People who’ve always been comfortable alone tend to develop these 9 emotional skills others struggle to learn

People who’ve always been comfortable alone tend to develop these 9 emotional skills others struggle to learn

I had a friend in college who would disappear for entire weekends.

Not because anything was wrong.

Not because she was avoiding anyone or nursing a difficult stretch or going through something she didn’t want to talk about.

She just went home. Spent time alone. Came back on Monday looking rested in a way that had nothing to do with sleep.

I didn’t understand it then. I was someone who needed people around constantly, who experienced silence as something to be filled, who found empty stretches of time faintly threatening rather than restoring. Her ease with solitude seemed like a different language—one I hadn’t been taught and couldn’t quite access.

What she actually had wasn’t introversion, exactly, though that was part of it. It was something more developed than a preference. A set of capacities she’d been quietly building her whole life, in the space that other people filled with noise and company and the particular comfort of not having to be alone with themselves.

People who’ve always been comfortable alone aren’t just introverted. They’ve had more practice than most at a specific kind of inner work—and that practice tends to produce particular emotional skills.

1. They can embrace solitude without it being lonely

A women enjoying a solo beach walk.
Shutterstock

This distinction sounds simple. It isn’t.

Loneliness is the ache of unwanted aloneness—the feeling of absence, of missing connection, of being separate from something you need. Solitude is chosen, inhabited, and generative. It’s aloneness that isn’t asking to be fixed.

People who’ve always been comfortable alone developed this distinction early, through experience rather than through being told about it. They know what loneliness feels like—it’s a real feeling, and they’ve had it. But they also know that being alone and being lonely aren’t the same thing. That knowledge gives them access to rest that people who can’t make the distinction never quite find.

2. They have a reliable relationship with themselves

Spend enough time alone, and you either learn to be decent company for yourself, or you don’t spend time alone anymore.

The people who stayed—who kept returning to solitude and found ways to make it habitable—built something in the process.

A familiarity with their own interior.

An ability to sit with themselves without the background noise of other people organizing their experience.

A relationship with their own thoughts and feelings that doesn’t require an audience or a mirror.

This is rarer than it sounds. A lot of people reach midlife without having spent enough unmediated time with themselves to know what they actually think, feel, or want when no one else’s preferences are in the room.

3. They can regulate their emotions without relying on others

When something difficult happens, the first move for many people is outward—toward a friend, a partner, a phone call, the particular relief of having someone else help process the feeling.

People comfortable with solitude learned to do more of this internally. Not because they don’t value connection—they do—but because they’ve had more practice sitting with difficult feelings long enough to understand them, rather than dispersing them immediately through contact with other people.

I’ve noticed this in myself in the years I’ve spent living alone—a greater tolerance for sitting inside a hard feeling without immediately reaching for someone to take part of it. It’s not always comfortable. But it produces something. You come out the other side knowing more about what was actually going on.

4. They let silence be silence

People who are used to silence don’t need to fill it. In conversation, this shows up as a quality of presence that other people often find unusually calming—an absence of the low-level nervous energy that drives people to speak before they’ve finished thinking, to fill pauses before they’ve had a chance to breathe, to keep the noise going because the quiet feels like something has gone wrong.

People comfortable with solitude know that the quiet between two people isn’t failure. It isn’t awkward unless someone decides it is. It can be its own form of closeness—two people existing in the same space without needing to perform for each other.

5. They know the difference between their opinions and others’ expectations

Solitude is clarifying in a specific way. Without the constant input of other people’s preferences and expectations and enthusiasm, you’re left with the quieter signal of your own.

What do I actually enjoy? What do I actually think about this? What do I want to do with this time that belongs entirely to me?

People who’ve spent a lot of time alone have answered these questions more often than most. They’ve had to—there was no one else in the room to defer to, no social current to follow, no easier option than figuring out what they actually wanted. The result is a clearer sense of self that holds up better under pressure.

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6. They don’t need other people’s opinions to know they’re okay

This one compounds over time.

When your primary source of stability is internal—when you’ve built a functioning relationship with yourself rather than relying on other people’s approval to know how you’re doing—you become less vulnerable to the particular turbulence of other people’s moods and opinions.

It doesn’t mean they don’t care what people think. It means their sense of themselves doesn’t hinge on it. They have a floor that stays steady even when external feedback is absent or negative. That floor gets built in solitude, through the accumulated experience of being okay without anyone confirming it.

7. They’re good at recognizing when they need to withdraw

Most people run on empty for longer than they should because they don’t recognize the signal—or because they recognize it and don’t know what to do with it.

People comfortable with solitude have a more practiced relationship with their own depletion.

They’ve learned, through experience, what it feels like when they need to step back—and they’ve built enough comfort with aloneness that stepping back doesn’t feel like punishment or failure. It feels like maintenance.

I didn’t get this at all until I spent a period living somewhere very quiet, with a lot of unstructured time. The first few weeks felt like withdrawal. By the end, I’d recalibrated entirely—and I understood, for the first time, what it felt like to be genuinely restored rather than just less tired.

8. They have a lot of patience for time-consuming processes

Solitude moves slowly. There’s no one to rush you, no social rhythm to keep up with, no external pacing to match.

People who’ve spent a lot of time alone have made peace with slowness in a way that translates into other areas of life. They’re more comfortable with the middle of things—the long stretch between starting and finishing, between planting and harvesting, between beginning something and knowing whether it worked.

This patience isn’t passivity. It’s a tolerance for incompleteness that most people find genuinely uncomfortable, and that most people never develop because they’re always in the company of other people’s urgency.

9. They’re more than enough company for themselves

There’s a particular longing that drives a lot of human behavior—the desire to be completely known by another person.

Completely seen, completely understood, completely received. It’s a real longing, and it isn’t wrong.

But it also isn’t fully achievable. Some part of every person remains private, untranslatable, impossible to fully convey to another consciousness. People who’ve spent a lot of time alone tend to have made a kind of peace with this—not because they’ve given up on connection, but because they’ve developed enough of a relationship with their own interior to know that the unknowable part isn’t a problem to solve. It’s just part of what it is to be a person.

I think this is what my college friend had that I couldn’t name then. Not just comfort with being alone. A comfort with being herself—fully, privately, without needing anyone else to confirm it.

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Halle Kaye has been writing for Bolde since 2014. She writes primarily about dating, marriage, divorce, parenting, friendship and family dynamics.

As someone who is unapologetically hyper-independent, Halle writes extensively about people who are high-functioning, high-achieving and tend to rely exclusively on themselves. She writes about the origins of this psychological profile as well as the loneliness that often comes with it. She regularly shares her personal experiences navigating parenting, family and friendship with these tendencies and speaks candidly about those moments she wishes she had someone she could rely on.

Halle is also the author of the popular 2012 dating book Maybe He's Just an Ahole: Ditch Denial, Embrace Your Worth, and Find True Love! which was based on her dating experiences in college. Halle splits her time between Westport, CT and New York.