Interesting article JH.
Coincidentally, I had hovered over the link on Slate earlier and decided not to read it. Seeing it here, was that added push I needed to give it a few minutes of my attention.
I think that loneliness
is a leading cause of depression... which, in turn, is quite dangerous if one wallows in it. And conversely, depression often leads to loneliness.
Over the last few years, I have felt increasingly "lonely" from time to time. It can even well up into a visceral desire for companionship and camaraderie. Trying to fill this hole can be stressful, which makes a deadly cocktail with depression. Most people these days turn to drugs (and the bad pharma kind at that), but I decided I would deal with it head on... a much more empowering solution if you are strong enough.
The first thing I realized is that, like mentioned in the article, I have no reason to feel lonely. I have a large... a
vast circle of friends and acquaintances. I am not shy. I have no problem going out alone and making a dozen new friends in a single night. I was spending a lot of time alone because my work is not social and my hobbies are not especially so either, but not because I had no opportunities to be with people...
It was because
I didn't want to hang out with any of the people who were available.
This was a harsh realization. Most of my core bros live far away, are married with kids, and have stressful jobs. The vast majority of people I really cared about have turned into tired old cynics... and left me nearly alone as someone out there pushing the envelope and living the dream. I am pushing 50 and never had kids.
This dearth of worthy chums is common for people in my age, sadly. There are not a lot of people who are my "peers." The people my age and up tend to look and act decades older than me. My native environs (music, travel, gatherings, hyperspace etc.) tend to be populated by people half my age. And while I enjoy the company of enthusiastic youngsters, and nearly all of the people with the freedom and inclination to follow me out into the wilds of consciousness and debauchery are younger than me... I find myself somewhat alienated from them, in that they are still making mistakes I stopped making decades ago. They are still chasing after dreams I retired half a lifetime ago. They are... well,
children in my eyes.
I don't wanna put them all down, and they are doing rather well, all things considered. But, it is hard enough for
average people to find true peers that are half their age... and I am anything but average. By the time I was in my late 20's I had already been around the world, studied with masters, and focused on my interests with a laserlike intensity that is next to impossible in our modern society. As someone who skipped grades in school and could get 100% on tests I didn't even study for in University... while taking LSD a few times a week and running through 7 grams of chronic a day... my peers tended to be people much older than I.
So, now I am in the odd and somewhat disappointing position of being a teacher to nearly all of my "friends," and not having any
true comrades who can push, challenge and inspire me. My relationships with the people I
do hang out with tend to be that of the guru/student variety, and the "normal" people of the world seem like inmates in a kindergarten lunatic asylum to my weary eyes. The "average" person is stupid, small minded, stressed, fearful, unstable, and often psychotic in my eyes. I look for the best in everyone, and try to overlook the many shortcomings, but the fact is... that any association with such people is bound to result in unwanted drama eventually. Sooner or later, most people will not only let you down, but do their best to backstab you in the process.
And so, I choose to be my own boss, and work mostly alone in the "clinical" environment of a recording studio where my word is law. I minimize contact with the crazier people and avoid bureaucracies. I have become much more selective about who I will help... who I will offer my medicine, my reiki, my shiatsu/ tui na, or my guidance. Advice is mostly free to those who are ready to hear it, and I don't mind debating with peoples' worldviews or blowing minds from time to time. But, I find myself, like most people in my position throughout history... a mildly lonely old wizard without a peer group, let alone a guild to belong to.
The Nexus helps a bit, but even here, there are only handfuls of people who know what I am talking about... and a rising tide of sheltered young know-it-alls who don't have the life experience to be truly wise, and have never had their mettle tested. While consuming and regurgitating information may pass for knowledge in academia... it is nearly worthless in the realms of experiential mysticism. You either know how to do something reliably... or you don't.
Anyway, this is getting rather long. And, I fear it makes me seem more morose and sad than I actually am. I am resigned to my situation. I could move to a place where there are more people like me, but to do so would require me sacrificing all that I have built and much of what I treasure in life. So, I am content to be an occasionally grumpy, mildly misanthropic philanthropist.
Thankfully, I have the skill in meditation and the grounding of kung fu to keep this from being a debilitating condition.
In regards to the article, it IS possible to live over 100 years smoking, eating fatty foods and having regular exposure to pathogens... if you are strong. Perhaps some "what doesn't kill you makes you stronger" effect is at work.
(Note: I am well aware that that old adage is myopic and foolish if extrapolated)
Anyway... a toast to the lonely.
HF
"Curiouser and curiouser..." ~ Alice
"Do not believe in anything simply because you have heard it. Do not believe in anything simply because it is spoken and rumored by many. Do not believe in anything simply because it is found written in your religious books. Do not believe in anything merely on the authority of your teachers and elders. Do not believe in traditions because they have been handed down for many generations. But after observation and analysis, when you find that anything agrees with reason and is conducive to the good and benefit of one and all, then accept it and live up to it." ~ Buddha