Home Alone

Home Alone

My wife Linda left last Tuesday to go to her high school reunion in Hawaii.  I didn’t want to go with her, and she didn’t press me on it.  How many days can you devote to making small talk with very nice people you haven’t met before and probably won’t see again?   AND I had an ulterior motive:  As someone who is seldom alone for more than a few hours at a time, I wanted to experiment with being alone for a week and a day, safe in the knowledge that it was temporary.

Given the statistics on longevity, Linda will likely outlive me, and it will be her job to wrestle with being alone.  Still, I could be the one left alone.  And I’ve begun wondering how I would handle it.

I have most of the required domestic skills for solo survival because I was the oldest son and also a single parent for so many years.  I can cook, clean, and do laundry, shop, mess things up, tidy things up, pay household bills, arrange for events with friends, take psychic nutrition from the serenity of our otherwise unoccupied house, say “no thank you” to lunch and dinner invitations from friends who already think I’m nuts by conducting this experiment, sleep reasonably well alone, and ask for help when I’m feeling isolated.   (For me, isolation could be a real problem.)

I began my alone research by observing some of my male friends more closely, and myself during the eight days Linda was away.  I discovered several faces of alone.

Conscious aloneness.  I have a friend, call him Adam, age 69, in Pennsylvania.  His wife died 10 years ago.  The right woman hasn’t come along, and through the years I have watched him adapt both his comfort levels and his expectations without abandoning his efforts.   Adam has an apartment that’s a kind of nest, comfortable without ostentation of any kind, with book-lined walls and all kinds of recorded music.  There is great public transportation nearby and a charming shopping street within walking distance.   He has an active social network.  Sometimes he is lonely but isn’t undone by being alone.  Retired now, Adam meets people when he volunteers and when he travels.  He is at one end of what I have come to see as the Alone Continuum, the guy who has for the most part found his place alone and with others.

Confusing aloneness and not busy enough.    Another friend, call him Ben, age 73, lives in Ohio.  He’s retired, and was divorced three years ago after a 30-year marriage.  His M.O. is that he is only content when he’s busy.   The rest of the time he’s anxious.   Ben is without any noticeable nesting instincts of his own.  He is seeking the right female companion with no expectations of exclusivity or permanence.  He says he can’t stand being alone, that it’s actually painful for him.   I’m unclear whether he’s more afraid of being alone or more undone by lack of busy-ness.  I am clear, however, that Ben is at the other end from Adam along the Alone Continuum.

Alone In A Crowd.  Now we come to Charlie, age 58, who lives in California.  Charlie attends a lot of large social events and pays great attention to his appearance.    He can’t stand being wrong or being challenged.  So he surrounds himself with people who won’t disagree with him, often hanging out graciously but alone in crowds.  If Charlie isn’t happy, no one around him is allowed to be happy either.  He says he’s lonely.    Charlie shares one end of the alone continuum with Ben.

As for my time on my own, how did I do?  I have had a great week, filled with joy and feelings of competence.  Still, I’ll be glad for my wife’s return home tomorrow.  (I’m already marinating her favorite teriyaki steaks.)  Did I miss her terribly?  No.  Is missing immediately and intensely somehow a requirement for great love and devotion?  I don’t think so.

As a result of my experiment, I’m much clearer than ever before that:

  • I have the ability to be alone if that is what life hands me.  It isn’t what I want. But I won’t be undone by it, and that’s a relief.
  • I am no longer embedded in a role (parent, spouse, homeowner, consultant, author, grandparent, researcher, speaker) as my primary way of knowing who I am; somehow in the last 10 years I have developed a sense of myself that endures without roles as a requirement.  And this already gives me a leg up, so to speak, on being alone.
  • I think it would be good for all of us to experiment with solitude before it knocks on our doors with utterly unforgiving permanence.
  • My friends Ben and Charlie would be well served to take Adam out to dinner and inquire in depth about how he manages.  And then to try some of what worked for Adam in their own lives.
  • Our society often views singlehood after 50 with a dark and suspicious eye.  It doesn’t have to be so.  We get to choose what alone means for us.
  • One of the best things we can do for ourselves after 50 is to take consistent action, renewing and replenishing our social networks.  We need to meet and socialize with people of different backgrounds, interests and viewpoints.  Building relationships only with people we agree with isn’t renewal.  It’s acquisition.  Besides, that’s exactly how older people get isolated—they hang out with the same people for years.  Then their friends die off and move away while they did little, if anything, to replenish their group of friends.

