
Understanding Loneliness and How to Overcome It
Learn why loneliness affects so many men, and how to overcome it. Explore causes, health impacts, and practical steps to rebuild connection.

Learn why loneliness affects so many men, and how to overcome it. Explore causes, health impacts, and practical steps to rebuild connection.
Every message sent, every activity joined, every honest conversation moves you closer to the connection you deserve.
Loneliness is a common and deeply human experience, and something that affects far more people than many realize. More than 45% of men who have completed our Stress Test indicate that it’s one of the top stressors in their lives. This is also reflected globally, with various studies suggesting that, at any given time, around one in six people globally report being lonely.[1]
In many countries, loneliness has reached levels that public health experts describe as a growing crisis.[2,3] It’s linked to poorer mental health, substance misuse, and even higher rates of physical illness and early mortality.[4]
Understanding why loneliness happens, what prevents us from reaching out, and how to rebuild meaningful connections is essential to improving mental health and saving lives.
Loneliness is not simply being alone. It’s the painful feeling of lacking meaningful connection; of feeling unseen, unheard, or emotionally disconnected from others. Someone can be surrounded by people and still feel lonely, while another person may spend time alone but feel quite connected.
Loneliness is a signal that our need for closeness, belonging, and understanding is not being met. Think of it in a similar way to thirst or hunger, which alert us to the need for water and nourishment. Over time, persistent loneliness can erode confidence, dampen motivation, and make everyday life feel heavier and more exhausting.
Many men carry loneliness quietly, pushing through work, responsibilities, and daily life while feeling disconnected, unseen, or emotionally isolated inside.
Chronic loneliness increases the risk of depression, anxiety, substance misuse, and suicide.[5,6] Yet many men never speak about it, believing they should be able to handle it on their own. For men, loneliness often shows up as:
Loneliness rarely has a single cause. More often, it develops through a combination of life circumstances, emotional challenges, and social changes. For example:
Relationship Breakdown
Relocation
Work Changes
Mental Health Challenges
Major Life Stressors
Although loneliness is widespread, it’s not uncommon for us to suffer in silence. Several factors can make reaching out feel difficult or even impossible. Even when loneliness becomes painful, many men hesitate to seek support due to powerful internal and social barriers:
Stigma and Shame
Loneliness is often misunderstood as a personal failure rather than a natural human experience. Many of us can feel embarrassed to admit that we are lonely, worrying we will be judged as weak, needy, or socially inadequate.
Not Knowing Who to Reach Out To — or How
Some of us might feel we have no one we can turn to. Others may want support but are unsure how to start the conversation or worry about what kind of response they’ll get. Over time, uncertainty can lead to stagnation.
Fear of Burdening Others
A common belief is, “Everyone else is busy. I don’t want to bother them.” This fear prevents many of us from reaching out, even to close friends or family. Yet, people often feel quite touched and valued when asked for support.
Masculine Norms and Expectations
For many men, social messages about masculinity create additional barriers. Norms that emphasize toughness, emotional control, independence, and self-reliance can make it feel unsafe to share that they feel lonely. Men may worry that opening up will make them appear weak, vulnerable, or inadequate.
As a result, many men cope with loneliness alone, turning to distraction, overwork, substances, or emotional shutdown. These strategies may temporarily distract from or numb pain, but they ultimately deepen isolation.
Long-term loneliness doesn’t just affect our emotional well-being, it impacts our physical health as well.
Research shows that persistent loneliness is linked to:
Loneliness can also distort thinking, leading people to assume rejection, misinterpret social cues, and withdraw further, thus creating a self-reinforcing cycle that becomes increasingly difficult to break.
Loneliness is not a personal failure and it is not permanent. With patience, courage, and small steps, meaningful connections can be rebuilt. We are all worthy of friendship and connection, and there are a lot more people out there looking for human connection than we realize.
Fighting loneliness requires being honest with yourself and finding out why you feel alone.
There are three main overlapping reasons why people feel lonely:
A) Comparing and judging yourself
This is an easy trap to fall into, especially with social media. We see people posting photos with their friends and/or partner and we judge ourselves as not being as good or worthy of the deeper connections it looks like they have (even though their photos may not represent what their life really looks like).
