It’s finally time to make it “even Steven” after all these times we've looked at the wholesome couples, best friends, partners in crime, and whatnot messing around together under one roof and wondered what on earth we've done to deserve living alone. We all know how much easier it is to survive the autumn blues, breakups, hard days at work and whatever challenges life throws at you when you have a spare shoulder to cry onto. We know that, okay?
So when someone asked a much-anticipated question “What is a highly underrated advantage of living alone?” on r/AskReddit the loners who don’t share their postcode with anyone saw it as a perfect moment to celebrate just that. The answers started flooding in one by one, showing the joy of simple things like never having to wait for a bathroom and total control over heat and air conditioning.
I mean, you can freely talk to yourself out loud, forget manners and quit politeness, put the responsibilities aside and indulge in the sweetness of doing nothing... Isn't this basically the closest we’ll get to the ultimate freedom in a society where no one feels free anymore?
This post may include affiliate links.
Every single item in your house is exactly where you left it the last time you used it.
Everything is your own mess. I don't want to clean up after someone, and I don't want to nag someone to clean. Those are all my dishes in the sink to do, or to let sit there for a week. Feels good.
Also, ripping a fart you feel super proud of with no shame or holding back.
Bored Panda spoke with Susan Petang, a certified divorce coach and the creator of “The Quiet Zone Coaching,” who teaches women how to stop feeling overwhelmed and start waking up happy in the morning again. Susan was happy to share some insights on the often overlooked perks of living alone and how we can all make the most of it.
“Sometimes it's really nice to be alone! You don't have to think about the needs of anyone else. You can go to bed whenever you want, and get up when you have to, without accommodating someone else's schedule,” Susan said.
She continued: “Don't want to eat healthy tonight? No problem! Want to have dinner at 11PM? No worries, there's no one else to answer to. You can eat what you like without having to worry about someone else's preferences. You can watch as much TV or play as many video games as you want. If you want to work until 3AM, you can—you don't have to worry about disturbing anyone else. Vacations can be wherever YOU want to go, doing what you want to do.”
There are a lot of advantages but my top is not having to deal with people and their damn problems
This would be my number one. Living with other people is a nightmare. In my experience, almost everyone turns out to be a complete piece of s**t.
I’m an introvert so when I come home, I want to be by myself. Social situations are draining and I can only re-energize by having alone time. I am not antisocial, but I have hidden in my room for hours for my roommate to leave because I don’t want to answer 'How was your day?' for the millionth time
Yeah like sometimes I don't wanna talk about my day I just wanna watch youtube in my room.
In fact, Susan describes living alone as “the ultimate in self-care.” She added that “you can plant whatever you want in the garden, take as many candle-lit baths as you want, and read whenever you want without worrying about the needs of someone else.”On the other hand, living alone has some practical downsides. “There is nobody to share the chores with. You and you alone are responsible for taking out the trash, cleaning the cat's litter pan, and walking the dog. If you get sick, there is nobody to help, no one to make you chicken soup.”
Total control over heat/air conditioning. Highly underrated. You can have control over your costs and/or your comfort.
This should be way higher! This is the number one perk. Total control over the windows, open or shut, the blinds, open or shut, the bathroom door when using the bathroom can stay open. and I saved the best for last - when you’re cold you simply dial up that thermostat with zero regard. When you’re hot you can freeze yourself out if you feel like. If anyone complains, they can go TO THEIR HOME!!
If I want to eat blueberry Eggos for breakfast, lunch, and dinner, no one judges
When you get home, that food you been thinkin about all day long will be there.
Moreover, you're responsible for paying all the bills, argues Susan. “It's always easier with two incomes, and if you lose your job, it can be pretty scary. When you get home from work, there's nobody to share your day with, laugh with, and play with. Sure, you can take a friend on vacation with you, but it's just not the same.” The life coach added that one of the biggest joys in life is doing things for others. “When you live with someone else, you can experience that joy every single day!”
