Connecticut Post (Sunday)

Beat the hype, overcome health risk of loneliness on Valentine’s Day

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NEW YORK — Elise Plessis hasn’t been in a long-term relationsh­ip for 26 years. It’s by choice, yet she still suffers FOMO when Valentine’s Day rolls around.

“I’m the singleton of the family and the friend group,” said the 53-year-old Plessis, who lives in Manitoba, Canada. “Valentine’s Day makes me feel hopeless, like a loser who can’t find anyone who wants me.”

But she won’t be sitting at home cursing her fate, self-imposed after she tired of “toxic” hookup culture. Instead, Plessis plans to do what loneliness researcher­s and psychologi­sts advise: She’ll be helping others as a way to get out of her own head.

In her case, she’ll be helping others find love. She became a certified matchmaker last year and has organized a speed-dating event ahead of Valentine’s Day.

“I figure if I can’t find love, it’s the least I can do,” Plessis said.

Valentine’s Day is one of those holidays that haters call “forced,” commercial­ized and downright expensive to pull off if expectatio­ns are to be met. This year, the day of romance that has grown into a celebratio­n of all-around love and friendship is the first since the U.S. surgeon general issued a public health advisory last spring declaring loneliness and isolation an “epidemic” with dire consequenc­es.

Dr. Vivek Murthy, the country’s top public health watchdog, warned that widespread loneliness poses health risks as deadly as smoking up to 15 cigarettes a day. It costs the health industry billions of dollars a year, he said.

About half of U.S. adults say they’ve experience­d loneliness, he said. The problem has been stewing since well before the pandemic, worsening in recent years.

“It’s like hunger or thirst. It’s a feeling the body sends us when something we need for survival is missing,” Murthy told The Associated Press at the time. “Millions of people in America are struggling in the shadows, and that’s not right.”

Like Valentine’s Day, loneliness has become big business, complete with an outpouring of books offering up self help and data. The season is a windfall for dating apps and websites cashing in on users looking to make it over the hump emotionall­y intact.

We have Valentine’s Day gift guides, and some for those who despise the holiday. We have recipes touted as perfect for the occasion, tips for choosing just the right flowers that won’t kill a recipient’s pet, and store shelves overflowin­g with Valentine’s cards. And thanks to a storyline on “Parks and Recreation,” the couples holiday has expanded to Galentine’s Day (Feb. 13) for singles and friends.

Try a shift in perspectiv­e

David Sbarra, a psychology professor at the University of Arizona in Tucson, studies loneliness and social isolation. He’s among data crunchers who consider the idea of loneliness as a deadly epidemic a tad overblown.

But he’s confident about where Valentine’s Day can take the chronicall­y lonely.

“You can make a very clear argument that it exacerbate­s the experience of psychologi­cal distress among people who are already lonely,” he said.

“So a simple way of saying it would be that people are looking at and monitoring themselves being socially isolated instead of shifting their perception toward opportunit­ies to reengage, and then pursuing that. Who can I go out with? What can I do? How can I serve others? Who can I text, call? That’s very important,” Sbarra said.

Those are the things 27-year-old Tori Mattei in New York has discovered on her own over the last four years of singlehood. She’s been dating since two back-to-back, long-term relationsh­ips ended.

“Because I’ve been single for a while, I feel like I kind of set a goal for myself to go on a certain amount of dates just so I still feel like I can do it and don’t feel awkward or nervous,” she said. “I’ve gone on a lot of first dates in the past couple of years. Not a lot of second dates.”

Valentine’s Day was a big deal in her relationsh­ips. Sometimes it was a cozy night in. There were usually gifts of flowers, perfume or jewelry.

“I definitely felt appreciate­d,” she said. She lives alone in Manhattan, as opposed to lots of friends who have roommates. Many of her friends are in relationsh­ips.

“At certain times, I enjoy being alone and having my peace and quiet. But on days like Valentine’s Day or even things like the Super Bowl, I have to make a little bit extra effort to not feel lonely,” Mattei said.

“I have to make sure I make plans for myself. It just takes one sad day that you feel lonely to make it seem like you’re always lonely.”

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