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Friday 13 May 2022
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A Coventry University psychologist has shared her five top tips to help young people soothe the feelings of loneliness, to coincide with Mental Health Awareness Week.
Course Director of Childhood, Youth and Education Studies in Coventry University’s School of Psychological, Social and Behavioural Sciences, Nim Bahia has 14 years of health psychology practice experience working across health and education with children and young people.
Due to that background, she is able to share her insight into an Office for National Statistics survey that revealed young people aged 16 to 24 years reported feeling lonely more often than those in older age groups.
Loneliness can be described as a hollow, sinking feeling of emptiness and in a physical sense is the pain experienced from feeling deficient of social connection, or a network of relationships that make you feel 'heard'. We continue to live in a world where it is assumed a large social following, extroverted characteristics, are artefacts of being happy, heard and well – yet loneliness is as much about 'context', as personal characteristics.
Transitions between life stages, a sense of disconnect, an inability to express themselves or at least when trying to feel they don't matter, pressure to fit in or be socially accepted are a few examples of 'why'. Social media is an example of one such platform which continues to harness a gap between young people's authentic sense of self and what they perceive to appease others online.
There are often two types of reactions that can precede when a young person describes feeling lonely, one that can unhelpfully label the feeling as a ‘problem, or deficit’, and a second which overlooks the debilitating nature of loneliness, as a method of ‘attention seeking’ or a characteristic of adolescent behaviour.
Nim Bahia, Course Director of Childhood, Youth and Education Studies at Coventry University
She has put together some helpful tips that could give some relief to these feelings:
There is also extensive external support where parents, carers or professionals working with young people can find guidance:
Young Minds: Helpline and Webchat
Find out more about the School of Psychological, Social and Behavioural Sciences.