B) Anxiety around talking to others and making connections.
Everyone has different levels of stress and anxiety in social situations; for some, it can be intense enough that it prevents them from forming relationships. Whether you have a lot of social anxiety or are simply a little shy in large groups, it’s important to understand this and acknowledge that making new connections makes all of us a little anxious at first.
C) Not letting people in
Forming more meaningful relationships means having someone you can trust, but if you never give someone a chance to really know you, your connections can get stuck at more superficial levels.
When you are honest and authentic with others, it shows your confidence and trust in them, which in turn makes it easier for them to trust you.
Many men were taught that strength means handling everything alone. But isolation isn’t resilience.
Real strength looks like:
Reaching out is an act of self-respect and an acknowledgement that you’re human.
Connection has the best chance of forming when it starts small.
Simple messages that work:
Action steps:
It’s often easier to reconnect than to start from scratch.
Think about:
Many people are also looking for deeper connections, so you might be helping them as much as yourself.
Men often bond best by doing something together.
Shared activities reduce pressure and make conversation more natural.
Low-pressure ways to meet people:
Loneliness grows in unstructured time. Routine social activities build stability and belonging.
Ways to add structure:
Consistency matters more than intensity, as relationships often take time to build. More opportunities for connection also means you get more practice socialising, starting conversations, and breaking the ice with new people.
Whenever you ask a new person to hang out, ask a co-worker to meet up on the weekend, or want to take the next step in your relationship, you face the possibility of rejection, which risks real hurt and discomfort. This discomfort feels bad in the moment, but it’s only by working through it that we can expand our comfort zone to include more interactions, and ultimately, more social connections.
Think of it like learning to swim in a pool. You can start in the shallow end, but to reach the other side, you need to gradually build up the skills, strength, confidence, and perseverance to reach those depths.
Socialising and opening up can be awkward or painful, but that’s okay. Someone not wanting to spend time with you doesn’t change what you have to offer and is not a reflection of your worthiness, and often has more to do with the other person’s priorities at the time.
Learning how to brace yourself and not take rejection too personally is a crucial skill, and is also one that requires practice.
Social confidence improves with repetition and practice. Expect some rejection, discomfort and awkwardness along the way, just like you expect some sore muscles after a gym workout. That discomfort doesn’t mean you’re failing; it means you’re getting better.
Practical goals:
Try not to focus on whether someone will become a “great friend” immediately. Let relationships grow naturally over time.
It’s common for men to have fears around “looking weak” or “making things awkward” when we want to open up about how we’re feeling. This is really common, since most guys learn from childhood (either implicitly or explicitly) that men keep their feelings to themselves.
But opening up is crucial to build real connection that extends beyond surface-level friendship. You don’t need to share everything at once, but gradually being more open and honest with close friends will deepen trust over time.
Start with manageable honesty:
Most men are carrying more than they show, so when one guy articulates a struggle they’re dealing with, it often creates relief for the other guy, not discomfort. Vulnerability gives the other person permission to be honest as well and ultimately builds real connection.
If loneliness continues to weigh on you, getting support is a smart move, and doesn’t need to be left as a last resort.
A therapist, counsellor, or trained peer supporter can:
Loneliness is a major and leading risk factor for depression, and can affect mental and physical health over time. It is also very treatable, and worth taking seriously. Getting professional help is absolutely nothing to be ashamed of, rather, it’s a sign of self-respect as it shows that you’re taking your health, personal wellbeing, and relationships seriously.
Meaningful connection takes time.
There may be:
That’s normal.
Every small step counts. Every message sent, every activity joined, every honest conversation moves you closer to the connection you deserve.
Loneliness can feel overwhelming, but it does not define who we are, and it does not have to be permanent. Human beings are wired for connection, and with the right support, those connections can be rebuilt.
If you’re feeling lonely, know that you’re not alone in this experience. Reaching out – even in small ways – can begin to shift isolation into connection, silence into understanding, and loneliness into belonging.
So, whether you are feeling lonely or know someone who is struggling with loneliness, reach out. After all, we are better together.
References
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