Better Off Alone?
In Yesterday's article I was talking about the success and failure of relationships, and tonight I thought I would look at some aspects around the other side of the coin, choosing to stay alone, and some of the changes in culture and where it might lead, based on my own observations.
More and more people are not only staying unmarried for longer, but are avoiding committed relationships altogether. There are many reasons for this, but all the reasons in the world an individual might give, tends to come down to their own past conditioning. For instance, there was social conditioning for women to enter into the workforce and chase careers, but many who did so feel guilty about the time they didn't spend with their children, or sad they chose not to have children at all. When they were young, it all made sense and the decision was intentional based on what they believed at the time. But they didn't predict, how they'd feel later.
That conversation opens up a can of worms for many.
But it shouldn't.
People use extremes to justify averages, but just like I was writing about the obesity epidemic, averages are averages because the majority of people fit the mould. And when it comes to the way we behave, on average we are pretty predictable. Not every overweight person is unhealthy, but the majority are. Not every single person is lonely, but the majority are.
Or will be.
The reason is that regardless of the social conditioning and advancements in technology over the last decades, we haven't evolved as a species to live our lives disconnected, isolated, and without intimacy. This means that even though we have created some substitutes, they are poor matches for healthy relationships and will never fill the void for the average person. Leaving the average person, in personal conflict.
However we look at it, our decisions now are going to have an effect on our future, and while we might be able to predict some aspects of what will happen, we are terrible at predicting how we are going to feel in the future, in circumstances that we don't understand now.
For instance, the neighbours were talking about their mid-teen son and his friends who essentially have already made the decisions on the future, about not working and just doing whatever to get by. An older cousin who is out of school and working, has adopted the "own nothing and be happy" mindset that has been conditioned over the last couple decades and spends everything he gets, without any consideration of what it means in his future. The young refuse to take responsibility.
Which means they are acting irresponsibly.
Yes, life has changed, culture has changed, but our physiological, mental, and emotional structure is much the same as it has been for thousands of years. We have evolved to not only be creative, but also be owners of what we create, and live in some form of community with social connections. And, we have evolved to desire intimacy.
Tinder one nights stands aren't a substitute for intimacy.
Sex is great, but it isn't enough to sustain the average person's needs for social connection. And in my experience, whilst sex is very important for the average romantic relationship, a lot of sex with veritable strangers leads to emptiness and loneliness. And that is when young. What happens when people who live that life in their twenties and thirties, continue to try and live that life into their fifties and sixties.
Is it sustainably rewarding?
I believe that society is suffering from a scarcity of quality human interaction and intimacy. We have created a distraction filled technological desert, devoid of intimacy, and we have been convinced that we don't need it. You know, relationships are hard and getting into them is likely to lead to breakups anyway, and they hurt.
And simultaneously, we have been conditioned to be hyper-sensitive to discomfort of multiple kinds - especially emotional discomfort. Yet ironically perhaps, we have also been conditioned to react to any discomfort with uncontrolled emotions.
Is it any wonder people struggle in relationships?
So we don't take ownership, we are uncommitted, we are easily triggered, and we are constantly seeking distraction so that we don't have to face discomforts of any kind.
But we are still human.
And the problem is that so much "humanness" has been taken out of daily life, that we don't recognise what is actually missing. So, we consume more content, buy more gadgets, swipe more meaningless transactions, trying to overcome the gap between what our whole human needs, and what our shallow self has been trained to want.
The growing dysfunction in society is due to our shift in focus away from growth of communities, into isolation of individuals. From young ages, we are isolated behind screens, taught to be individualistic and protected in engineered environments from reality. We are wrapped in proverbial physical, mental and emotional cottonwool, so that once we leave the confines of what we know, variation in experience triggers our pain receptors, we feel discomfort, and we react emotionally.
It is the behaviour of childish tantrums and tyrannical leaders who are fragile due their personal insecurities. It is the behaviour of people who are inexperienced, and of those unwilling to take responsibility for their own thoughts, feelings, and behaviours.
But when this is the condition of the average person, we are going to see increasing interpersonal conflict, that has a knock-on effect that influences everything from the ground up. At some point though, it is likely that all the distractions in the world are not enough to hold that creeping feeling at bay any longer, and we wake up for a moment to realise, we bought into the wrong cause.
By then though, it might be too late to correct.
Since we are like spoiled children unwilling to mature, perhaps many of us are better off alone. At least then, we can save others from our tyranny.
Taraz
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I am your first one
We always remember our firsts. Unless very drunk.
Stay alone is one thing that I am not considered, I think but recently i was talking with a friend who loses their marriage and told me, why not stay alone, is better, after 30 years of marriage, why I need a woman in my life I prefer stay alone enjoy my life without no one who told me what can I do.
I never consider this option before talking with him, but after that I am considering this.
If you need sex get it and do not complicated.
But all people are not sure about this, specially if you are a 50 60 years old man.
Un the younger is normal in this times.
By the way yesterday I read you and think what a hell happens with taraz never he have been writing, I read and read and read was a post very extensive very big.
Maybe his wife fight very hard with him yesterday.
I hope all things go good.
By the way I was the first one in give you my upvote.