You can walk around with no pants and go to the bathroom with the door open
joke's on you, i leave the door open all the time.. but that might be because i have cats and a toddler xD
Being able to nap at the drop of a hat and having the peace and quiet to do so
Dieting is like 400x easier. I know it's a bad excuse, but hear me out. When I'm dieting I won't buy a single junk food item, and I won't eat it since I won't have it. Live with someone who buys tons of junk, especially someone who buys food and doesn't expect you to not eat it, like your parents, and it makes it a lot harder.
Yeah I know it's a bad excuse for breaking diet but it's super easy for me to just never buy junk food and never have it around but it's hard for me to avoid it when I'm living with it
Not a bad excuse at all. Living alone gives you total control over your food choices without obstacles. That’s just fact. No one has made a big meal and the food will go to waste if you don’t eat it and you feel pressured. No one has ordered pizza and asks if you want some and you started your diet 4 hours ago. It is way easier to shed pounds alone. It’s a silver lining of being alone.
It's no wonder that living alone may get pretty lonely. Susan said that the best way to avoid loneliness is the MGP Method: Mindful, Grateful, Positive. She explained: “Mindful: Instead of regretting the past, or pinning your happiness on some future event (that may or may not happen!), focus on where you are in life right now. We spend 100% of our lives in 'now'! It's OK to reminisce about the past and make plans for the future, but enjoy those when it's appropriate to do them. Focus on what you're doing, sensing, feeling, and observing in this moment. Experience this moment. Be curious about it. Immerse yourself in it—whether or not the moment is good, bad, or indifferent.”
Being able to do whatever you want without consulting someone else first
Making your own mistakes and having nobody looking over your shoulder pointing them out :)
You can talk out loud to yourself (something I do often as I work from home) and nobody is around to think it's weird
When I lived alone I would clean my place and it would stay clean. Now I clean my place and it is messy again in about 10 minutes, it feels like.
“Grateful: If we're staying focused on this moment, right now, then it just makes sense to make it the best it can be, right? So, what's good about it? What can you be grateful for—no matter how small? Find wonder and awe for trees, rain, snow, and sunshine you see from your window; be amazed by the technology that makes our lives easier, like cell phones, TVs, and computers. Be grateful for the tiniest of 'wins' in your life, like when you remember to take out the trash, have enough money to pay the electric bill, or have enough food for dinner. Make your mantra, 'Something good about right now is...'”
“Positive: Instead of thinking, 'This stinks!' or, 'I really hate being alone,' or 'I'll never find someone to share my time with,' change the Negative Nancy talk in your head into something positive. Instead, think, 'I can watch anything I want on TV,' 'I love being able to eat whenever I want,' and 'Maybe I'll have someone in my life someday, but for now I'm going to enjoy my freedom!'”
You never have to watch terrible movies, wait to use the bathroom or take a shower, you can eat what you want, and you can decorate however you like.
You dont have to tiptoe around the house worried you'll wake up roommates/family members.
So i've been living alone for the last couple of years and to be honest i feel like i want it to stay that way for the rest of my life for the following reasons:
I can make any food i like and if i feel lazy i can eat outside i don't have to answer to anyone or cater to anyone's needs
I just clean the house once per week and it stay squeaky clean for the rest of the week.
I can do whatever i want in my free time sometimes i want to go out and do something interesting other times i want to be a couch potato i do not have to cater to anyone's needs.
Budgeting becomes super easy i manage to save a lot of money and at the same time buy whatever i need.
I have a king size super comfy bed all for me if its too hot i can remove the covers, if it's too cold i can put on as much covers as i need no need to ask someone for their permission.
I can invite any of my friends anytime i want and we can do whatever we want anytime we want.
I work in a stressful career and nothing beats coming home to a nice quiet house and just relaxing and recovering from a stressful work day without having to answer silly questions like how was my day or having to listen to how another persons day went.
These are just a few reasons i thought of the top of my head i am sure i could have come up with more reasons but suffice to say that no matter how much i think about it when i compare my single days to the days i was in a relationship the single days always end up being much better.
Susan explained that it's not being alone that makes you lonely; it's what you tell yourself about it, how you perceive it, that makes you feel bad. “So, who wants to feel bad? Choose to change the way you view being alone. Focus on the benefits and the good parts. Focus on solving the problems that arise from being solo, instead of complaining about them.
