Four Things You Should Never Do
1. Never allow your living space to fall into chaos
When you share a home, order often exists without effort. When you live alone, no one sees the disorder except you—and that’s where the danger begins.
Dirty dishes piling up, unopened mail, clothes scattered around—these aren’t harmless habits. They often signal that something inside is unraveling, too. Disorder in your surroundings slowly seeps into your thoughts, making everything feel heavier than it needs to be.
Your home is the one place entirely under your control. Losing that control means losing an essential source of peace.
2. Never stop leaving the house
At first, staying in feels freeing. No schedules. No obligations. Then suddenly, days pass without speaking to anyone—and the most alarming part is that you barely notice.
When you stop going out, your world quietly contracts. Your mind dulls. Your sense of belonging fades. Going out isn’t indulgent—it’s essential.
3. Never abandon a daily rhythm
Waking up whenever you want may feel like freedom, but it’s a subtle trap. Both body and mind depend on structure. Without it, days blur together, energy drops, and sadness slips in unnoticed.
Routine isn’t confinement. It’s stability.
4. Never cut yourself off completely from others
Living alone doesn’t mean disappearing. Solitude and isolation are not the same—and isolation is dangerous.
No one should live in a way where something could happen and no one would notice. Total silence isn’t independence; it’s exposure.
Four Things You Should Always Do
I am 73 years old, and I have been living by myself for the past eight years. It wasn’t something I planned or longed for—it simply unfolded that way. In the beginning, I was afraid. I believed loneliness would sit on my chest like a heavy weight.
Today, I can say something I never thought I would: living alone can be meaningful, peaceful, and deeply human.
It didn’t happen overnight. I made many mistakes—more than I care to admit—and there were moments when I nearly lost my sense of direction. But over time, I learned an important truth: living alone is not the same as being isolated. The line between a calm life and a painful one is drawn by small, everyday choices.
Here are four things you should never do if you live alone—and four things you should always do.