Which brings me to one my biggest takeaways from this experience:  As Linda and I grow older, it’s important that we have our own lives, even though our shared life dominates.  This does NOT mean I’m less devoted to my wife.  It does mean we can’t depend upon each other exclusively to be OK.  We have to depend upon ourselves, too.  And upon others.  That seems to be a requirement of aging well.

Here’s another important lesson:  Loneliness and isolation aren’t completely avoidable, but they don’t have to swamp us.  NOW is the time to consider practicing with being alone, at least occasionally.  NOW is the time to take all of this seriously, because later may be way too late.

You may want to start, as I did, with Home Alone.  Or do you have other strategies in mind?

6 Comments

  • Sue Seiter
    June 17, 2016 2:21 am 0Likes

    I am living alone now, for the first time in 48 years. I went from living with my parents to being married at a young age to having children 6 years later.

    When my Bob died last January after declining health for more than two years, I knew what being alone meant. I was very glad that throughout our life together, we had always given each other space to be alone. Girls’ weekends, golf getaways and business trips taught each of us that we were okay flying solo for a time. We admitted that we enjoyed the solitude of being in our own home all alone – no schedule, no responsibilities but our own. We missed each other but we could certainly get by quite well.

    Now that I am alone each day, I embrace your wise advice of getting out with friends, traveling to new places, meeting new people. The loneliness hits in the strangest ways, like when you want to comment on a news story or share a joy — and no one is there to listen. I am deeply grateful that I have had “alone practice” and know I will survive.

    I am also glad that I have a dog who (sometimes) listens!

    • George Schofield
      June 21, 2016 6:51 pm 0Likes

      Hi Sue. You should write for publication. Thanks so much for such a heartfelt and authentic telling it like it is for you. Inspiring! George

  • Jari Searns
    June 17, 2016 12:31 pm 0Likes

    What a truly great and appropriate piece…especially for me at this time. Having recently retired after a 50+ year business career, primarily involved with supervision of others and sales/marketing oriented activities, I found myself awash in time and a whole bunch of that time was alone time. It was scary and quite disconcerting for a period.

    I would spend hours just waiting for my husband to come home from work so I had someone to talk to and often when he came home he was stressful from his day and wanted only peace and quiet.

    Finally, a light went on in my rather thick skull and I recognized that being alone holds all kinds of interesting challenges…old acquaintances to renew, places to visit that my Husband doesn’t really like, but I do, long lunches to chat and gossip with friends I never seemed to have time to see. There are books to read, hobbies to pursue and the time to actually enjoy every part of every day…and I’m loving it! Including my alone time which allows me now to concoct new adventures.

    • George Schofield
      June 21, 2016 6:49 pm 0Likes

      Thanks, Jari. I know it isn’t necessarily easy but the truth is, as we get older we have a decreasing amount of total control. Refusing to be alone can be a vehement statement of control that is like putting our heads in the sand. Thanks for your very genuine and thoughtful response. George

  • David Lubert
    June 17, 2016 2:27 pm 0Likes

    Another good topic, George. I have found that your local library has a tremendous amount of resources, activities and events to allow one to stay engaged, to explore new areas and also to discover old topics in a new manner. Over the years I have seen a vast number of articles on great places to retire to and places to consider as you enter your second career. Well, for me when my wife and I decide to downsize wherever that might be one of the first areas I will investigate is the local library and their associated programs. I am blessed to live in a community that has a impressive local library that has great program offerings and offers a wide ranging array of community services, like exploring 3-D printing and a tremendous access to on-line education and research courses that are all free from the comforts of my home or in-person on-site. So if you are “home alone” and you want to stay engaged the local library is a click away and if you want to be engaged in person then drive on over and get engaged!
    Oh! and by the way I do not work for the library!

    Thanks, George!

    • George Schofield
      June 21, 2016 6:47 pm 0Likes

      Hi David. What a really smart guy you are. You use a resource containing resources. I hope more of my readers take this tip from you. George

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