Mindfulness + Gratitude + Positivity = Happiness,” the life coach concluded.
If there’s a mess and no one else sees it, is there even a mess?
You can walk around naked 24/7
You know exactly what state your home is going to be in when you arrive back at it
You can basically do whatever whenever without bothering anyone. When I lived with my parents if I showered after like 9pm, you'd think I'd been running around the house playing a keytar or something with how much they complained about the noise the next morning. Plus I don't wake up to anyone else's noise, either.
Sometimes if I wake up while dreaming and I'm super disoriented I think I'm back home and worry that I'm going to hear people walking around, slamming doors, yelling at each other, etc. at some point, then I remember that I'm in my own house, in my own bed, alone with my dogs so I can rest in peace. (Not dead, though, hopefully.)
I think I value living alone a lot more because I grew up with parents that thought screaming at each other every other night was the best way to work out their conflicts. Silence in my house is absolutely golden.
Learning life skills. Paying your bills, cleaning, time management, etc.. You just end up learning these based on experience.
All the food will be stuff you like bc you can grocery shop for yourself.
For many years I lived in a full size (3br 2ba)family house all by myself. Freaking LOVED it. My brother lives with me now but that's still super cool. Really the best part is simply not having to deal with people.
I love not dealing with people. Like this person said"the best part is simply not having to deal with people." Aren't all of our brothers/sisters/siblings aliens?
Every second is yours. No waste. No waiting on someone else ever. No cleaning up after anyone else. No doing something someone else wants. It's incredibly efficient, unless you're dying.
Knowing exactly where everything is. There's no compromising. All my belongings are in the perfect place
Being able to come and go as you please. Doing stuff at any hour and not worrying.
I like to cook and clean during my productive hours (2-5am), and I like to shop at midnight when noone is about to bug me.
Now living with my husbands family I have to keep to their schedule of up at 8am and asleep at 11pm. I also listen to them argue all day every day, get yelled at in crossfire and have to take care of a three year old.
I much preferred being alone. I am only still here because I love my husband too much to leave, but this is year 5 now, it is rough...
You don't have to politely tell someone you will be out late
I live alone, but I have to have a talk with my cats if I'm going to be out late. They need to know, otherwise the look of betrayal on their faces is to much.
I live alone and [poop] at work; a six pack of toilet paper is a year's supply.
Décor - one of the best things about having your own place.
Not having to answer to anyone inside those four walls.
Closet space, man. I never appreciated this until my girlfriend moved in. Now my closet is literally jammed packed with her clothes and I basically have a couple drawers for all of my stuff. There's no end to it either. Every time we do laundry, she materializes more and more clothing. I think to myself "the closet is completely full; all the hangers are used. We've put everything away. There's no way she could possibly have more clothes" more stuff just appears out of nowhere.
As a woman, I never understood the concept of keeping so many clothes.. I have enough... My closet has some stuff which i keep for various reasons. Rest, i have given away.
The whole house is your bed. Fall asleep on the couch. Turn over and pass out on the office futon. You might even want to make it to your actual bed if it's worth the effort... But no matter what, there's nothing forcing you to an arbitrary sleep station. I don't even know why I have a bedroom anymore, the couch is so much more comfortable.
The mundane way of living life with no responsibility to anyone else. I miss waking up in the mornings, reading a book and just watching the city light up from hundreds of miles away while eating breakfast. Then coming home, shaking off the day's work before making a light dinner, finishing a project and then cuddling in bed with a movie or book after a warm bath. Just to wake up the next day and repeat it. I love my life but I'm always busy with work and it has become unpredictable. I'm never alone. Sometimes I miss the solitude of a quiet home. Sometimes.
No one judges you when you drink alone until 4am to play Fortnite and watch The Office
living alone is the best arrangement. You can do whatever the hell you want. The better question is what’s the advantage of living with someone.
You can be a total hedonistic layabout whenever you're home and no one will be there to make you feel sh*tty about it. Not that one should feel sh*tty about anything they choose to do with their off time, but it definitely bums me out when I'm having a nice lazy day of binge watching/eating/drinking and someone who's actually accomplishing things is anywhere in my vicinity.
