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By myself and liking it? Predictors of distinct types of solitude experiences in daily life

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posted on 2025-08-01, 10:10 authored by JC Lay, T Pauly, P Graf, JC Biesanz, CA Hoppmann
Objective: Solitude is a ubiquitous experience, often confused with loneliness, yet sometimes sought out in daily life. This study aimed to identify distinct types of solitude experiences from everyday affect/thought patterns and to examine how and for whom solitude is experienced positively versus negatively. Method: One hundred community-dwelling adults aged 50–85 years (64% female; 56% East Asian, 36% European, 8% other/mixed heritage) and 50 students aged 18–28 years (92% female; 42% East Asian, 22% European, 36% other/mixed) each completed approximately 30 daily life assessments over 10 days on their current and desired social situation, thoughts, and affect. Results: Multilevel latent profile analysis identified two types of everyday solitude: one characterized by negative affect and effortful thought (negative solitude experiences) and one characterized by calm and the near absence of negative affect/effortful thought (positive solitude experiences). Individual differences in social self-efficacy and desire for solitude were associated with everyday positive solitude propensity; trait self-rumination and self-reflection were associated with everyday negative solitude propensity. Conclusions: This study provides a new framework for conceptualizing everyday solitude. It identifies specific affect/thought patterns that characterize distinct solitude experience clusters, and it links these clusters with well-established individual differences. We discuss key traits associated with thriving in solitude.

Funding

Alpha Mater Society, University of British Columbia

F12-05343

Faculty of Arts, University of British Columbia

Michael Smith Foundation

Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada

UNR12-­0926

UNR13-0484

Vancouver Foundation

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© 2018 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.

Notes

This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Wiley via the DOI in this record.

Journal

Journal of Personality

Publisher

Wiley

Language

en

FCD date

2020-07-27T07:35:44Z

FOA date

2020-07-27T07:40:15Z

Citation

Vol. 87 (3), pp. 633 - 647

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