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How to Live Alone Without Being Lonely

Healthy and happy solo households achieve well-being by expanding social networks and activities

March 29, 2012 RSS Feed Print

The following article comes from the U.S. News ebook, How to Live to 100, which is now available for purchase.

They are known as singles, singletons, the never-married, the divorced, and the widowed. What they share is that they are part of the country's fastest-growing living unit—more than 31 million one-person households in 2010, according to the U.S. Census.

[See the Top 10 U.S. Cities for Well-Being.]

Traditionally, relationship researchers have found that people living alone are on the bottom rung of the wellness ladder. They lack the emotional, financial, and daily help of a committed partner, which are major reasons why people in successful marriages and other strong two-person relationships fare better in measures of health, happiness, and longevity.

"When people succeed in having a good intimate relationship, it has so many benefits," says UCLA psychology professor Ben Karney. "Your body works better, your immune system functions better, your body produces more antibodies. Study after study shows that people in good relationships live longer." Even severely ill people who were in good relationships recovered faster and lived longer than comparably ill people who were not in good relationships.

Single men, in particular, take especially poor care of themselves. "Unmarried men are more likely to have bad health habits than married men," says Linda Waite, a sociologist at the University of Chicago. "They drink too much, don't eat well, don't wear seat belts, have more unprotected sex" and don't enjoy the kind of social supports they would in a committed relationship. Single women, by comparison, fare better, precisely because they have better social connections and are used to taking care of themselves.

However, many experts say the health and happiness disadvantages of living alone are disappearing. Social science research tends to look at a long-distance rearview mirror, analyzing large groups of people over many, many years. Current trends are easily documented.

"Over the past 30 years, the health gap between the married and never-married has narrowed to almost nothing," says Debra Umberson, a sociologist at the University of Texas. "Being not married has increasingly become an accepted option."

[See How to Get Marital Benefits—Sans Marriage.]

"Once they accept [being unmarried] and make their peace with it, they fare just as well as anyone else," says Deb Carr, a Rutgers University sociologist. "We see them expanding their definitions of what is a family. Not only do they have larger numbers of friends [than married people], but they have more frequent contact with them and closer relationships with them." Carr says society has become friendlier to "never marrieds" as well, and that people are more tolerant and supportive of a broad range of different ways people choose to live.

"I think that there is a really important distinction to be made between social isolation and choosing to live alone," Umberson says. "People who are socially isolated are the ones more likely to die" at earlier ages.

Eric Klinenberg is a sociologist at NYU and author of a recent book about living alone called Going Solo. It supports, if not celebrates, the emergence of the one-person household as an increasingly preferred living choice, not only in the United States but even more so in many Western European nations.

Klinenberg is careful to distinguish among different types of one-person households when assessing their occupants' health and well-being. He also thinks that much of the pro-marriage research is based on either misleading or flawed assumptions.

"Many, if not most, studies of the health consequence of marriage compared currently married people versus never married people," he says. The adverse health consequences of divorce and widowhood are well-documented but are usually viewed separately from the positive health effects of people who remain married. No one gets married thinking the marriage will fail or their spouse will die, Klinenberg notes. And while staying married produces benefits, he says it's impossible to conclude that simply getting married improves a person's well-being and longevity compared with staying single.

Tags:
divorce,
relationships,
marriage,
money

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Eric, a 47 year old man is not old. There are many women who would appreciate having someone like you to be friends with and more. Why not take a course in some form of retraining perhaps in the medical field and get a better job? Join groups such as exist on meet-up and put yourself out there to make new friends. Don't wait and let another 7 years pass - you can make a better life for yourself now. Good luck. I know you can do it. And the comments which followed your notes were totally insensitive and stupid - don't listen to stupid people - join a religious or spiritual organization, put yourself out there, stay healthy and you will find someone to love you and be with you. Good luck, I know you can do it.

Susan of NY 1:33AM March 30, 2013

i used to have so many friends, it was ridiculous!

I never went more than a year without having a girlfriend.

And I had the same good job for 25 years.

I truly had a great life!

... Then I turned 40, and midlife crisis kicked my ass!

My 27 year old girlfriend of 4 years, threw a surprise 40th birthday party for me...

And told me that night, ''I'm just not happy anymore.''

She left me the next morning, got married a few months later, and had a baby!

Me? Well, I guess the combo of my age, and my broken heart, was the one-two punch that knocked me out for good!

I went into a deep depression.

I lost my job, my pad, my friends, and worst of all... My self confidence.

Now I am almost 47. I live with my mother. I work any minimum wage job I can find (when my depression isn't paralyzing me), and I have been alone since my last girlfriend dumped me on my 40th birthday.

Unable to start over at my age, I have given up on ever being happy or confident. I realize I will be alone the rest of my life, which I hope isn't much longer. I have had enough... ''Hey waiter! Check please?''

I am done.

erik of CA 11:56PM March 29, 2013

I understand the last comment only too well, with two consecutive failed relationships, the last one being an engagement, I wonder if my mojo is at last failing me. Online dating is a miserable failure, with most women being too rude even to get back to me.

I am 41 years old, and live alone. My only family is an elderly mother in a local nursing home. She told me today she worries for me, and truth be told I worry for us both.

I know I am isolated, and need to make a social circle for myself. It is hard enough to raise my head every day let alone go excercising at my local pool or go for a walk. I take pleasure in little things these days, washing my clothes and dishes, maintaining the yard, a far cry from the successful public practitioner I was only 12 months ago.

The moral of my story is that success is fleeting and relationships even more so, at the end of the day you will only have yourself to depend on, depressing but true from my own experiences and those of others I have observed ...

Damien 10:34AM February 17, 2013

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