Coming home and relaxing on the couch. Different with a spouse but I went from a single bedroom to a 4 bedroom. I would come home at midnight to 6 people drinking outside my bedroom door. Or I would be watching a movie and 5 people would walk in. Or I want to sit down and chill after a long day and theres my roommate in my house who wants to catch up.
You never have to worry about someone else paying their share of the rent on time
Oh. I guess they mean living together with roommates. I was thinking more like in a relationship. We don't really do roommates here in NL (expect in some student situations).
No judgment about anything from anyone. Insert your preference - no judgment
Has anyone found anyone on this planet and been this level of comfortable with that human?Am guessing it's not.Compatibility is bullshit.
Not getting stuck with a long-ass Netflix list you can't watch because she "wants to watch it, but don't want to watch it right now"
So you end up re-watching sh*t you've already seen because it's a nice easy watch.
No one will see or hear you cry
Nobody steals the blankets.
However, cats will plunk themselves right in the middle of the bed lmao
Not having to be quiet coming home because somebody might be sleeping.
that last soda in the fridge is still there.,..and so is your left over chinese take out that you have to specially order because of a soy allergy you have...
This. You don't have to worry about that special dish or that leftover you have for lunch the next day being gone when you go to eat it. Grrrrr
Don’t have to share your washer/dryer
You get to hang with the ghosts without someone making them go away cause they don't believe
Here are a few I can list off the top of my head...
* Complete and utter quiet, solitude, and peace upon waking up
* Everything is yours and you don't have to share anything, everything is the way you want it and nobody will ever complain - ever.
* You get to watch whatever you want, play video games whenever you want, and nobody is going to bother you
* You can talk out loud to yourself (something I do often as I work from home) and nobody is around to think it's weird
* Get day drunk, eat pizza like a slob, and fall asleep on the couch and nobody gives you that "look"
* Fart as loud as you want or take huge, gurgling diarrhea sh*ts with the door open because who gives a f*ck
* Watch porn on your big 4K TV and masurbate right there in the living room - no need to keep it on your tiny phone, masturbating in dark corners like a shameful ninja
* Take up the ENTIRE bed - it's all yours baby
* Inviting anyone you want over, anytime you want, because nobody is there to tell you otherwise. F*ck it - have a party with a bunch of strippers.
That's all I got for now.
Nobody will know that 35 years old man with beard watching anime
What is wrong with watching anime whatever your age and what has a beard got to do with it?
Thank you for this, now I feel better about living alone. It sounds more like a privilege than just "being alone".
Living alone IS a privilege. I am far happier than many of my friends, because I live alone and have total autonomy. Happiness is a choice, and sometimes it's easier to make that choice when you're solo. I enjoy my own company, I have books, and the music I like, the movies I like, the schedule I like. It is a lucky thing indeed.
Load More Replies...I still prefer to do most of these together. If I have the choice not to wait to shower vs shower together, have the bed for yourself vs cuddling with my wife. Watching what I want vs watching what we want together. Food tastes better with her around aswell. I can’t think of anything downside really.
Except for the year I rented a room, and the five years I was married, I've lived alone my entire adult life. Almost 50 years now? It's great.
Other than a live-in girlfriend and an extended guest some years ago, I've lived alone for about 20 years. I'm so used to it, that I can't imagine living any other way.
I have been living 'alone', that is with my pets, all my adult life and I love it. You never have to compromise on anything - I have peace and quiet and my favourite food and get to do what I like whenever I like without any further ado. The only times I (sometimes) dislike living on my own are when I am sick because it makes me a bit sentimental and whiny. Usually, I am completely content with myself and the kitties. And I absolutely do not envy my workmates, family and friends all the drama they tell me about. Some people confuse being alone with being lonely. That is not the same, guys! And I defenitely do not need pity from people who have never ever felt the benefits of living on their own! "But what are you doing on Christmas?!?" Whatever I like, as always... But the question I have been asked most often is "But aren't you afraid, all on your own?" It sometimes makes me wonder if people consider their SO as some kind of guard dog?
