nerdygirl
Well-known member
The loneliness is probably different between a person who has been in a relationship and a person who never has. I will not say either one is worse. I also wouldn't say that a person who was born without an arm suffers more than the person whose arm was amputated. Each person suffers for his or her own reasons, and neither will ever feel how the other one feels.
I have to say, TheSolitaryMan, that you seem more afraid that nobody will ever want you than you are of being alone. If you are the same person offline that you are online, I think it is mostly a matter of time and self-confidence.
Valince, hugging my mother for over five seconds would cause me a great amount of stress. We get along reasonably well, but I do not associate her with comfort or consolation. If hugging yours all day wouldn't help you to feel better, it isn't because you are not romantically linked, but because that isn't a dynamic of your relationship.
I suppose that the reactions I'm reading to my post make it clearer to me that I'm doing the right things and making the right choices when I make friends. I have extremely few friends, but each of them are people who would hold me if I needed to be held and for whom I would do the same.
Being "in love" is a natural high that eventually stops. You produce extra neurotransmitters that make you feel all kinds of happy, cuddly, and sexual. Just like with any drug, your brain gets used to that and those emotions fade. I mean, Love is Love, and that doesn't go anywhere, but all of that giddy stuff fades away. Sometimes, people realize they never actually loved each other at all.
I'm bringing this up because I think a lot of people think that you're supposed to feel like that the whole time. Yes. You will love this person in a way that you don't love your friends... but when that high wears off, it's not quite as distinct as it used to be. And you realize that while the way you feel about that person is unique... you can, indeed, find a similar comfort in hugging friends or relatives. Exactly the same? Of course not. Nothing can replace Nana's cookies, either... but Aunt Linda makes good ones, too.
It is completely reasonable to want (but not need) somebody in your life. A relationship, when it's good, can be fun. It can be a source of comfort and happiness for many people. The desire for a relationship becomes unreasonable when you believe a it will be the key to ending your loneliness. I've seen many posts here urging people to be in relationships that probably aren't good for them because zomg, it would suck to be alone.
And Anten, you are very obviously one of those people who can only answer this thread by saying, "'Cause I get horny."
I have to say, TheSolitaryMan, that you seem more afraid that nobody will ever want you than you are of being alone. If you are the same person offline that you are online, I think it is mostly a matter of time and self-confidence.
Valince, hugging my mother for over five seconds would cause me a great amount of stress. We get along reasonably well, but I do not associate her with comfort or consolation. If hugging yours all day wouldn't help you to feel better, it isn't because you are not romantically linked, but because that isn't a dynamic of your relationship.
I suppose that the reactions I'm reading to my post make it clearer to me that I'm doing the right things and making the right choices when I make friends. I have extremely few friends, but each of them are people who would hold me if I needed to be held and for whom I would do the same.
Being "in love" is a natural high that eventually stops. You produce extra neurotransmitters that make you feel all kinds of happy, cuddly, and sexual. Just like with any drug, your brain gets used to that and those emotions fade. I mean, Love is Love, and that doesn't go anywhere, but all of that giddy stuff fades away. Sometimes, people realize they never actually loved each other at all.
I'm bringing this up because I think a lot of people think that you're supposed to feel like that the whole time. Yes. You will love this person in a way that you don't love your friends... but when that high wears off, it's not quite as distinct as it used to be. And you realize that while the way you feel about that person is unique... you can, indeed, find a similar comfort in hugging friends or relatives. Exactly the same? Of course not. Nothing can replace Nana's cookies, either... but Aunt Linda makes good ones, too.
It is completely reasonable to want (but not need) somebody in your life. A relationship, when it's good, can be fun. It can be a source of comfort and happiness for many people. The desire for a relationship becomes unreasonable when you believe a it will be the key to ending your loneliness. I've seen many posts here urging people to be in relationships that probably aren't good for them because zomg, it would suck to be alone.
And Anten, you are very obviously one of those people who can only answer this thread by saying, "'Cause I get horny."