31 Things I Do to Combat Loneliness During the Pandemic

I’m sure I don’t need to tell you that loneliness has been a serious problem for many of us during the pandemic. As a hardcore introvert who doesn’t live alone, I’ve been spared the worst of it, but it still sneaks up on me sometimes. Here are 31 things I do regularly that help ease the pain of loneliness:

  1. Have long phone calls with my spouse nearly every night.
  2. While on those phone calls, sync up shows/movies to watch together, so it’s almost like we’re cuddled up on the couch enjoying entertainment together like a non-long-distance couple could do.
  3. Look at real estate websites and imagine the parties I would throw, post-COVID, if I owned this brick-walled loft or that Grecian mansion.
  4. Skype with my best friend once a week to catch up and record our podcast.
  5. Watch live improv shows online (the Bad Dog Comedy channel on YouTube, and the usually-weekly performance of RaaatScraps, are my faves). It almost feels like being in an actual comedy venue again.
  6. Read books containing loveable characters. Literature, I think, is one of humanity’s best ways for mentally communing with other people when we can’t physically be around other people.
  7. Drink wine and play Jackbox games with my roommate and her boyfriend once a week or so.
  8. Occasionally lurk around online dating sites fantasizing about what my life would be like if I was dating this person or that. (Turns out that a tendency to visit site after site into the wee hours is maybe not the healthiest thing for me, but hey, life is a journey of self-discovery!)
  9. Flirt with people on social media.
  10. Argue with people on Reddit. (Would not recommend.)
  11. Learn to deeply enjoy my own company. This is a lifelong process, I suspect.
  12. Watch old videos of fun times with friends.
  13. Play songs on my piano and ukulele, close my eyes, and imagine I’m performing them for a massive crowd (in a post-pandemic world in which that would not be at all concerning for any of us).
  14. Chat with my therapist on the phone twice a month.
  15. Cuddle with cats.
  16. Cultivate obsessions with YouTubers – gorgeous women doing beauty tutorials, clever men making cocktails, etc.
  17. Use realistic sex toys and fantasize about various hot people.
  18. Learn to cook new meals and make new drinks, in the hopes of one day being able to serve them to people I love.
  19. Leave my favorite Twitch streamer’s videos playing on my iPad when I go to sleep, just to hear the comforting sound of a familiar voice (even if he happens to be battling the Elite Four or trying to catch a shiny Rayquaza or whatever).
  20. Have one-person dance parties in my room, and imagine I’m surrounded by sweaty bodies writhing in tandem at a club.
  21. Make a gratitude list.
  22. Go for (masked) walks down to the waterfront, to be with the wind and the waves and the other wandering souls who’ve found their way there.
  23. Send out compliments as often as it occurs to me to do so.
  24. Create families in The Sims and have them throw parties, go on adventures, etc.
  25. Listen to music that seems to “get” how I’m feeling, like that of Ben Hopkins, Paul Cook & the Chronicles, Sarah Vaughan, Ski Lift, Blossom Dearie, Hippo Campus, Fleet Foxes, and Nick Jonas (his most recent album Spaceman is full of COVID vibes!).
  26. Reflect on memories of wonderful social experiences, like being part of a competitive improv team, attending sex-positive mixers, and chatting with the folks who came to my book launch event.
  27. Add more lamps to my room. I don’t know why, but they make the space feel cozier.
  28. Be proactive about my own self-care, including stuff like taking my meds + vitamins every day and using my SAD lamp every day, because taking good care of myself is extra important when no one is physically around to take care of me.
  29. Step away from the internet sometimes. Being online may seem like a solution to loneliness, because there are so many people buzzing around on there, but often it just exacerbates the problem. “Touch grass,” as the kids say.
  30. Look out my window at all the lit-up windows of other people who are stuck inside.
  31. Remember, always, that this too shall pass.

 

This post was sponsored. As always, all writing and opinions are my own.