Sunday, October 20, 2019

LONELINESS AND LACK OF INTIMATE SUPPORTIVE RELATIONSHIPS




Despite the explosion of diverse ways to relate intimately, most young adults do not seem to be experiencing this:

·       A Barna-World Vision partnership that surveyed 15,000 18–35-year-olds from 25 countries around the globe—is broad agreement with two statements: “Events around the world matter to me” (77% all) and “I feel connected to people around the world” (57%). The experience of connection in one’s daily life, however, isn’t a guarantee. In fact, the vast majority of young adults feels the impact of broad, global trends more than they feel loved and supported by others close to them. https://www.barna.com/research/global-connection-isolation/

·       Just one in three 18–35-year-old respondents tells Barna they often feel deeply cared for by those around them (33%) or that someone believes in them (32%). Meanwhile, nearly one in four (23%) acknowledges encountering feelings of loneliness and isolation.

They also complain of other problems:

·       There are other signs that 18–35-year-olds are not quite at ease in the world—a main one being that they tell us so. When respondents had an opportunity to provide a portrait of their emotions, the image is one of a generation gripped by worry. Anxiety about important decisions is widespread (40%), as well as uncertainty about the future (40%), a fear of failure (40%) and a pressure to be successful (36%). Though this study alone can’t speak to actual diagnoses of mental illness, nearly three in 10 overall (28%) call themselves sad or depressed.

Psychiatrists Jacqueline Olds and Richard Schwartz cite two “major studies” in regards to the spread of loneliness. In the first:

·       “McPherson found that between 1985 and 2004, the number of people with whom the average American discussed ‘important matters’ dropped from three to two. Even more stunning, the number of people who said that there was no one with whom they discussed important matters tripled: in 2004, individuals without a single confidant now made up nearly a quarter of those surveyed” (The Lonely American, 2).

In addition to this, James Buie reported that “Depression…for those born after 1950 is as much as twenty times higher than the incidence rate for those born before 1910” (quoted from Edward Welch, Depression: A Stubborn Darkness, 113).

What has happened to us, to our families, and to our communities? What has made intimate social attachments so difficult? I’d like to suggest one simple answer. We have lost the ability to be comfortable within ourselves and therefore also with others. It has become harder for us to accept ourselves the way we are, warts and all.

From where does self-acceptance arise? The consensus points to fact that we are born to be loved. However, our families are often as dysfunctional as we are, and we all are dysfunctional, perhaps in many ways. Therefore, we are always trying to prove to both ourselves and to the world that we are lovable, worthy, and significant. This is even true of those who achieve the highest rung on the ladder. In The Significant Life, George Weaver presents President Lyndon B. Johnson as an example of the typical human being who could never simply accept himself as he is:

·       According to one commentator, “It is a curious footnote to history that long before he ran into trouble, Johnson had turned central Texas into a living monument to his heritage and his journey to the summit (the L.B.J birthplace, the L.B.J. boyhood home, the L.B.J. state park, the L.B.J. ranch and more).” (22)

Johnson had presented to the world the face of “heightened significance.” Who else would set up props which essentially say, “Look at me!” In order to affiliate with such a person, we are required to accept this face. If instead, we regard Johnson as just another human being or even criticize one aspect of his façade, any further affiliation, let alone friendship, would be doomed. It is a manicured presentation that we have to buy as is.

What does it do to relationships when we are always trying to prove ourselves by presenting a façade, an inauthentic self? We become a performer, and others will eventually tire of our performance and flee.

What is our solution when we find that we are unable to accept ourselves and to just be transparent? I have found that as I grew in the confidence that God loves me so much that He had died for me, even when I was His enemy (Romans 5:8-10), I could begin to accept myself without the need for others to affirm me. Free from this need, I was now free to enjoy them and look towards their needs. I also found that if I could accept myself, I could also begin to accept others as they are. I think that it is only in this climate of mutual acceptance and caring that meaningful relationships can take root. It also seems that as we have increasingly turned our back on God, we have also turned away from the hope of other meaningful relationships.

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