Loneliness Has Escalated Into A Social Epidemic

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:eek: :confused: Loneliness In Britain Has Escalated From Personal Misfortune Into A Social Epidemic

Imagine Britain in the grip of a chronic illness that was causing widespread misery, costing the country millions in lost days at work, and doing more harm to those affected than smoking fifteen cigarettes a day or being obese. There would be calls for immediate action.

That is exactly the impact that loneliness is having. The evidence suggests that loneliness increases the risk of premature death by about a third, as the NHS will be highlighting later this week. But because it is so often hidden from sight, it is too easy to ignore. The damage it is doing right now is so profound that we have to respond quickly. Fortunately, the cost of effective action is not high. The price of inaction is enormous.

We have been studying the evidence over the past year as co-chairs of the Jo Cox Loneliness Commission. It is now clear that none of us is immune. As Jo herself said, “young or old, loneliness doesn’t discriminate.”

For some, its phases are acute but fleeting. For others, chronic and debilitating. The triggers can be anything from losing a loved one, to major changes at work or in our home lives. Loneliness surrounds us, from the quiet child in class to the high-powered executive too busy to engage in meaningful conversation, from the new mum to the family carer. It hides in plain sight.

We have been here before. For a long time, we saw positive mental health as the norm and mental illness as an aberration. It turned out that wasn’t true. The same applies to loneliness.

For individuals, loneliness can be hugely draining emotionally. There’s a reason why misbehaving toddlers are sent alone to the ‘naughty corner’ and why solitary confinement is used on prisoners as a punishment and torture technique.

Mentally, loneliness results in anxiety and stress, insomnia and depression, dementia and neurodegenerative disease. Physically, it can lead to high blood pressure, cardiovascular disease, strokes, and diabetes. Lonely people visit GPs more often, stay longer when in hospital and find it harder to recover afterwards.

As families, loneliness can rob us of perspective and cause our closest bonds – our safety nets – to fray.

It undermines community cohesion as people disengage, forgetting that we have more in common than that which divides us, receding into their respective corners in a downwards spiral of withdrawal.

And it damages our national economy, to the tune of £32bn per annum.

The evidence is clear: loneliness is toxic. And the problem is getting worse by the day.

We are living alone more, often moving away from family, and we work alone at home more too. We spend a greater proportion of our day by ourselves than we did ten years ago. Many of the institutions that once brought us together are fading, as each week another church or pub is converted into flats. On-line ‘friends’ replace real ones. The professionals, whether GPs, carers or church leaders, tell us they now have to confront the damage done by loneliness on a daily basis.

We can’t leave it up to them. All of us need to make tackling loneliness our business. Starting a conversation each day in your neighbourhood can be a radical act of community service. Whether it be in the doctor’s waiting room or the supermarket queue, it really is good to talk. We walk the same streets, so let’s not live in different worlds.

We learn from National Rail, on whose tracks hundreds of desperate people commit suicide every year, that just saying hello or asking someone on the platform about the weather could avert another tragic death.

So, let’s try to break out of the routine journey that is head-down, headphones-in, not a word spoken from home to work, and have a quick chat with a fellow passenger. When we get home, let’s phone an older relative or check on a neighbour who may be lonely but too proud or embarrassed to say so.

On Friday we will be publishing the report of the Jo Cox Loneliness Commission.

Central to our recommendations is the need for ministers to make tackling loneliness a priority at all levels of government. Yes, it will cost some money but, like all preventive interventions, will save far more in the long run.

We can’t afford not to act. Loneliness in Britain has escalated from personal misfortune into a social epidemic.

It doesn’t have to be this way. The problem is solvable. If we were all to play our part in strengthening the increasingly thin ties between us we could build a less lonely Britain.

As MPs, working to continue Jo’s work on this has been the greatest privilege of our professional lives. She pictured a country where nobody need feel isolated from the rest of society unless they choose to. Now it’s down to the rest of us to make that vision a reality.

https://www.msn.com/en-gb/health/mi...ocial-epidemic/ar-BBGu44c?ocid=ob-fb-engb-667

In continuation of the previous thread: https://forums.overclockers.co.uk/t...-you-as-smoking-15-cigarettes-a-day.18169063/

In the end of the day, it looks like social media and personal computers don't help, actually they do enough harm to the population, too. :eek: :confused:
 
Extroverts. My girlfriend has a meltdown if she is left alone for a couple of hours (no, she isn't a dog).

I can be left alone for a week and still be completely sane and happy even.

Society on the whole is naturally extrovert biased, maybe this the way us introverts fight back.

I too hope for more self service tills and efficient internet shopping.
 
Thank ****. I hate people. More self service tills and online shopping ftw!

I can relate to this.

Naturally I am extremely anti social and choose my circle of who I acquaint with very very selectively.

This isnt because I am a social snob who believes he is better than anyone else.

However, when I tell people (who dont know me) that I am like this, they are genuinely shocked. The nature of my business is networking, relationship building and large scale presentations and seminars, and I am pretty good at it. I have this ability to turn on the charisma when required despite the fact that its the total antithesis of what I am about.

Online shopping and self service for the win!
 
I can relate to this.

Naturally I am extremely anti social and choose my circle of who I acquaint with very very selectively.

This isnt because I am a social snob who believes he is better than anyone else.


However, when I tell people (who dont know me) that I am like this, they are genuinely shocked. The nature of my business is networking, relationship building and large scale presentations and seminars, and I am pretty good at it. I have this ability to turn on the charisma when required despite the fact that its the total antithesis of what I am about.

