Ask HN: Feeling Lonely
I have been feeling pretty lonely for the last couple of weeks. My job is contract python work so I stay home all day. I don't really have close friends. The last time I went out with friends was weeks ago. I barely have any communication with others online. I always seem to never have anything to talk about and have trouble keeping a conversation flowing.
I am getting worse at being motivated to do any work, so simple tasks take hours to do. I used to love programming on personal projects but the last time I worked on a personal project was nearly a month ago.
I am 20 and still live with my parents but don't talk to them much, they are restrictive parents. I am a college student on a long holiday.
So, I am not in a super depressing position, but I am not having that much fun either. I would like to be more social to not feel lonely.
29 comments
[ 5.2 ms ] story [ 71.9 ms ] threadI actually just posted my experience on this here: http://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=5066944
I hope you feel better soon.
Also, it's pretty commonly understood that the site exists so that like minded people can find each other when they otherwise likely wouldn't have crossed paths, so it's a great way to make new friends (and/or social networks). If you still have some anxiety, I would suggest contacting the group admin and saying you're interested but a bit nervous about going to the first meeting. It does take a small amount of money each year to host the group, so the people in charge of it usually care enough to try to make people feel comfortable enough to come and keep coming. (I have a friend who runs a small meetup group for writers, and he's always extremely super thrilled when new people come out to it.)
Assuming that you're not depressed but just in a rut here are some things that work for me but your mileage may vary:
- go outside. Go for a walk or a hike in nature.
- invite friends over and cook them dinner. While youre cooking as them about their lives and how they are going. Be interested in how they really are. Once you do that, communication will start flowing.
- block your work up. You could try the Pomodoro technique etc. take blocks of time to relax too.
- get some exercise.
- ask your parents about what it was like growing up for them. You may get a deeper understanding of why they are restrictive.
- get your friend to set you up on a blind date.
- write a page of free form stream of conscious every morning for a week. First thing when you get up. At the end of the week read them.
Good luck buddy
I would also suggest surrounding yourself with as much outdoor greenery as you can (time of year permitting). It's really therapeutic.
I found myself in a similar space a few years back and these are the three things that brought me out of my rut:
1-I joined a martial arts club. The Aikido community is generally a welcoming group and most dojos have classes 5 - 7 days a week. 2-Wrote brief entries in a journal. 3-Sought out cultural experiences/events that I wouldn't normally attend. Oh and 4-, actually, outside time. Even in the winter. Even a 15 minute walk. The ol' gray matter really likes to hit the trails, or even the pavement.
Just make one change to your routine today and that sense of your own agency can build momentum.
An instant mood makeover is to perform a good deed. Just because you can. Examples: Feed some pigeons. Free a rabbit caught in a snare. Drop by the local SPCA to pet some animals. And see if they could use a pair of hands for the day.
I don't really have close friends.
A close friend is like a priceless jewel. Guard 'em with your life.
When I feel that I'm getting bored of coding all day I go to a local Café with my laptop and using my smartphones 3G connection shared on wifi to the laptop. Works great for looking up docs and googling a question if the Cafe dsn't have free Wifi. I'm working from a cafe 2 times a week about 3 hours each time.
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Go to the Gym, even if it's not your thing.
When I started going to the gym i definitely felt lost, the big guy where lifting way more than me and I wasn't very sure what exercises I should do. But just going to the gym, doing some basic exercises and looking at others in the gym thought me a lot and now I really like it. It does also have benefits such as feeling better afterwards and making you look more attractive, which is a huge boost for your self-estime.
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Help others.
Jump on IRC or the mailing-list for your niche and help others when you feel you want to do other things other than work. This not only gives you the pleasure of helping others with your skills, it's also a great place to find gigs.
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Contribute to an opensource project.
Find an open-source project that you are using and understands how it works, look up what reported issues the project have and try to solve them. If you can't find a solution for any of the issues start with the documentation, every project needs better documentation and it's not a very hard task to write if you understand how the code works. The benefits are same as helping others really.
You're pretty young and your parents are supporting you, at least providing housing, which is pretty nice. I'd tackle some of those personal projects you enjoy, and travel (at the very least, explore your own city), and learn to do some new stuff (learn Latin and read Cicero, practice a musical instrument, learn how to bind books, build a tube amplifier, other stuff we never have time to do 'cause working for rent/mortgage gets in the way). Go to the library (w/o a laptop) and sit and read, a lot.
I so wish I were young again...
And yeah, talk to your parents, being sure to let them do lots of the talking.
https://www.google.com/webhp?sourceid=chrome-instant&rlz...
If there aren't any in your area, start your own meet up. You can do it at a local coffee shop and take it from there. I am sure you are not the only one in your situation. Give a try!
I was in a similar situation and I found a local group. Best decision I ever made. Got to hang out with people, have lunch, dinner drinks and made a lot of new friends and potential business partners. Good luck!
The key is to step away from the computer and realize that it isn't what life is all about. There is so much beauty and wonder in the world that simply cannot be replicated on a screen.
P.s. If you want someone to talk to about Python or books or the future or girls or boys or dreams, please send me an email. I too am working a remote Python job from home on a long winter break so some company would be appreciated! If you are around NYC I'd even grab a coffee or something.
In the weekends, there are lots of places (especially if you live in a decently populated city) where people go to to spend time with other people. If you find one of these places (just google it, basically), there's almost always musicians (e.g. Jazz Saxophonists) playing some laid-back music, and tons of people having a great time. Merely being present in a place like that is enough to make you not feel lonely. Your situation might differ but I doubt it would hurt to try these and some of the other ideas other HNers presented.
Besides that, you have to socialize, it`s absolutely imperative to escape depression, not decay your(apparently already low) social skills. Also, don't you communicate with your work friends?
Start an activity like a sport, dancing, painting, whatever, you'll meet new people doing this.
Working remotely is a great thing but you gotta enjoy it's advantages or this sort of stuff will bite you. When I did remote work I went through the same stuff, now I'm working "normal" and I feel it's my fault that I didn't enjoy it as I could and I wished I'd work remotely again.
When I'm in a rut I grab a notepad, go for a walk and only let myself return after writing down 5 observations.