Tag: loved

  • The Quiet Grief of Needing a Hug

    There are some things people don’t talk about enough.

    One of them is how lonely it can feel to be a touchy-feely person in a world that increasingly isn’t.

    I don’t mean romantic loneliness. I mean something quieter than that.

    I mean missing hugs.

    Missing physical affection.

    Missing the simple comfort of being held for a moment by another human being.

    For some people, hugs are an occasional bonus. For others, they’re a language. A way of saying, “I’m here.” A way of feeling connected, safe, loved, and understood without a single word being spoken.

    When you’re someone who naturally reaches for a hug, who puts a hand on an arm when talking, who leans into closeness, life can feel surprisingly empty when the people around you don’t need those things in the same way.

    And here’s the difficult part.

    Many of us learn to stay quiet about it.

    We stop asking.

    We stop reaching.

    We stop mentioning it because we don’t want to make anyone uncomfortable.

    Especially when the people we love most are simply wired differently.

    Your adult children may love you deeply, but they’re not huggers.

    Your friends may care about you enormously, but they don’t express affection physically.

    The result is a strange kind of emotional hunger that can be hard to explain.

    You’re surrounded by people who care.

    Yet something still feels missing.

    Not because you’re ungrateful.

    Not because you’re needy.

    Because human beings need connection, and for some of us, physical affection is part of that connection.

    The world often treats this need as trivial.

    As though a hug is just a hug.

    But science tells us otherwise.

    Physical affection can lower stress hormones, increase feelings of safety, and strengthen bonds between people.

    A genuine hug can calm a nervous system that words sometimes can’t reach.

    Yet many people go years without receiving the kind of affection they quietly crave.

    And they carry on.

    They go to work.

    They smile.

    They help other people.

    They become the person everyone else leans on.

    Meanwhile, they miss being held themselves.

    There is a particular sadness that comes from always being the comforter and rarely being comforted.

    A particular ache in being strong all the time.

    Sometimes I think what makes this loneliness so difficult is that it doesn’t look lonely from the outside.

    You can have family.

    Friends.

    A busy life.

    People who care about you.

    And still feel the absence of touch.

    Still wish someone would pull you into a hug and hold on for a few extra seconds.

    Still miss the warmth of being physically reassured that you matter.

    The truth is, many people are walking around with this quiet grief.

    They don’t talk about it because it feels too small.

    Too insignificant.

    Too embarrassing.

    But it isn’t.

    Human beings were never designed to exist entirely without affection.

    We were built for connection.

    For comfort.

    For closeness.

    And while we may adapt when those things are missing, that doesn’t mean we stop needing them.

    If this resonates with you, I want you to know you’re not the only one.

    There are more people quietly carrying this ache than you might imagine.

    People who miss hugs.

    People who miss being held.

    People who wish someone would reach for them first.

    Perhaps the first step is simply admitting it.

    Admitting that you miss it.

    Admitting that it matters.

    Admitting that affection isn’t a weakness.

    It’s part of being human.

    And maybe, just maybe, there is comfort in knowing that somewhere, someone else is reading these words and thinking:

    “Thank goodness. I thought it was only me.”

    Until next time.

    Lorraine x

  • Modern Day Lonely

    Life is full but empty.

    You know what no one really talks about?

    How loud loneliness is these days.

    Modern day lonely isn’t just the quiet kind. It’s noisy. It’s everywhere. It’s messages popping up without meaning. It’s voice notes you never play. It’s social feeds full of people who wouldn’t even notice if you went quiet for a week. It’s being surrounded by connection, but still feeling… empty.

    Loneliness used to be simple. It was distance. Silence. Being alone.

    But now?

    Now it’s watching people post “you got this 💕” to strangers online while you sit on the edge of your bed wondering why no one checks in on you.

    It’s being “known” by hundreds but seen by no one.

    It’s having notifications but not real conversations. Being invited but not included. It’s performing joy instead of living it.

    Sometimes it’s pretending you’re “low maintenance” when really? You just don’t think anyone would show up if you actually needed them.

    Sometimes it’s saying you love your own company—when in truth, you’ve just learned how to be your own safe space because no one else felt safe.

    Modern loneliness looks like:

    Being in a room full of people and feeling completely invisible. Saying “I’m fine” because the alternative is too vulnerable and too exhausting. Smiling at memes that say “mentally I’ve already quit” because it’s easier than admitting you feel lost.

    It’s laughing in group chats and then crying in the shower.

    It’s staying “booked and busy” so you never have to sit in the silence.

    It’s craving a hug that isn’t digital.

    And yet…

    There’s something sacred in the stillness too.

    A strange kind of becoming.

    Because here’s the thing most people don’t realise:

    Loneliness doesn’t always mean you’ve failed.

    Sometimes it means you’re in the in-between.

    The space between who you were and who you’re becoming.

    Sometimes it means you’ve outgrown relationships built on survival, not connection.

    Sometimes it means you’re making space for the kind of love that sees you clearly and meets you gently.

    Loneliness can be healing too.

    Sometimes it means you’re learning how to choose yourself—even when no one else is choosing you.

    And that’s not weakness. That’s strength.

    That’s healing.

    So if you’re in that space right now—the scroll-without-feeling, lay-awake-without-crying, show-up-without-being-seen kind of space—just know this:

    You’re not broken. You’re not behind.

    You’re not too much, and you’re not too invisible.

    You’re simply in the middle of your own becoming.

    And if no one’s told you lately:

    I see you.

    And I’m proud of the way you’re still trying, still caring, still hoping.

    Even when it’s hard.

    Especially then.