How to handle loneliness during the pandemic holidays

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Zoomed out? Exasperated by isolation? Longing for face-to-face human interaction beyond your home? You’re not alone. Such craving is widespread, and holiday-induced loneliness brings additional challenges. Maybe some expectation management and realistic solutions are in order.

Holidays traditionally bring loads of in-person events and interactions. The season is usually a time for people to gather, eat, relax, talk, watch sports or movies or concerts, attend faith gatherings, sing, and enjoy company. But pandemic-era holidays will be different.

Anthony Fauci explained that his three daughters were not coming home for Thanksgiving due to COVID-19 concerns. Ditto for National Institutes of Health Director Dr. Francis Collins and his extended family.

What about you? Has “there’s no place like home for the holidays” morphed into “home alone” for the holidays? Have endless virtual office meetings made you a Zoombie? Maybe you’re a stressed parent juggling remote work and home schooling. Losing sleep because your sales presentation requires schmoozing that a computer screen just can’t provide? Maybe you miss coffee with a trusted friend whose presence affirms your value.

Loneliness affects even experts. With admirable transparency, psychiatrist Ravi Chandra noted his own pandemic feelings: “I’ve had difficult moments of loneliness … an intense one on only the second day of quarantine, when it felt like the trapdoor beneath the stage of the world had been dropped out, and there was a bottomless pit of isolation and loss underneath.”

Isolation can make you feel unappreciated, unloved, anxious, angry. Chandra cites a mom who wrote: “My kid had an absolute unholy screaming like forty-minute meltdown about a very small thing and then at the end of it said quietly ‘I miss school and I miss my friends.'” Would that more adults recognized their own emotions’ roots.

There are many suggestions and diversions, both helpful and harmful, to battle pandemic isolation and loneliness. Consider a few I’d call helpful:

  • Face reality. While vaccine news is promising, pandemic life will go on for a matter of months, not days, so adjust your expectations. Before life gets back to normal, you’ll experience isolation, perhaps danger, death of a loved one, illness, or more. Life may get worse before it gets better. Accepting that may help you discover healthy coping strategies. Olympic runner Louie Zamperini survived 47 days on a raft in the Pacific after his World War II plane crashed, then endured a hellish Japanese prisoner-of-war camp. On the raft, he had prayed for divine rescue. Faith in God eventually became his mainstay.
  • Face your feelings: Practice emotional intelligence. Ignoring or stuffing unpleasant feelings can bring physical illness and emotional explosion. Try writing down what you feel and why. Discuss your feelings with a trusted friend. Sometimes, just recognizing and talking about feelings can help you process them constructively.
  • Cultivate kindness. Pandemic-era Gallup workplace research found that “less than half of employees (45%) strongly agree that their organization cares about their overall wellbeing.” Ouch! Leaders take note. Harvard Business School professor Boris Groysberg writes, “Kindness is contagious as well as calming.” The Mayo Clinic maintains: “The act of helping others actually activates the part of your brain that makes you feel pleasure. … Seems like research supports the Golden Rule: Do unto others as you would have them do unto you. The kinder you act toward others, the better you will feel.”
  • Foster your own faith. Collins, of the NIH, feels the biblical affirmation “God is our refuge and strength” is a “great source of comfort.” Maybe his faith inspires his optimism: “We’re going to get through [this] serious worldwide crisis, and it will have an end.” A personal relationship with God can bring peace of mind, purpose for living, confidence about life beyond death, and the best friend you could ever have.

All of these will help you throughout the holidays. No matter what happens, have a happy Thanksgiving, and stay safe throughout the holiday season.

Rusty Wright is an author and lecturer who has spoken on six continents. His film reviews and columns have been published by newspapers across the country and used by more than 2,000 websites.

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