TRAINING SCHOOL
THERAPY SERVICES
PRIVATE THERAPYLOW-COST THERAPYMICHAELA MCCARTHY
LOCATIONS
CLAPHAMTOOTING
CALL US TODAY 020 8673 4545BOOK AN APPOINTMENT ONLINE
Product has been added to your basket.
  • HOME
  • ABOUT
    • CLINICAL SERVICES
      • About TAC Clinical Services
      • Meet the Team
      • Client Reviews
    • TRAINING SCHOOL
      • About TAC Training School
      • Meet the Faculty
      • Student Reviews
    • OUR CENTRES
      • TAC Clapham
      • TAC Tooting
      • Michaela McCarthy’s Practice
      • How to Find Us
    • THE DIRECTOR
      • Michaela McCarthy
    • OTHER
      • Centre News
      • Media
      • Collaborative Partners & External Agencies
  • THERAPY SERVICES
    • PRIVATE THERAPY
      • Counselling
      • Psychotherapy
      • Psychology
      • Michaela McCarthy’s Private Practice
      • Online Counselling
      • Private Healthcare Providers
      • Our Private Therapists
    • SPECIALIST THERAPY
      • Anger Management Therapy
      • Bereavement Counselling
      • Child & Adolescent Counselling
      • Couples Counselling
      • Eating Disorders Therapy
      • Family Therapy
      • LGBTQIA+ Counselling
      • Multilingual Counselling
      • Sex & Relationship Therapy
      • Trauma Counselling & Psychotherapy
    • LOW COST THERAPY
      • Counselling & Psychotherapy
      • Couples Counselling
      • LGBTQIA+ Counselling
      • Multilingual Counselling
      • Sex & Relationship Therapy
      • Our Low Cost Therapists
    • NHS THERAPY
      • NHS Lambeth
      • NHS Wandsworth
      • NHS Sutton
      • Our NHS Therapists
      • NHS Multilingual Counselling
    • FURTHER INFORMATION
      • Types of Issues
        • Abuse
        • ADHD
        • Anger
        • Anxiety Disorders
        • Asperger’s Syndrome
        • Attachment Disorder
        • Bereavement and Loss
        • Body Dysmorphic Disorder
        • Bullying
        • Cancer
        • Carer Support
        • Chronic Fatigue Syndrome
        • Communication
        • Dementia
        • Depression
        • Disability
        • Dissociation
        • Eating Disorders
        • Family and Relationships
        • Gender & Identity
        • Guilt and Shame
        • Hearing Voices
        • HIV/AIDS
        • Illness
        • Infertility
        • Isolation & Loneliness
        • Learning Difficulties
        • Life Transitions
        • Low Self-Esteem
        • Mental Health
        • Paranoia
        • Passive Aggressive Behaviour
        • Personality Disorders
        • Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD)
        • Pregnancy & Childbirth
        • Psychosis
        • Rape
        • Redundancy
        • Schizophrenia
        • Self-Harm
        • Sex and Relationships
        • Sexuality
        • Spirituality
        • Stress
        • Suicidal Thoughts
        • Tourette’s Syndrome
        • Trauma (Child & Adult)
        • Trichotillomania
        • Workplace Issues
      • Frequently Asked Questions
      • Resources
      • Approaches to Therapy
      • Client Reviews
  • FEES
  • TAC TRAINING SCHOOL
    • COUNSELLING & SUPERVISION TRAINING
      • Foundation Certificate in Counselling
      • Diploma in Integrative Counselling
      • Diploma in Clinical Supervision
    • FURTHER INFORMATION
      • About TAC Training School
      • Meet the Faculty
      • Training School Reviews
      • How to Find Us
  • BLOG
  • WORK AT TAC
    • Work in Private Practice at TAC
    • Careers at TAC
    • Therapist Reviews
  • COUNSELLING PLACEMENT
    • Counselling Placement
    • Counselling Placement Reviews
    • Placement Training Reviews
  • CONTACT
THERAPY SERVICESBOOK AN APPOINTMENT020 8673 4545
loneliness

Loneliness and its impact on Mental Health

We have all known for a very long time that loneliness is not nice. Connection to other human beings brings all sorts of good stuff and feeling apart from them can be upsetting. However, in recent years, loneliness has gone from being something off-radar that we all thought was not desirable to becoming central to how we think about what might be wrong with us and the world.

