Prolonged loneliness as a child can cause all sorts of issues in adulthood.
Loneliness in childhood can cause long-lasting damage to a person’s psyche. It interferes with emotional and social development, and can cause people life-long insecurity, anxiety, and more. Those who were terribly lonely during their formative years often exhibit the following behaviors in adulthood.
1. A preference for online/distance friendships and relationships.
Many people who were isolated by their peers as children choose to have online relationships and friendships because they can maintain the illusion of being the ideal versions of themselves at a safe distance. Their perceived flaws and inadequacies are much easier to cover up from afar, rather than in person.
2. Clinginess.
Since childhood loneliness can lead to anxiety and depressive disorders in adulthood [1], many people who experienced intense loneliness in their youth cling to those who allow them to get close. This needy grasping can be overwhelming to those around them, resulting in ostracization and repeated experiences of rejection and isolation.
3. Need for constant distraction or stimuli.
A lot of people are uncomfortable with solitude, and thus distract themselves by constantly having a TV on or music playing. Some may seek out extra stimuli such as playing on their phone while watching movies, and may even sleep with the TV on to avoid being alone with their own thoughts.
4. Extreme social anxiety.
Having experienced childhood loneliness can make a person hypersensitive to social rejection. As a result, they may suffer from severe social anxiety: they’ll agonize over how others perceive them, and try to be the most acceptable and ideal versions of themselves so they won’t be rejected, criticized, or bullied—even by complete strangers.
5. Difficulty establishing and defending personal boundaries.
When and if adults who experienced childhood loneliness do cultivate friendships or romantic relationships, they’re often terrified of being rejected again. As a result, they may tolerate behaviors or actions towards them that make them uncomfortable because they’re afraid of losing the only people they have in their lives.
6. Escapism.
Kids who don’t have many friends find ways to entertain themselves while simultaneously escaping from the pain of isolation and exclusion. As adults, they may still gravitate towards things like fantasy books and films, or computer games in which they can experience existence as characters that are very different from themselves.
7. Over-attachment to material possessions.
Lonely children have a tendency to become collectors, filling the space created by an absence of friends with material items. As adults, they may have different collections (or even become hoarders), experiencing a sense of security and fulfillment from surrounding themselves with “stuff” that won’t abandon them or be taken from them.
8. Hypervigilance about potential rejection/abandonment.
They may have difficulty feeling secure in any of their relationships, and are hypervigilant to any signs that they may be abandoned by those close to them. Some might even run away from relationships if there’s any hint of potential abandonment—essentially ending things on their own terms, rather than risking getting hurt.
9. Obsessive perfectionist behaviors.
Adults who felt rejected and lonely in childhood may cultivate perfectionist tendencies, resulting in eating disorders, obsessive exercise, or workaholism. This is often the case if they filled their lonely lives with activities or pursuits that required intense dedication and focus in their youth.
10. Excessive need for external validation and praise.
If they didn’t receive recognition from their peers and caregivers as children, they may have felt that they weren’t “good enough”, and thus need a great deal of recognition and praise in adulthood. They require continual accolades to have any sense of self-worth.
11. Substance abuse.
Some people who were terribly lonely as children found different ways to self-soothe, since they had nobody else to talk to or comfort them. Once those techniques are no longer effective, however, they may seek out other avenues. Many choose to numb their feelings of grief, anxiety, and inadequacy with alcohol or drugs.
12. Self-soothing with overeating.
Some lonely children become lonely as a result of ostracization due to their weight. This creates a vicious cycle inasmuch as overweight, excluded children often self-soothe their loneliness by eating—especially unhealthy comfort foods—leading to greater weight gain. This behavior often extends into adulthood, leading to lifelong loneliness for many.
References:
1. Xerxa, Y., Rescorla, L. A., Shanahan, L., Tiemeier, H., & Copeland, W. E. (2023). Childhood loneliness as a specific risk factor for adult psychiatric disorders. Psychological Medicine, 53(1), 227–235. doi:10.1017/S0033291721001422