Research suggests that people who say they prefer being alone aren't always telling the truth. Many of them preferred connection until it repeatedly disappointed them, and solitude became the story they told to make the disappointment portable. - Silicon Canals
Briefly

Research suggests that people who say they prefer being alone aren't always telling the truth. Many of them preferred connection until it repeatedly disappointed them, and solitude became the story they told to make the disappointment portable. - Silicon Canals
"Many people who claim to prefer being alone aren't describing a preference at all. They're describing an adaptation. The distance between those two things is enormous."
"The preference for aloneness often emerges after connection has failed enough times that the nervous system quietly reclassifies it as threat."
"Avoidant attachment describes a relational style in which closeness, dependency, or emotional intensity begins to feel threatening rather than soothing."
"The person doesn't just stop wanting connection. They reorganize around the absence of it."
Society rewards solitude as a sign of strength and self-sufficiency, but many who prefer being alone may not truly choose it. Psychological research indicates that this preference often arises from past failures in connection, leading to a reclassification of solitude as a safer option. Avoidant attachment describes how individuals develop a fear of closeness due to painful early experiences, resulting in a withdrawal from connection. This withdrawal is not a lack of desire for connection but a reorganization around its absence.
Read at Silicon Canals
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