It is very similar to what has happened with obesity: we’ve always known in the back of our minds somewhere that having too much body mass was not good, but in recent years obesity has been the focus of so much medical, scientific and social research that we now know just how many diseases and ills it can cause if we don’t act to combat it. So much so that obesity could now be typified as ‘public enemy number one’. And loneliness is creeping up behind it as a major cause of poor health and social ills.

Research published in the British Medical Journal in 2009 showed that ‘loneliness leads to poorer physical and mental health’, two years later the BBC produced a report describing loneliness as a ‘hidden killer’ among the elderly. Since then the evidence has been amassing and it is now established that loneliness can be more deadly than smoking as it not only affects your mental health and increases depression and suicidal ideation, it also adversely affects the immune and cardio-vascular systems.

Loneliness is one of the most frequently used search terms on health and medical websites so it is clearly something that many people worry about. So what can you do about it if you are lonely? The answer is not an easy one because although loneliness is universal it is also very complex and is individual to each person that feels it. And, because there is no single common cause of it, the prevention and treatment of it can vary dramatically.

For example, the child who finds it hard to make friends at school, the young person looking enviously at all her friends’ Facebook feeds full of celebrations and group selfies, and the recently widowed elderly citizen who doesn’t see anyone to talk to from one end of the day to another — they each have very different needs and need to work in different ways to address their loneliness.

What is Loneliness?

You might instantly answer — being alone, dummy! But actually it is more complicated than that. It is not just whether you are frequently with people or isolated from them; it is a state of mind. You can feel lonely in a crowd or as part of a committed couple and you can feel not lonely while living in solitude up a mountain. Feeling lonely is a state in which you feel empty, unloved, unheard, and unwanted; and you can be in that state whether you have friends or not. People experiencing loneliness yearn to form meaningful connections with others, but they find this very difficult.

Scientific research shows that loneliness can arise from external factors, but really should be attributed to internal factors such as low self-esteem and lack of confidence. People who lack confidence often believe that they are not worthy of love and attention from others which can lead to social isolation and chronic loneliness.

Ironically perhaps, the rise of social media isn’t helping. Researchers report that while the web can help us connect with and stay connected to more people, the quantity of social interaction makes no difference to loneliness. It is the quality of social interconnection that matters. Research also shows that having as few as three or four really close friends can be enough to protect you from the harmful effects of loneliness.

What Can You Do to Prevent Loneliness?

Accept is as a sign that something needs to change. Loneliness is stereotyped as being ‘Billy No Mates’. But you have to learn to stop thinking of it as somehow sad and pathetic and therefore shameful and embarrassing. It is a state that affects almost all of us at different times of our lives, and it is something that can be worked on and changed.

Recognise and understand the affects that loneliness can have on your life, both physically and mentally. Bringing this to awareness will help you to learn how best to get to grips with it and tackle it.

Build your self-esteem and confidence in ways that also get you out into the community a bit more. For example by doing some form of community service or voluntary work.

Focus on quality not quantity. Think about the nature of all your friendships and concentrate on building the ones with people who share your interests and have similar values to you.

Be positive and open to new things. The loneliest people are those who consciously, or not, expect to be rejected. Try to give space to thinking about the part of you that feels undeserving and start to show an interest in others, which you can reasonably expect to be returned.

Be active. Physical exercise is well-recognised by psychologists, nutritionists, and medical professionals for its benefits to physical and mental health and having regular exercise is associated with significantly less loneliness.

Remember: loneliness is not a character flaw or the result of poor social skills it is a state of mind and one that can be changed for the better.

If you feel lonely and would like work towards changing this, having a safe space to talk about it in therapy could be very helpful. Just call 020 8673 4545 or email [email protected] for a confidential appointment.

Bridget Freer
Bridget Freer first trained as a print journalist and worked for many years as a freelance features writer for publications including The Sunday Times, The Times, The Observer, The Telegraph, Hello, People, Rolling Stone, Marie Claire and Psychologies. She is also the author of several books on careers and travel. Bridget is a qualified psychotherapist with an MsC in psychodynamic psychotherapy from Birkbeck, University of London.
How Counselling Can Help You Manage Your Anger
How To Diminish The Power Of Your Inner Critic

Related Posts

Give yourself a spring clean!

Give Yourself a Spring Clean!

Do I Have Health Anxiety?

Do I Have Health Anxiety?