I've lived on my own my entire adult life, except for the first 6 months I moved down to Florida when I was 20. Got the heck outa there and never again. If I have heavy stuff to take outside my house bring in my house or move around my house I have friends with SOs or husband's to help me out with that. Love living alone. If I ever found someone "special" I think I would want to purchase a semi-detached house, both sides of it, and put a door in between.
Being able to sit down and read a book and no one asks you questions. Phone rings? Vmail. Doorbell? Nope. Or sitting there playing an instrument. Or just sitting there in a fog having pulled out your Nothing Box.
I just realized that I have never ever lived alone....I guess there was one summer toward the end of high school, when my parents were getting divorced, and they both basically moved out of our house, but I constantly had friends over, spending the night, and partying. I'd come home from work at 10pm, and there would be a half dozen people naked in the pool, with cans of beer floating around. Good times....
Not having to deal with someone's irrational idea about where something is supposed to be put away.
You can be on the phone talking to whoever you want to,you go to bed when you want,you can leave things on the floor,you can leave the lights on if you want
Some of these pros are mixed with being single, not living alone :) Maybe i'm just this lucky, but I have bf and we live together and I still do not worry about many things, when someone upvoted these as pros for living alone :)
If you have a good other-half than you both can hole up together and lock the world out. This list applies to me and yet I have been married for 6 years and together for 20... still block out people who do these things though. Never have roommates if I have a choice (but staying with family is still appreciated over hotels)
When I open the cutlery drawer i know the spoons are facing the correct way.
You can build blanket forts and watch terrible movies in them without anyone judging you
I have the best of both worlds. Am a senior citizen who family did not approve of my living alone in a large house in the country. Set up my house as a two family house. We share only the kitchen. My area is plenty big enough for me -- my own living room, bathroom, bedroom, walk-in closet. We share the kitchen but since I am retired, I can eat when I want, usually while they are at work. We are friendly but not in each other's face daily. Keeps my family off my back and I have my privacy and can live life as I wish. Think this is something more senior citizens should think about if they have a large enough home for it to work. They are gone all day to work/school, I can have my pets in my area and my family feels I am safe so they are no longer on my back!
I agree with all of this. I'm so much happier being single than I was being married. There is absolutely 0 pressure! Don't have to worry what's for dinner or cleaning up hubby's messes, I know where everything is, I don't have to eat food I don't want, I can put on my pajamas as early as I want and lounge around, the grocery thing is awesome, buying exactly what I want, staying in bed late, binge watching TV, there are very few disadvantages
I think I've got the best of both worlds because I'm in a relationship and I still live alone; we live in the same building but we have no desire to live together even if we could afford to (we are both chronically ill and disabled and would lose a lot of money if we live together)
I upvoted every post in this thread. Every one of them is true for me too.
Actually being able to sleep at night, actually being able to prioritize myself and my health, I barely have to clean, especially the bathroom, and the only problems I have to worry about are my own .
I LOVE living alone so much that I don't even want to get married. It really is that great
I really can't bend myself to adapt to the degree needed to live with another person so I've lived most of my adult life by myself. The only negative thought I've ever had about living alone is that I will, most likely, die alone. There is legitimate fear (humans, for the most part, are hardwired for social interaction) in this idea but, so far as yet, this fear hasn't driven me to "find someone" for the sake of not being alone. Some of us, more than is acknowledged, are simply hardwired differently.
When I was in the navy, I returned from a long sail and my best friend and crew mate was good enough to give me a lift with his family. Seeing his kids and wife give hugs and kisses made me happy, but when they dropped me off at my apartment and I stood there in the silence of that empty place, I felt so alone and so small.
It feels like all these people lived with terrible roommates. I have all these things and I live with my wife.
Have lived alone for long periods and have been married w/kids for long term. Its a matter of having the right partner, and being willing to compromise sometimes. I am concerned the latest generation that avoids being social will become asocial/isolated. I was fine with being a bachelor, but I am happier being in a healthy relationship.
I do enjoy all of these, living by myself, but I do miss talking to people.
