence of other humans, but if we are spending the time doomscrolling on our phones, watching the ever-unfolding crises that the media portray, or even seeing the latest highlights of our online friends’ lives on social media, we are feeding our soul the same sort of empty calories that will and do wreck our waistlines. The results are just as deleterious, but felt in our minds, and our lives.
So, what is the answer? The answer is to take advantage of that time alone, not to run from it or hide from it. Don’t fill those moments of solitude with more images or noise, but rather embrace the quiet and look within. As Socrates said thousands of years ago, “the unexamined life is not worth living.” We can make ours worth living, more worthy of living, by feeding ourselves that food “necessary for our soul.” Every time we are alone, and we have our phone in our pocket and a television and/or computer in easy reach, it is like being in the kitchen with the bowl of fruit in front of us, but the bag of potato chips sitting just next to them.
Just as it is has been found that having cereal rather than fruit out on your kitchen counter leads to higher rates of obesity, so too has it been found that having your phone in the same room as you can make you stupider. Get those tempting sugar highs out of sight and out of mind. Sit with yourself. Look within. Feed your soul with something of real substance.
And, also as Tolstoy wrote, make it “temporary.” We are still social animals after all. Get out and socialize with real live people. Social media is as close to the social connection that we all need as a Fruit Roll-Up is to eating actual fruit. Both have the right thing in the name, but only one is going to provide us with the sustenance our mind and body need to thrive.
Here’s to seeing you soon IRL.