What to do After Giving Up on New Years Resolutions loneliness

Overcoming Obstacles and Setbacks: What to do After Giving Up on New Year’s Resolutions

Why There Is No Getting Over A Bereavement

Why There Is No “Getting Over” A Bereavement

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Fill out this field
Fill out this field
Please enter a valid email address.

Subscribe to our newsletter



    Please add me to the list

    Categories

    • Abortion
    • Abuse
    • Acute Stress Disorder
    • ADHD
    • Alcoholism
    • Anger Management
    • Anxiety
    • Ask Michaela
    • Attachment
    • Bereavement & Loss
    • Bipolar
    • Black History Month
    • Borderline Personality Disorder
    • Bullying
    • Children and Adolescents
    • Coaching
    • Co-Dependency
    • Couples
    • Counselling
    • Dementia
    • Depression
    • Divorce
    • Eating Disorders
    • Echoism
    • Ecopsychology
    • Empty Nest Syndrome
    • Family
    • Health
    • Imposter Syndrome
    • Infertility
    • Insomnia
    • LGBTQ
    • Life Stories
    • Loneliness
    • Masochism
    • Meditation
    • Men's Mental Health
    • Menopause
    • Mental Health
    • Mindfulness
    • Narcissism
    • News
    • OCD
    • Panic Attacks
    • Parenting
    • Personal Development
    • Personality Disorders
    • Porn
    • Postnatal Depression
    • Pregnancy
    • Psychodynamic Therapy
    • Psychology
    • Psychosexual
    • Psychotherapy
    • PTSD
    • Purpose & Meaning
    • Relationships
    • Sadness
    • Seasonal Affective Disorder (SAD)
    • Self-Care
    • Self Esteem
    • Self-Harm
    • Sex
    • Sexual Harassment
    • Sleep
    • Social Anxiety Disorder
    • Suicide
    • Stress
    • Therapy
    • Training School
    • Trauma
    • Uncategorized
    • Workplace Issues

    COUNSELLING PLACEMENT

    Are you looking for a voluntary therapist role in a counselling placement that challenges you as much as it supports you?

    The Awareness Centre runs one of the largest voluntary counselling placements in London.

    LEARN MORE
    The Awareness Centre Training School

    TAC TRAINING SCHOOL

    The Awareness Centre (TAC) Training School offers comprehensive counselling and clinical supervision training, including a BACP accredited diploma in counselling and a programme of CPD courses for qualified therapists. With centres in Clapham SW4 and Tooting SW17, TAC Training School prides itself on its outstanding tutors, who deliver high-quality teaching to aspiring and experienced practitioners in the therapy field.

    LEARN MORE
    Subscribe to our newsletter
    Subscribe to the newsletter

    "*" indicates required fields

    Consent

    TAC Clapham

    41 Abbeville Road
    London SW4 9JX
    020 8673 4545
    [email protected]

    Available Services

    check_circle
    Private & Low-Cost Therapy
    check_circle
    Counselling, Psychotherapy & Psychology

    Appointments

    Monday – Friday:
    7.00am – 10.00pm

    Saturday:
    9.00am – 5.30pm

    Sunday:
    9.00am – 1.00pm
    1.30pm – 5.30pm

    TAC Tooting

    74-80 Upper Tooting Road
    London SW17 7PB
    020 8673 4545
    [email protected]

    Available Services

    check_circle
    Private & Low-Cost Therapy
    check_circle
    Counselling & Psychotherapy

    Appointments

    Monday – Friday:
    7.00am – 10.00pm

    Saturday:
    9.00am – 5.30pm

    Sunday:
    9.00am – 1.00pm
    1.30pm – 5.30pm

    Michaela McCarthy’s Practice

    85 Wimpole Street
    London W1G 9RJ
    020 8079 0708
    [email protected]

    Available Services

    check_circle
    Private Therapy
    check_circle
    Counselling & Psychotherapy

    Appointments

    Tuesday and Thursday:
    8.00am – 12.00pm

    The Awareness Centre
    BACP Membership

    BACP Member

    TAC Training School
    BACP Accredited Course

    BACP Accredited Counselling Diploma

    cyber essentials
    • Home
    • Disclaimer
    • TAC Policies
    • Cookie Policy
    • Privacy Notice

    © 2025 The Awareness Centre Ltd. A company registered in England and Wales, Number: 06194423. Registered Office: 74-80 Upper Tooting Road, London, England, SW17 7PB.