No fighting here. We were out enjoying our relationships as a family :)
People are looking for an easy life. A painless life. Just think being on the death bed after eighty years and saying "at least I put in the least amount of effort possible".
This post really struck a chord. We've built a world full of distractions and independence, but deep down, we’re still wired for real human connection, Screens and comfort can’t replace emotional intimacy and sooner or later, that emptiness starts to show. Powerful reflection.
It seeps out and then quickly starts to pour through the cracks. Society is filled with indicators these days.
I guess I am one of those people that decided to stay alone. I don't want to have kids. Having seen the baggage that can come with a partner [my mother's side has a lot of familial issues], being in a relationship is too much trouble.
Although, I am not like the ones in your example that spends everything and leaves the future up to chance. I still save and have some plans for the future. I think a big problem is social media showing us perfect relationships even though they aren't. People have become too idealistic and since they realized that it is impossible, would rather not go through it anyways.
Everyone makes their choices. I wonder if you will always feel that way though and I also wonder what people miss out on. For example, it is also too much trouble to cook a good meal, since survival doesn't require flavour. But what is worth "the trouble".
It is a massive problem. People are idealistic to the extreme, unable to deal with anything that doesn't meet their expectations. And since nothing will, they settle for a life less than they are worth.
That is really the question. With food, it's easy, people can just order. But in relationships, especially getting married and having children, it isn't something that you can go around or have take backs. A lot of people don't consider the rewards to be worth the risk, and I can't really blame them. For me, I think I'm deciding with the best information I have now, while still planning for the future.
I have thought about this a bit and I reckon it is perhaps worth asking people in different age groups older than us about their experiences and regrets, as well as the things they believe brought them value.
From what I've read, most older people regret what they didn't do. If they are married with kids, they would say they wanted to travel more and enjoy being single more. If they are single, they would have wanted to get married and have kids. It's basically grass being greener on the other side.
I am pretty happy most of the time being alone in my own head, but I know it isn't a place I could live. I have little doubt if something were to happen to my wife I would be craving companionship after a reasonable time of morning.
I think most people don't consider how they are going to feel when they are say, 70 years of age. Still pretty healthy, still capable of doing things - but maybe not as interested in the sexual part. But the intimacy needs are still there. You know how those old people go to shops, just to have someone to talk to - that is the future for everyone now I think.
Yeah, that is kind of sad, but always kind of the case.
I think that the more people report feeling anxious and depressed due to shallow interactions, it's obvious that society needs to rethink how we connect with each other.
People feel anxious, depressed and stressed when the phone rings. We have totally broken the social ecosystem we need to thrive.
I took 11 years off between marriages, but I was not doing it on purpose. I was ready to get married again a year or two after the divorce, but the relationships I have attempted just didn't work out. And I was raising my son who was four at the time of the divorce.
Do you think you learned some lessons from the first failure, time single, and then going into a new relationship?
I think, that I did, but it still was quite a challenge especially in the beginning.
Probably the first lesson I have learned was don't marry someone because she looks hot and has great bumpers 😀
You get used to that really quickly and then all the other stuff comes to the forefront. I also learned that it is good to have at least an equal partner in most aspects like intelligence, accomplishment in life, etc. And it's OK if she is a little ahead of me.
Nobody is perfect and some strengths that your partner has all have a flip side that could be a challenge at times. Like her high achiever drive would sometimes drive you nuts and her keeping the house clean and spotless would sometimes mean that you have to clean up inside your cupboards a bit more than you are used to. While keeping the house clean and uncluttered she would also sometimes throw away or donate things that are really needed a very short time after...
Another lesson that I learned from my journey is that there are a lot of great people out there, but not all are compatible with you and ideally you marry the one that is most compatible with you, commit and make the stuff that is incompatible work.
Perhaps I will learn this for my second marriage...
This is what many people don't get I reckon. People aren't very good at working out how to deal with things that don't match their ideals, but expect everyone to accept them the way they are.
The great philosopher and science fiction writer Stanislav Lem said in his work “Solaris”: “Man needs man.”
I like being alone for a few days, in silence my thoughts come into order and interesting new thoughts appear. But being alone all the time is very bad.
And alone with nothing but a digital echo chamber for company is worse.
The storyline is interesting am longing to learn more
Loneliest I've ever been was in a relationship.
That I understand. Is it the relationship itself that was the issue, or the type of relationship?
yes, I often find myself getting tired of playing the dating game.. that is, even trying to find of talk to someone.. hoping things will turn into a relationship.. those times I think.. just get a dog and be happy and content! 😁😉😎🤙
Get many dogs. Be the crazy dog guy.
yea. thats a good plan! 🐕🐶🐕🦺
Technology has gifted us infinite voices yet it has starved us of presence. Modern time has replaced shared talks even the sileny moments with notifications, meals used to be on the same table now everyone has their own meal–just a call away. I guess, the problem isn’t isolation itself, but the illusion that we have conquered it.
For the intimacy, I love the wise words of Zen, "the moon reflected in water"—beautiful but untouchable, just like our screen deep relationships today.
From my personal experience, the time spent physically surpasses everything, the intimacy it carries is beyond expression.
People staring at a painting of a forest, believing it generates fresh air.