The researchers found that people who choose to spend time alone for mostly positive, "self-determined" reasons are at a much lower risk of viewing solitude as “social isolation” or suffering the negative consequences associated with feelings of loneliness than those who seek alone time for the predominately "not self-determined" reasons reflected in questions 9-14 in the survey above.
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CURATED FROM
Why Loners Love Being Alone & Why Being Forced to Socialize Makes Many of Us Unhappy
psychologytoday.com
15 ideas
·7.28K reads
IDEAS CURATED BY
Being with others only makes us happy if we do it by choice; when choice is taken away, whether we are social butterflies or lone-wolfs, extraverts or introverts, matters little to our happiness; togetherness and aloneness can make us equally unhappy. Let’s choose what we need to be happy.
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There is an abundance of evidence showing that loneliness can have devastating health consequences.
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