07/01/2026
Man taler ofte om farligheden ved at være alene - at folk der er alene er ensomme.
Jeg har talt med rigtig mange ældre mennesker i mit arbejde, fælles for mange var, at de havde det ok med at være alene - de savnede en ægtefælle der var faldet bort, men de følte dem ikke ensomme!
Min hypotese er - at det er personligheden der afgør, hvordan man oplever det at være alene🌱
I dag stødte jeg på dette fra Buddhismen - ret interessant 👌
Emotionally healthy people tend to have fewer friends.
Not because they are cold.
Not because they are arrogant.
Not because they don’t value people.
But because they value peace, clarity, and authenticity more than noise.
🌿 They are selective, not antisocial
Emotionally healthy people don’t collect people to fill silence or soothe loneliness. They choose connections that feel safe, mutual, and honest. They understand that not everyone deserves access to their inner world.
🧘 They have boundaries and respect them
They’ve learned, often through pain, that saying yes to everyone means saying no to themselves. Boundaries are not walls; they are doors with rules. Anyone who repeatedly disrespects them simply doesn’t get entry.
🌱 They don’t confuse closeness with chaos
Drama, constant emotional demands, manipulation, and instability feel exhausting to them. They don’t mistake intensity for intimacy. Calm relationships feel like home — not like something to survive.
🪷 They are content being alone
They’ve made peace with their own company. Solitude no longer feels like punishment; it feels like rest. Because they don’t fear being alone, they don’t tolerate relationships that drain them.
🧠 They value depth over numbers
A few genuine connections mean more than dozens of shallow ones. They prefer conversations that nourish the soul over interactions that simply pass time.
🪶 They don’t chase validation
They no longer need constant reassurance from others to feel worthy. Their sense of self comes from within, not from how many people are around them.
☸️ Buddhist perspective
Buddhism teaches that suffering arises from clinging — including clinging to people. Emotional health grows when we let go of the need to be liked by everyone and choose relationships rooted in mindfulness, respect, and compassion.
Sometimes, fewer friends don’t mean less love.
It means more peace.
And peace is a sign of inner strength, not loneliness.https://www.facebook.com/share/p/1DHw5Frq2A/