Ok thanks for this post. Now I feel better. Sure I want to make a family. But this makes me feel a burden has lift off my chest
Living alone can be a very joyful and empowering thing. When I got married, my biggest fear was having to live with someone; be around someone all the time. It wasn't as horrible as I imagined, but when we divorced, I never lived with anyone again. I would stay with my SO on weekends, or he with me, but living together 24/7 was just unthinkable for me.
Load More Replies...The one thing I miss about living alone is having complete control of the bedroom TV. My hubby has decided his TV needs are more important than mine. I'm so dang sick of law and order and chicago PD reruns 😂
And nobody mentions how you can masturbate 5 times a day without judgement.
Why couldn’t you with a partner? Mine encourages it, or helps...
Load More Replies...Seems to me that a lot of people never have been in a real relationship when I see this list of advantages of living alone. My wife and I enjoy all of these advantages because we don't b!tch over trivialities. But sure, if you think that finding your dirty socks at the same place where you left them 4 weeks ago is a major plus in your life, be my guest.
I have been in several "real" relationships... although you might not consider any relationship that isn't yours "real". I think it's kind of sad that what you took out of the whole post, despite all the eloquence of the writers is that no one else can be happy because we're bitching about trivialities. Many many self actualized people find great joy in living alone. We have "real" relationships, and real lives, just on our own terms. Your wife must be a real treasure.
Load More Replies...Thank you for this, now I feel better about living alone. It sounds more like a privilege than just "being alone".
Living alone IS a privilege. I am far happier than many of my friends, because I live alone and have total autonomy. Happiness is a choice, and sometimes it's easier to make that choice when you're solo. I enjoy my own company, I have books, and the music I like, the movies I like, the schedule I like. It is a lucky thing indeed.
Load More Replies...I still prefer to do most of these together. If I have the choice not to wait to shower vs shower together, have the bed for yourself vs cuddling with my wife. Watching what I want vs watching what we want together. Food tastes better with her around aswell. I can’t think of anything downside really.
Except for the year I rented a room, and the five years I was married, I've lived alone my entire adult life. Almost 50 years now? It's great.
Other than a live-in girlfriend and an extended guest some years ago, I've lived alone for about 20 years. I'm so used to it, that I can't imagine living any other way.
I have been living 'alone', that is with my pets, all my adult life and I love it. You never have to compromise on anything - I have peace and quiet and my favourite food and get to do what I like whenever I like without any further ado. The only times I (sometimes) dislike living on my own are when I am sick because it makes me a bit sentimental and whiny. Usually, I am completely content with myself and the kitties. And I absolutely do not envy my workmates, family and friends all the drama they tell me about. Some people confuse being alone with being lonely. That is not the same, guys! And I defenitely do not need pity from people who have never ever felt the benefits of living on their own! "But what are you doing on Christmas?!?" Whatever I like, as always... But the question I have been asked most often is "But aren't you afraid, all on your own?" It sometimes makes me wonder if people consider their SO as some kind of guard dog?
I've lived on my own my entire adult life, except for the first 6 months I moved down to Florida when I was 20. Got the heck outa there and never again. If I have heavy stuff to take outside my house bring in my house or move around my house I have friends with SOs or husband's to help me out with that. Love living alone. If I ever found someone "special" I think I would want to purchase a semi-detached house, both sides of it, and put a door in between.
Being able to sit down and read a book and no one asks you questions. Phone rings? Vmail. Doorbell? Nope. Or sitting there playing an instrument. Or just sitting there in a fog having pulled out your Nothing Box.
I just realized that I have never ever lived alone....I guess there was one summer toward the end of high school, when my parents were getting divorced, and they both basically moved out of our house, but I constantly had friends over, spending the night, and partying. I'd come home from work at 10pm, and there would be a half dozen people naked in the pool, with cans of beer floating around. Good times....
Not having to deal with someone's irrational idea about where something is supposed to be put away.
You can be on the phone talking to whoever you want to,you go to bed when you want,you can leave things on the floor,you can leave the lights on if you want
Some of these pros are mixed with being single, not living alone :) Maybe i'm just this lucky, but I have bf and we live together and I still do not worry about many things, when someone upvoted these as pros for living alone :)
If you have a good other-half than you both can hole up together and lock the world out. This list applies to me and yet I have been married for 6 years and together for 20... still block out people who do these things though. Never have roommates if I have a choice (but staying with family is still appreciated over hotels)
When I open the cutlery drawer i know the spoons are facing the correct way.
