Stop Being A User And Open Your Heart To Others
Are you a user?
Open Your Heart To Others and Stop Being a User
I’ve been thinking a lot about the importance of making connections. We all really need them, but it seems that people are more disconnected than they’ve ever been.
I had a conversation with the psychotherapist Megan Bruneau, for my Ruthless Compassion podcast. She’s also noticed how people are more lonely and alienated these days.
In her practice, Ms. Bruneau has observed how disconnection and isolation lead to problems such as depression, anxiety, even psychosis. She recommended that we make more of an effort to connect with each other on a daily basis.
Sadly, our consumerist society has resulted in people increasingly seeing each other as objects to exploit and take advantage of, when all we really need is to connect with one another.
More and more, people are being reduced to one basic function: as a source of money, social status, political or career advancement, or sex.
In our society, it’s not uncommon that one person befriends another because they believe that this “friend” will benefit them socially, financially or politically. It’s not uncommon for a man to date a woman to make him look good to his associates, or a woman to use a man for financial security or social status.
Recent research tells us that it’s only through love and compassion that we find real happiness.
Relationships based more on personal gain than mutual affection have always been part of our world, but it all seems more blatant these days. And, sadly, these types of exploitative arrangements encourage everyone else to keep seeing other people as helpful objects to make use of, rather than as delightful individuals to share and connect with.
In his book, Happiness: A Guide to Developing Life’s Most Important Skill, Matthieu Ricard, the French writer, a Buddhist monk and “happiest man in the world” talks about why so many people are deeply unhappy today.
Ricard says that in part, it’s because they “instrumentalize” one-another. This is another way of saying that people too often see each other as objects to use, instead of opening their hearts to one-another and enjoying being together.
Ricard would like us to make more of an effort to access our empathy and compassion for other people. He says that loving and caring about others are the only real ways to create happiness.
Recent research tells us that it’s only through love and compassion that we find real happiness. In her new audiobook, The Science of Compassion, the health psychologist Kelly McGonigal describes how doing for others changes our physiology, improves our mood and deepens our sense of connection.
Studies show that being generous makes us happy while being selfish or insensitive toward others increases our loneliness and unhappiness. Being a user of others, no matter what we gain from these transactions, leaves us even more miserable than we were before.
Connecting to other people and being kind to them raises our levels of endorphins — the chemicals that cause us to feel happy and improve our overall well-being. It boosts our oxytocin, the bonding hormone. So, the more we connect, the more we want to connect.
Loneliness and disconnection, including acts of greed or selfishness, will increase our levels of the stress hormone, cortisol, which promotes anxiety and depression, causes us to keep weight on and lowers our ability to fight off infections, heart disease, and cancer.
People these days use each other to boost their self-worth. They maneuver to be the “top dog” and get everyone in the group to do things their way. They show off their flashy possessions or brag about their exploits. They compete with one another for who’s the most wealthy, attractive or successful. They post endless pictures on social media, demonstrating how great they are, but all of this is just making them more lonely, alienated and sad.
When we’re disconnected, we become isolated and miserable. And when we’re miserable, we isolate ourselves further. Conveniently, society offers us an alternative to creating meaningful connections: we can be a consumer. We’re actively encouraged (by businesses that offer goods or services) to overeat, drink excessively, gamble or medicate ourselves to fill up our emptiness and soothe our feelings of alienation.
We’re constantly encouraged to go shopping. Advertisers promise us that having more “stuff” will compensate for the loneliness and distress we’re feeling. Unfortunately, all this consuming just creates a vicious circle of more misery and alienation, more attempts at using people and things to try and feel better, and more unhappiness and emptiness.
Being a user, either by using people or things isn’t a valid solution to our feelings of loneliness, emptiness, and alienation.
More of the wrong solution doesn’t become the right solution.
Consuming things — or other people — has never made anyone happy. That’s why someone who uses other people or things to fill the void is compelled to keep on being a user. It never feels like enough.
If we’re suffering from disconnection, the only answer is to connect.
When we’re disconnected, we’re unable to value other people or respect their lives. Being rude, selfish or hurtful is easy. We become, in a sense, “antisocial.”
Feeling disconnected makes it easier to behave badly toward others, and a vicious circle is created because our bad behavior will end up pushing people away. When these people get angry or withdraw from us, it will reinforce our sense of alienation and encourage us to be that much more antisocial.
The more disconnected we feel, the more insensitive and self-centered we become, the more isolated we become and the more alienated and empty we feel.
Instead of a vicious circle of increasing disconnection and turning to consuming to compensate, we can begin to create a positive spiral of empathy, compassion, and growing connection.
More of the wrong solution doesn’t become the right solution. The answer to our loneliness, emptiness, and unhappiness isn’t to exploit more people or consume more things. The answer is to open our hearts, love more, care more, try to connect more, and make a conscious effort to stop being a user. That’s what we need most, right now, as individuals and as a society.
You will also enjoy The Need to Belong and the Pain of Loneliness
About the Author
Sign up here for Marcia Sirota’s free monthly wellness newsletter. Listen here to her latest podcast. Therapist Megan Bruneau talks about how women’s friendliness is often interpreted as flirtation.
Dr. Marcia Sirota is a Toronto-based board certified psychiatrist specializing in the treatment of trauma and addiction, as well as founder of the Ruthless Compassion Institute, whose mandate is to promote the philosophy of Ruthless Compassion and in so doing, improve the lives of people, everywhere.