By American Heart Association News
If you've been keeping a healthy distance from other people because
of COVID-19, you probably feel smart. But if you're also feeling lonely
and stressed, it doesn't mean anything is wrong. It could simply mean
you're human.
The need to be around people is hard-wired into our
brains, researchers say. We crave company in the same way we hunger for
food or thirst for water. When that craving isn't satisfied, the
long-term health consequences can be serious.
Luckily, the need for togetherness can be met even at a distance.
The
idea that our brains drive us to be around one another has gained
popularity in recent decades, said Louise Hawkley, senior research
scientist at NORC at the University of Chicago.
We evolved to be
around those we know and trust, she said. "Our security was in numbers.
We had our safety by being around other people. We weren't particularly
fast runners. We couldn't defy what nature threw at us just by speed. We
had to be smart about it. Well, one of the smart things we did was we
capitalized on each other's brains. We worked together."
As Lane
Beckes, an associate professor in the department of psychology at
Bradley University in Peoria, Illinois, put it: "We absolutely need
other people."
Brain studies have shown how deeply this need is woven into our biology. A study in the journal Science
found subjects who were excluded from a virtual ball-tossing game had
more activity in the part of the brain that processes physical pain.
Recently, researchers published preliminary findings
on the preprint server bioRxiv that suggest loneliness triggers
chemical responses in the brain similar to what's prompted by hunger.
Other
research has shown serious long-term health consequences from chronic
loneliness. "It turns out that being socially connected is associated
with approximately a 50% reduction
in the risk of early death," Beckes said. "In effect, it's similar to
the reduction of risk that somebody with coronary heart disease has if
they quit smoking."
A 2016 study in the journal Heart linked loneliness and social isolation to a 32% increased risk of having a stroke or developing coronary artery disease.
Beckes was part of research
published in the International Journal of Psychophysiology that showed
how people facing a threat have lower stress responses when they're
physically touching their partners or close friends. But here's an
important point for those of us sitting home during the pandemic – it's
not the physical company of others that defines loneliness. What matters
most is that you feel as if someone has your back.
"It's not being alone," Hawkley said. "It's feeling alone" – a mismatch between what you want and what you have.
Not
everybody needs the same level of connectedness, she said. "And it's a
good thing, because we need those brave souls who are willing to break
away from the group and be the explorers, (who) break new ground, get
out there and go where no one has gone before. But there's always got to
be this backstop, this return to the safe base that even the explorers
need."
That sense of having a base can come in many ways, even without face-to-face contact.
"A
lot of people can even live alone and be perfectly fine in part because
they do things like they talk to their friends on the phone, they have
Zoom conversations, they feel like other people will come to their aid"
if they need help, Beckes said.
But there are limits. There's a
reason those Zoom conferences feel awkward. Stress, he said, arises when
our brains don't know what's happening next. Usually, we're absorbing
all sorts of cues from those around us to try to anticipate what's going
to happen. The absence of those nonverbal signals makes online
connections more stressful.
Which is why he recommends trying to
arrange in-person social contact with physical distancing – perhaps a
small gathering of friends outside at a park with space between people.
Just
don't ignore safety to socialize. "The health effects of loneliness and
social isolation probably pale in comparison to an acute outbreak of
the COVID-19 virus," Beckes said.
If in-person meetings aren't feasible, improve digital get-togethers. Try playing games online.
"When
they have a shared focus, players are thinking about something besides
those missing cues," he said. "Anything that sort of reduces the
awkwardness and stress of interacting with other people is going to be
more rewarding and, ultimately, a better source of satisfying your
social need."
Hawkley said taking initiative is key. A review
she helped conduct about anti-loneliness techniques that was published
in the journal Personality and Social Psychology Review suggested the
brains of lonely people get "hijacked" by negative thoughts.
She
suggested making a list of people to connect with, perhaps a long-lost
friend or a family member. But be deliberate about the decision.
"It
may not be the be-all, end-all the first time around," she said. "But
you have to find a way of feeding your social need bit by bit. And as
you have successful experiences you gain more confidence. And you think,
'Yes, I can do this.'"