Embracing Single Life: How To Feel Good About Going Solo

Medically reviewed by Andrea Brant, LMHC
Updated October 9, 2024by BetterHelp Editorial Team

As a single person, you may have probably experienced pressure from friends or family to “find” someone. While the expectation to date can be overwhelming, there are many benefits to being single. For example, happy single people often know themselves better, enjoy more free time, and have closer relationships with friends and family than their married counterparts. This article explores the benefits of being single and how you can start embracing single life. 

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Are fears and self-doubt holding you back from enjoying single life?

Why you might feel bad about being single 

There are many benefits to being single, so why does it feel bad sometimes? Here are a few  reasons: 

  • Mindset: Mindset plays a significant role in how happy you are in your single life. For example, one study found that people who view themselves as voluntarily single experience lower rates of romantic loneliness compared with those who consider themselves involuntarily single.
  • Stigma: People in long-term relationships are often called mature, kind, or stable. A single person, however, is more frequently labeled as insecure, self-centered, or unhappy. This type of stigma is sometimes referred to as “singlism.” 
  • Social pressure: If you’ve found yourself being pressured by friends and family into accepting a blind date or asked if you’ll ever settle down and start a family, you’ve experienced social pressure. Pressure from others to be in a relationship may make you feel as if being single is the wrong choice. 
  • Guilt: Shani Silver summed up the experience of many single women, saying, “The guilt of doing nothing about our singleness is what keeps women going back for more.” Some people feel guilty being single because they believe they’re supposed to put in constant effort to no longer be single. 
  • Customs: Once you reach a certain age, there is often an expectation to stop living life solo, get married, and have a family. As single people age, they may become more conscious of their relationship status. 
  • Self-doubt: Some involuntarily single people worry that they don’t deserve love or that they’ll be single forever. 
  • Comparison: If your peers are getting involved in serious relationships and you’re still single, you could become jealous or wonder why you don’t have that, too. This challenge is often exacerbated by social media and FOMO (fear of missing out).  

Many of the negative feelings people have about being single are rooted in societal expectations, discrimination, and stigma that becomes internalized. 

How being single can help you grow

If you’re single now—whether by choice or not—there are many benefits to explore. For example, you can: 

Other benefits of single life

In addition to exploring your passions and taking time for yourself, there could be unexpected advantages to being single. For example, you can:

  • Skip the drama: If your relationships tend to be turbulent or breaking up throws a wrench in your life, you’ll likely appreciate the calm of being single. 
  • Flirt whenever you want to: If you find the barista attractive, you can flirt in good conscience. 
  • Set the thermostat to whatever you want: When you’re single, you have the ultimate freedom to live your life the way you want to. Meal choices, weekend plans, thermostat temperature, vacation destinations, which side of the bed you want to sleep on-…You won’t need to compromise. 
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Healthy ways of embracing single life

The following are some approaches you can take as you harness the freedom and independence of being single and live the life you want:

Focus on your goals: Without having to worry about someone else’s goals, you can focus entirely on what you want to achieve. 

  • Pursue the career you’ve always wanted
  • Get your education
  • Travel
  • Move to your dream city

Explore new hobbies

You can use the extra time afforded by single life to pursue new passions.

  • Learn a new language
  • Take a dance class
  • Write a novel
  • Sign up for an art class 

Spend time with those you care about

Romantic relationships aren’t the only form of social support you can have. 

  • Move closer to your family
  • Have a routine dinner date with friends
  • Meet like-minded people by joining a group or organization you care about

Develop healthy habits

When quiet time after work doesn’t have to be spent catching up with your partner, you can invest your time into self-care. 

  • Journal
  • Meditate
  • Get regular exercise
  • Cook nourishing meals for yourself
  • Catch up on chores and responsibilities

Get to know yourself

When you’re single, you can “date” yourself and learn to enjoy your own company. 

  • Explore your values, goals, interests, and passions
  • Treat yourself the way you’d want to be treated by buying yourself flowers, taking yourself out to a nice dinner, or getting a concert ticket when your favorite band is in town
  • Challenge your inner critic
  • Discover what you enjoy the most
  • Find your most independent and capable self

With the right mindset, being single can boost your mental health, strengthen your social network, improve your relationship with yourself, and help you fulfill your life goals. 

Getty/Halfpoint Images
Are fears and self-doubt holding you back from enjoying single life?

How to deal with negative feelings about being single

If you’ve been single for a while, you might start to experience low self-worth or feeling that you’re “not good enough.” You may also experience feelings of frustration or loneliness.  

Processing feelings of loneliness

Addressing loneliness can help prevent a variety of mental disorders, such as depression, substance use disorders, and sleep disorders. Maintaining self-esteem and social needs may also be beneficial to your physical health. It’s also connected with physical disorders like diabetes, cardiovascular disease, and obesity. 

Embracing single life through social support

However, a romantic partner is not necessarily needed to relieve loneliness. Many single adults find the social support they need to thrive from friends, family, pets, colleagues, and their community. And if you are interested in having a romantic relationship, there are many like-minded people out there, as well as many ways to find love.

Working with a therapist

You can also try speaking with a therapist to address your concerns. A mental health professional can help you address loneliness, explore your interests, and learn more about yourself.

Navigating single life with online therapy

Online therapy platforms match clients with licensed therapists who can help them navigate concerns like low self-esteem, loneliness, or how to handle the stigma surrounding single life. If you’d rather avoid commuting to therapy, or if you’d be more comfortable attending sessions from home, you might want to try an online platform like BetterHelp.

The effectiveness of online therapy

Studies support the idea that cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) can address loneliness. In a 2020 study of internet-based CBT, researchers found that therapy had a long-lasting impact on reducing loneliness and improving overall wellbeing. Additional studies have found that online CBT can be effective for a range of mental disorders, including depression, anxiety, posttraumatic stress disorder, and obsessive-compulsive disorder. 

Takeaway

Society tends to push people towards romantic relationships, perpetuating the stigma that people cannot lead happy and successful lives without a life partner. However, being single can be a great opportunity to focus on your own needs, work towards your goals, and maximize your happiness. Many single people lead rich and fulfilling lives. 

If you’re experiencing loneliness, stress about dating, or if you want some help getting to know yourself, you may want to reach out to an online cognitive behavioral therapist. They can address your mental health challenges and help you grow into a more confident, self-loving version of yourself. 

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