life purpose Archives - Dr. KarenTurnerPhD https://karenturnerphd.org/tag/life-purpose/ Dr. KarenTurnerPhD Thu, 04 Jun 2026 00:45:52 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=7.0 https://karenturnerphd.org/wp-content/uploads/2026/03/cropped-Karen-Turner-logo-32x32.png life purpose Archives - Dr. KarenTurnerPhD https://karenturnerphd.org/tag/life-purpose/ 32 32 More or Enough? The Life-Changing Question That Comes With Age https://karenturnerphd.org/more-or-enough-the-question-that-changes-with-age/ Thu, 04 Jun 2026 00:45:52 +0000 https://karenturnerphd.org/more-or-enough-the-question-that-changes-with-age/ The Loneliness Epidemic Among Older Adults The opposite of loneliness is not company. It’s connection. That may sound like a small distinction, but it helps explain why loneliness…

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The Loneliness Epidemic Among Older Adults

The opposite of loneliness is not company.

It’s connection.

That may sound like a small distinction, but it helps explain why loneliness has become one of the most significant challenges facing older adults today.

Many people assume loneliness means being alone.

It doesn’t.

Some people live alone and feel perfectly content.

Others are surrounded by family, neighbors, activities, and social obligations yet still feel deeply lonely.

Loneliness is not measured by the number of people in our lives.

It is measured by the quality of our connections.

It is the feeling that no one truly knows what is happening inside us.

It is the sense that our conversations stay on the surface when what we really long for is something deeper.

It is the experience of being surrounded by people yet feeling unseen.

As a psychologist, I’ve learned that loneliness often arrives quietly.

Rarely does someone wake up one morning and suddenly feel isolated.

More often it develops progressively.

A retirement changes daily routines.

A spouse dies.

Friends move away.

Children become busy building lives of their own.

Health challenges make social activities more difficult.

The circle becomes smaller.

The opportunities for meaningful connection become fewer.

And before long, many people find themselves wondering why they feel disconnected despite staying busy.

The truth is that activity and connection are not the same thing.

We can fill our calendars and still feel lonely.

We can attend events, run errands, join groups, and engage in countless conversations without ever feeling truly known.

What most of us want is not simply interaction.

We want connection.

We want relationships where we can speak honestly.

We want people who remember our stories.

We want conversations that move beyond weather reports and medical appointments.

We want to matter.

One of the greatest misconceptions about aging is that our need for connection somehow decreases.

In my experience, the opposite is often true.

As we grow older, superficial relationships become less satisfying.

We become more selective about how we spend our time.

We become less interested in impressing people and more interested in understanding them.

Many older adults discover that what they crave is not a larger social circle but a deeper one.

A few meaningful relationships can nourish us far more than dozens of casual acquaintances.

Research consistently shows that social connection is closely tied to emotional well-being, physical health, cognitive functioning, and even longevity.

Human beings are wired for connection.

That does not change at 60.

It does not change at 70.

It does not change at 90.

The need to be seen, heard, valued, and understood remains one of the most enduring aspects of being human.

The encouraging news is that loneliness is not a permanent condition.

Connection can be rebuilt.

New friendships can be formed.

Old friendships can be renewed.

Communities can be found.

Sometimes the first step is surprisingly simple.

Reach out.

Call the friend you’ve been meaning to call.

Accept the invitation you’ve been debating.

Join the group you’ve been curious about.

Introduce yourself to someone new.

Invite someone for coffee.

Pull up an empty chair.

Connection rarely arrives because we wait for it.

More often, it begins because someone is willing to make the first move.

That can feel uncomfortable.

It can feel vulnerable.

But vulnerability is often where meaningful relationships begin.

One of the unexpected gifts of later life is the opportunity to become more intentional about the people we allow into our world.

We no longer need relationships based on obligation, status, or appearance.

We can choose relationships based on authenticity, kindness, shared interests, and mutual respect.

We can choose quality over quantity.

Depth over performance.

Connection over proximity.

The loneliness epidemic among older adults is real.

But so is our capacity to create meaningful relationships.

So if you find yourself feeling lonely, know this:

You are not unusual.

You are not failing.

You are not alone.

You are experiencing something profoundly human.

And perhaps the next meaningful connection in your life is closer than you think.

Sometimes it begins with a conversation.

Sometimes it begins with an invitation.

And sometimes it begins with the simple decision to pull up a chair and let someone sit beside you

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