
According to a study released today, millions of people across the UK are affected by loneliness.
A study carried out by relationship charity Relate found one in 10 people felt they didn’t have one close friend and that 19% had never or rarely felt loved in the two weeks before the survey.
Our commenters shared their own stories in the original piece. Some related their own experiences of loneliness:
Others felt that loneliness isn’t all bad:
Others blamed the advance of social networks for the survey’s results:
Does the study ring true to you? Have you ever felt lonely? And if you do, how do you deal with it?
Note: if you are affected by these problems and need to talk to someone, Relate’s contact details are here.
Let us know in the comments below.

I'm divorced, live alone, parents gone a long time ago, one sister I've never gotten on with. I have good friends and a daughter I love very much but they all live far away from me so communication is mainly electronic, there's no one I actually see regularly. I don't mind this as long as I'm working. That gets me out of myself, that's my main form of daily social interaction. But I get quite antsy during long holidays. I could easily rectify this and go out and make more friends but I just feel that the negatives outweigh the positives. I guess I'm a 'loner' but it didn't come naturally really, it was just a reaction to bad relationships - with romantic partners and with friends. Maybe there's something in me that's weirdly over-sensitive and intolerant of others' foibles but I got to a stage in my early 40s, about 6 years ago, where I couldn't bear to be around people who were sometimes ' off' with me even if they were fine 95% of the time. Since nearly everyone is moody sometimes that of course excluded most of humanity. Maybe that decision doesn't make logical sense, but it made emotional sense to me. I'd been through a depression and felt I had to protect myself or risk going nuts again.
There have also been some people who have been very friendly to me but I haven't let them get too close for reasons that might seem a bit dubious: their topics of conversation didn't align with mine, they've been nice but not interesting. Maybe I've snobbishly rejected chances at true love or friendship. But then I was married before to a woman whom I ended up feeling I had nothing in common with, and I feel like I can't let something like that happen again.
So in the end I guess I'm a bit misanthropic, or at least distrustful of people, and that was a bit hard to get used to at first, but actually being realistic about others, not expecting much from them, can be liberating. You can appreciate people from a safe distance. I found in my earlier years when I was more open-hearted I always ended up feeling cheated, and I'm glad I don't have to feel that anymore.