by James Wallace Harris, 2/19/26
There are two ways we can examine the question: Are We Alone? The first is personal. As individuals, are we by ourselves? I’ve often heard people say they feel alone even in a crowded room. The other way is to wonder if humanity is alone in the universe. Lately, I’ve been meditating on both.
With all the mysteries that the James Webb Space Telescope is discovering, and all the speculation about our universe being part of a multiverse, it’s easy to assume reality is infinite. Which would make people infinitely small. Does it matter if we’re alone in the universe when we’re so insignificant?
Of course, if we assume reality is infinite, it also means there are infinite possibilities for other beings to exist. But is this similar to that person at a big party still feeling alone? If we’re not talking, then we still feel alone.
Even though I have always had lots of friends and can be social, I’m a loner. I’ve always been a bookworm who prefers being social 20% of the time, and by myself 80%. I think I was at my most social when I was young, but after retiring, I became more social again.
However, I’m noticing something lately. As my friends move into their middle seventies, they are withdrawing into themselves. I’m trying to resist that trend, but it’s getting harder because my aging friends want to stay home. I have to admit, I want to stay home but get my friends to come over.
I felt like I had regular conversations with 40-50 people when I worked. But now that’s down to about a dozen. And two of them have been ghosting me. I think when we get old, the stress of everything makes us withdraw into ourselves. I’m both fighting that and embracing it.
Part of the problem is energy. As we age, we run out of energy, and thus it gets harder and harder to make any effort – for friends, for hobbies, for staying healthy, for keeping the house clean, etc. The other obvious problem is health. We’re just slowly breaking down.
But I wonder if there’s another factor. Are we just getting tired of explaining ourselves? Let’s face it, words fail us. Could we ever adequately express what we wanted, what we felt, what we meant? Since the advent of the Internet, people have certainly tried. But what a mess. Just imagine how well we’d do communicating with beings living on other planets orbiting distant stars?
I haven’t given up. But I think we need to explore new ways of communicating.
Yes, we’re alone, living in our heads, while existing in a fantastic reality. I’ve decided we have many problems to conquer. Two of the biggest obstacles we need to overcome are the narrative fallacy and the confirmation bias.
They work together. Basically, we embrace beliefs that have no relation to reality, and second, we only see what will confirm those fantasies. We tune out people who undermine our beliefs and embrace those who do. But other beliefs will splinter those bonds.
That shell of delusion keeps us from communicating with other people. In the long run, we’re either forced to be alone or choose to.
Maybe reality never cared about evolving beings that communicate. Maybe intelligence, self-awareness, and language are failed evolutionary experiments. Or maybe we need to try harder.
JWH
Interesting food for thought…
To me, there are three types of being alone. One is the “are we alone in the universe” and does it really matter?
And I think we probably are not, but due to speed of light distances and time differences, I don’t believe we’ll ever know… Ever.
And two is scientifically, are we alone and I would say yes we are. We do live in our brains with memories and emotions that are perhaps biased to either make us feel better or worse than they really were.
And third is emotional type of alone that can also feel lonely. And this can depend also on many things; some will bother some people and not others. For myself at 79, I’m widowed, no children and only a brother and a niece that I am close to and mostly my brother. I do have friends and I am social, but I live alone and enjoy it because I garden and for me that is my therapy. But I do feel lonely at times and basically I would say it’s because of the reality that your life is mostly gone and all that’s left are your memories and you won’t ever be back again for all time. Once you’re gone, it’s as if you never existed. OK.
recalling a line attributed to charles bukowski: ‘ i don’t hate people. i’m just happier when they’re not around.’ or as john belushis character put it in LEMMINGS circa 1973: ‘ this means that the man next to you is yr dinner.’ as you might have discerned, i’m feeling a bit misanthropic this season.