Online shopping and self service for the win!

Well, there isn't a reason for this. Imagine how many wonderful people you skip because of misjudgement. You can't know a person well at first glance or first talk.

Many people are good, they have good family relationships (with parents, brothers, sisters, cousins, etc) and a narrow friends circle but the problem is that they can't make this circle larger. In this way, the society is divided into countless small groups which are otherwise well inside but may be quite hostile outside.
 
I can only speak for myself, but working in a Post Office for the best part of a decade conditioned me to loathe the general populace.

Yet you and others who say this seem to seek out forums and other forms of social media to communicate with people if you really didn't want to connect with people you wouldn't bother.

I think one of the reasons when people say "I hate people" is down to them not being very good at socialising and forming relationships in person, they think everyone is against them, yet if they truly analysed themselves in these situations they wouldn't be surprised at why others don't take to them. It's a skill that needs to be honed, and whilst yes, some people are naturally more extroverted you aren't just born with the ability to socialise well, if you shut yourself indoors every evening and largely communicate through the internet or avoid small talk at work it's no surprise you don't like people as you're giving off the perception you don't like them and they'll respond in similar fashion.

Nothing at all wrong with enjoying alone time, it's important, but to completely hate most people and not be interested at all in anyone is a sign of other problems imo or an undiagnosed mental disability.
 
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I am equally happy on my own or with people. But I do prefer a social atmosphere when at work. Many people have left recently and most of the people I work with are now based in other continents. Most of those around me aren't in my team and are doing the same. We're all surrounded by people but don't work together. It's quite weird.

As I get older my friends are drifting away for various reasons (moving around the country, retiring, etc). I never wanted kids when younger but am glad I had them now, as it's nice to them.

But I'd also cope fine if completely on my own. I was a real loner as a teenager.
 
Yet you and others who say this seem to seek out forums and other forms of social media to communicate with people if you really didn't want to connect with people you wouldn't bother.

From my experience there is a huge distinction. In a physical social setting there are norms, protocols, etiquette, a method of conducting yourself.

These are all things that I can do very well, as I mentioned its a large part of my business. I HAVE to and I DO network, quite simply if I dont.....I dont earn. So IMO my dislike of these settings isn't a result of me not being very good at it, because I am.

So why dont I like it? For me it has to be something else.....what I dont know.

Why do I like to connect to people on a PC forum? Its in my total control. I can end the conversation as and when I choose to. If I am having an 'off' day I dont need to contribute. The power of invisibility behind a keyboard I suppose (although there are a couple of other contributors here who know me in person).
 
I can relate to this.

Naturally I am extremely anti social and choose my circle of who I acquaint with very very selectively.

This isnt because I am a social snob who believes he is better than anyone else.

However, when I tell people (who dont know me) that I am like this, they are genuinely shocked. The nature of my business is networking, relationship building and large scale presentations and seminars, and I am pretty good at it. I have this ability to turn on the charisma when required despite the fact that its the total antithesis of what I am about.

Online shopping and self service for the win!
This sounds like me to be honest, I'm more than happy all by myself (so long as I have internet :p)
I own a small computer repairshop and can "turn on the charisma" as you put it when needed, that said I do have my off days where I can't really be bothered.
that said naturally I am a "chatty" person so will also quite happily stand and chew the fat with anyone.

My missus on the other hand would go mental if she had a day without leaving the house, she can strike up conversation with almost any random stranger quite happily.
 
Better than staying with internet, go outside and enjoy our wonderful Planet in person. There are so many dozens of beautiful cities and places in nature which are worth visiting. Much better than staying at home and staring at a stupid screen.
 
@Rifte @MassiveJim Doesn't really sound like either of you have problems socialising in person though, you enjoy time alone because you have to socialise daily and it can become draining which is perfectly normal, my post was more aimed at those who say they hate everyone and refrain from socialising at nearly all costs.
 
"And it damages our national economy, to the tune of £32bn per annum."

and where exactly is their working-out to show that number attributable to loneliness? whole article reads like tree-hugger excrement. boohoo, people are lonely; if they're also incapable of going out to socialise, or join an internet group or forum etc then that would be the issue to address.
 
I think that the death of pub culture plays a part in people just being less social

Gone is the days of the public house. The number of pubs have fallen and the idea of using it as a place to spend time rather than get ****** is slowly becoming a distant memory in the city and larger towns. Using a pub as a public house was more than just having a place to go for a drink. It was a place to turn up when you wanted to relax, fancied watching whatever was on with other people and you could expect other regulars to be there if not your close friends.

We see more Weatherspoons pop up and other large chains which cater mainly to the 'pre-drinkers' rather than regulars. Small country style pubs are struggling and it is not hard to see why. Alcohol is taxed more and more, minimum wage goes up (in an industry that survives on paying minimum), alcohol consumption is down (it is less acceptable to have a few pints everyday), pre-drinking culture means less drinks sold in pubs and more in supermarkets - With all of these factors, it is not surprising that the industry has found the 'factory like efficiency' that the big pub chains bring to the industry are forcing many smaller pubs out of business.


Without the casual pub meets, i would have far less friends and likely never met half of my girlfriends
 
Despite the short term issues, I think there's not much to worry about in the long term. Our psyche has not yet adapted to the changes brought about by the internet but it will do so in time, we have been through much worse than a 'social epidemic of loneliness'.
 
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