Distinguish between being alone and a loner. I do not think there is any such thing as a "successful" loner. To be a loner is already to have failed at life in perhaps the most significant ways - and probably not the loner's fault. All this to be distinguished from being alone, the natural state of all of us some of the time.What traits do you think a successful loner typically possesses? — Benj96
Distinguish between being alone and a loner. I do not think there is any such thing as a "successful" loner. To be a loner is already to have failed at life in perhaps the most significant ways - and probably not the loner's fault. — tim wood
I try to be a social optimist and think: "There goes a happy loner who might very well have the secret to life." I give him the benefit of the doubt like any lover of humanity would do. — James Riley
so we know "the benefit of the doubt" is not to your benefit, in enabling you to assure yourself that he or she needs no assistance from you. — tim wood
The failure I have in mind is in a Rogerian-Aristotelian sense, of happiness as described by A, and self-actualization by R. The given being humans are social animals, and thus find greatest happiness and accomplishment as members of communities. — tim wood
Solitude and isolation are not the same thing. But often, these two are thought to be interchangeable. A person wanting to be alone doesn't necessarily feel cut off from the rest of social population. At least to me, wanting solitude doesn't mean wanting to be cut off from connections. I feel as happy spending time alone as I am spending time with others. I divide my time between the two situations. And I get satisfaction from either.So why is this the case? Are we social/ pack animals or not? Or do humans simply not fit a well- defined category when it comes to the need/ desire for social unity. — Benj96
. Or is it down to personality? Do some people genuinely like to be alone or is the need for socialising innate in all people - driven by sexual impulse at the very least? Perhaps it’s all of these things? — Benj96
What traits do you think a successful loner typically possesses? — Benj96
A good imagination will probably serve you well though above most other aspects. — I like sushi
I think 'loner' is a word frequently used as a pejorative in literature and in a law and order context and often precedes a discussion on serial killing or some other hate crime. — Tom Storm
I’m interested in the large divide between those who cannot stand being alone and those who cannot stand to be forced to engage with others. I wonder why there is this discord in such a populous and typically social mammalian species as humans are believed to be. — Benj96
If you are alone and unhappy about it: problem. If you are alone and happy: no problem. There is no 'meant to be' state. Some people, draw strength from social contact. Some people, draw strength from aloneness. — Tom Storm
Are we social/ pack animals or not? — Benj96
What traits do you think a successful loner typically possesses? — Benj96
Is it better to be alone or part of a group? — Benj96
I do not think there is any such thing as a "successful" loner. To be a loner is already to have failed at life in perhaps the most significant ways - — tim wood
And,Distinguish between being alone and a loner. — tim wood
The failure I have in mind is in a Rogerian-Aristotelian sense, of happiness as described by A, and self-actualization by R. The given being humans are social animals, and thus find greatest happiness and accomplishment as members of communities. — tim wood
One of the few things on Earth that I am afraid of is the pack. When I see a loner, I don't see a serial killer or a whack job. I see someone minding their own business and someone who presents no threat to the security of a free state. It is people that present the threat. — James Riley
This quoted part though can be tricky. We also know of many "loners" (or whatever word we want to use) which end up shooting people at school. They'll do something perhaps analogous in other countries, less scale involved, but destructive acts nonetheless. So I wonder what word to use for these cases. — Manuel
Off the top of my head, my speculation would be that not all these people were necessarily ignored or abused by family. Maybe a good deal of them, but not all. — Manuel
If these fictions begin telling someone that life is totally meaningless ergo I have to kill people to prove the point, then it's a problem. — Manuel
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