You can build blanket forts and watch terrible movies in them without anyone judging you
I have the best of both worlds. Am a senior citizen who family did not approve of my living alone in a large house in the country. Set up my house as a two family house. We share only the kitchen. My area is plenty big enough for me -- my own living room, bathroom, bedroom, walk-in closet. We share the kitchen but since I am retired, I can eat when I want, usually while they are at work. We are friendly but not in each other's face daily. Keeps my family off my back and I have my privacy and can live life as I wish. Think this is something more senior citizens should think about if they have a large enough home for it to work. They are gone all day to work/school, I can have my pets in my area and my family feels I am safe so they are no longer on my back!
I agree with all of this. I'm so much happier being single than I was being married. There is absolutely 0 pressure! Don't have to worry what's for dinner or cleaning up hubby's messes, I know where everything is, I don't have to eat food I don't want, I can put on my pajamas as early as I want and lounge around, the grocery thing is awesome, buying exactly what I want, staying in bed late, binge watching TV, there are very few disadvantages
I think I've got the best of both worlds because I'm in a relationship and I still live alone; we live in the same building but we have no desire to live together even if we could afford to (we are both chronically ill and disabled and would lose a lot of money if we live together)
I upvoted every post in this thread. Every one of them is true for me too.
Actually being able to sleep at night, actually being able to prioritize myself and my health, I barely have to clean, especially the bathroom, and the only problems I have to worry about are my own .
I LOVE living alone so much that I don't even want to get married. It really is that great
I really can't bend myself to adapt to the degree needed to live with another person so I've lived most of my adult life by myself. The only negative thought I've ever had about living alone is that I will, most likely, die alone. There is legitimate fear (humans, for the most part, are hardwired for social interaction) in this idea but, so far as yet, this fear hasn't driven me to "find someone" for the sake of not being alone. Some of us, more than is acknowledged, are simply hardwired differently.
When I was in the navy, I returned from a long sail and my best friend and crew mate was good enough to give me a lift with his family. Seeing his kids and wife give hugs and kisses made me happy, but when they dropped me off at my apartment and I stood there in the silence of that empty place, I felt so alone and so small.
It feels like all these people lived with terrible roommates. I have all these things and I live with my wife.
Have lived alone for long periods and have been married w/kids for long term. Its a matter of having the right partner, and being willing to compromise sometimes. I am concerned the latest generation that avoids being social will become asocial/isolated. I was fine with being a bachelor, but I am happier being in a healthy relationship.
I do enjoy all of these, living by myself, but I do miss talking to people.
Ok thanks for this post. Now I feel better. Sure I want to make a family. But this makes me feel a burden has lift off my chest
Living alone can be a very joyful and empowering thing. When I got married, my biggest fear was having to live with someone; be around someone all the time. It wasn't as horrible as I imagined, but when we divorced, I never lived with anyone again. I would stay with my SO on weekends, or he with me, but living together 24/7 was just unthinkable for me.
Load More Replies...The one thing I miss about living alone is having complete control of the bedroom TV. My hubby has decided his TV needs are more important than mine. I'm so dang sick of law and order and chicago PD reruns 😂
And nobody mentions how you can masturbate 5 times a day without judgement.
Why couldn’t you with a partner? Mine encourages it, or helps...
Load More Replies...Seems to me that a lot of people never have been in a real relationship when I see this list of advantages of living alone. My wife and I enjoy all of these advantages because we don't b!tch over trivialities. But sure, if you think that finding your dirty socks at the same place where you left them 4 weeks ago is a major plus in your life, be my guest.
I have been in several "real" relationships... although you might not consider any relationship that isn't yours "real". I think it's kind of sad that what you took out of the whole post, despite all the eloquence of the writers is that no one else can be happy because we're bitching about trivialities. Many many self actualized people find great joy in living alone. We have "real" relationships, and real lives, just on our own terms. Your wife must be a real treasure.
Load More Replies...