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Alone
In The Crowd
How to Overcome Urban Isolation
By Steve B. Reed, L.P.C., L.M.F.T.
The pain of loneliness
never knew a stranger. It is the constant companion of
many a solitary soul. In this massive urban sprawl, the
shadow of isolation is upon countless individuals. Most
of us have felt the chill of loneliness. Some people
even resign themselves to a life-style of being alone.
With so many people around, it is ironic that connecting
has become so difficult. There are two key reasons this.
One reason is sociological and the other psychological. For millennia, people
lived in small rural villages. They had all their family
and extended family close by. They grew up, went to
school, worked, lived and eventually died with the same
people. They did not have to do anything to become a
part of it all. They were simply born into the
close-nit, social fabric of a community. During the last
100 years, society has undergone profound changes that
contribute to the problem of urban isolation.
These sociological
changes include four main factors. They are:
1.
the
migration of the population to large cities since the
industrial revolution;
2.
the loss of
extended family as advances in transportation create an
increasingly mobile society;
3.
the breakdown of
the nuclear family with the social acceptance of
divorce;
4.
and the loss of
history with people as close friends move away to pursue
education, jobs and promotions. We have not yet
developed the coping strategies to deal with these
radical changes.
Today people are
trying to adjust and deal with loss, loneliness,
isolation, constant change, high-paced stressful jobs,
single parent families, blended families and the
repeated necessity of rebuilding ones social support
system. Many people who go into counseling are
struggling with these issues.
One key antidote for
urban isolation is membership in caring groups that you
find meaningful and enjoyable. Any topic of interest is
a catalyst around which people collect. You can join
many possible groups. Among them, one of the few instant
sources of caring community remaining in our society is
the church. This institution continues to play a great a
role in people's lives, socially as well as spiritually.
In some of my seminars, I suggest that people
participate in at least three groups that they can feel
a sense of inclusion, acceptance and caring. Membership
does have its advantages.
However, not everyone
is comfortable joining groups. There can be
psychological reasons that block a person from joining
even though they realize the benefits of a healthy
support system. Some people have traumatic experiences
in their family of origin. The family is the first group
in which we have membership. If it was not safe to be
yourself, to have your thoughts and feelings, with your
family it may not feel safe to think of joining any
group.
Others have felt
deeply hurt by a peer group that was attacking,
excluding or shaming. Such painful experiences can
develop into a phobia of social groups. If the thought
of getting closely involved in a group seems threatening
and anxiety provoking, then you may be experiencing this
type of phobia.
Lastly, even if you
do not have any traumatic associations with groups, if
you grew-up with parents who did, you may have learned
to be afraid of groups simply because they were afraid.
Many excellent
treatments are now available in the field of
psychotherapy to help people resolve fears of closeness
and connection to individuals and groups. Any traumatic
experience with family or peer groups can benefit from
some of the newer trauma therapies. Treatments that
have a high success rate include the REMAP process,
Emotional Freedom Techniques (EFT), and Eye Movement
Desensitization and Reprocessing (EMDR). Research is
showing these methods to be both faster and more
effective than the old ways of treating trauma that rely
on talk therapy alone.
Although these treatments represent recent advances in
the field of psychotherapy, a growing number of
therapists are becoming interested. Those who train in
these approaches find that many long-term problems can
dissipate in short order. Rather than years of therapy,
many issues only take months. Sometimes, even as little
as one treatment session can make a difference.
Last year, one of my
colleagues showed an interest in using the REMAP process
to treat her social phobia. In less than an hour of
treatment, she was already starting to feel better about
her life-long social fear. As the year went on, she
kept telling me about how much more comfortable she was
feeling in groups. This was after just one treatment
session.
This shows that when
you resolve these psychological blocks, the quality of
your life can improve almost instantly. This can clear
the way for you to enjoy further improvement in the
quality of your life by just adding people.
Steve B. Reed, LPC, LMSW, LMFT is a psychotherapist
that specializes in treating trauma and anxiety
disorders including social phobia. He treats people at
his Richardson, Texas office (Dallas area) and through
phone counseling worldwide. You can reach Steve at
972-997-9955 or through his website at
www.psychotherapy-center.com
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375
Municipal Drive, Suite 230, Richardson, TX 75080

Steve Reed is available for
an office appointment for your counseling and
psychotherapy needs in the Dallas, Fort Worth, DFW
metroplex, including Addison, Allen, Arlington, Bedford,
Carrollton, Colleyville, Denton, Euless, Flower Mound,
Frisco, Garland, Grand Prairie, Grapevine, Highland Park,
Hurst, Irving, Keller, Lake Highlands, Lewisville,
McKinney, Mesquite, Plano, Richardson, Rockwall, Rowlett,
and University Park. He also offers phone appointments from
anywhere in the world. Steve is a
creator of self
help products,
seminars
for the public, and
professional training classes on new
leading-edge therapies
such as REMAP,
EFT
Emotional Freedom Technique,
EMDR Eye
Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing, TFT Thought Field Therapy,
and NLP Neuro Linguistic
Programming.
Copyright
© 1997-2006 Steve Reed,
Dallas Counseling & Psychotherapy.
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