5 Convincing Reasons Writing Is an Antidote to Stress and Loneliness

by Dorian Martin

Writing is a creative, artistic activity that people around the globe practice as a hobby or profession. Whether you’re writing books, poems, blog posts, short stories, articles, or even novels, writing is helping you cope with stress and loneliness.

You may not be aware of it, but writing is great for your mental health. If you're not sure how or why just keep reading and we'll break it down together.

Here are 5 convincing reasons writing is an antidote to stress and loneliness.

1.     Processing Emotions

If we take a deep look into ourselves, we’ll see all kinds of mixed emotions, hidden feelings, and desires. We'll also see our fears, worries, and problems.

However, it’s not always easy to take that deep look inside and process everything that we feel.

Luckily, writing is a great way to use creativity and artistic drive to:

-        process our emotions

-        express how we feel

-        cope with our feelings

Writing is a gateway to our inner world and helps us get in touch with ourselves. This further helps us fight stress and get all those suppressed emotions out on the surface.

2.     Fighting Monotony

Loneliness is a feeling no one wants to experience. Still, more often than not we start feeling lost, alone, and lonely.

Many things are causing us to feel lonely:

-        lack of true friends

-        monotonous lifestyle

-        not enough people to share our ideas with

-        nostalgia over an old friend or former home

However, using the power of our imagination can take us wherever we want to go. That means we can use writing to fight against loneliness.

We can write about a whole different world and escape using our fantasy and creativity.

3.     Personal Growth

People don't like to stand in one place. Stagnation is something we should all avoid. Instead, we should always aim toward personal growth.

Working on our personal improvement gives us a sense of progress and purpose. This, in return, makes us feel happy about ourselves and even gives us a reason to wake up with a smile.

Writing is a great way to work on ourselves and improve. Here’s how:

-        researching for our writing enriches our general knowledge

-        perfecting our writing skills boosts our confidence

-        exploring different types of written content broadens our horizons

-        learning about tools and resources help us improve

“Learning, improving, and mastering new skills is what every person should strive for. Personal growth will make us feel accomplished and will reduce the stress we might otherwise have to struggle with,” says Maria Faber, a freelance writer and editor at Subjecto.

4.     Critical Thinking

Sometimes, it’s hard for us to think clearly and set our head straight. When we’re busy, anxious, or tense, there’s no way we can deal with the problems and struggles we’re facing.

Instead, our minds get even blurrier and we find it harder to address our problems.

However, writing can help to:

-        clear our mind

-        critically assess the problem

-        explore our options

-        focus

-        calm down

While we're doing something that we love, writing, we're calming ourselves down and becoming more focused. Also, we even get to write about the things we're facing and assess them from a different standpoint.

This is a great way to cope with problems and stress.

5.     Staying Connected

We all want to feel like we belong somewhere and are connected to the rest of the world. Being connected with people is what fighting loneliness is all about.

Luckily, writing gives us a chance to connect with people from all over.

Publishing and sharing our work with the rest of the world is crucial for feeling accomplished, happy, satisfied, and connected. Once you share your work, it will continue to live.

People will:

-        respond to your work

-        give you feedback

-        enjoy what you’ve written

-        reach out to you

Your social life will be richer since you’ll be making connections with other fellow writers, critics, and your audience.

When you’re publishing, make sure that everything you write is proofread. Use Studyker, Grammarly, or Write Scout to ensure you’re sharing top-notch content.

Final Thoughts

As you can see, writing is a great way to reduce stress, fight anxiety and loneliness. Writing will lift your spirit, awaken your creativity and help you process your emotions.

Keep writing and you’ll not only enjoy time well spent, but you’ll also benefit your mental health immensely.

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Dorian Martin is a freelance blogger and a writer with years of experience. He primarily focuses on giving actionable tips to his readers, as well as providing guidance and giving credible information. He’s currently working as a writer at Top Essay Writing and Classy Essay.

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Uma is a young astrophysicist in New York City, eager to leave behind her early modeling career and to prove she finally converted into a true scientist. Good intro. We can infer a lot about Uma from this single sentence. However maybe a different word than "converted?" That implies a change, whereas Uma was likely intelligent all along. She knows she hit missing "the?"jackpot when she detects a new extrasolar planet with good potentials for terraformation. Maybe an explanation of what terraformation means. Does that mean it can support human life? The problem is, she soon realizes that what she has found is in fact not a planet: its orbit around its companion star follows an unnatural pattern, and the only logical conclusion is that it is actually an artificial object. Uma had discovered, for the first time in human history, an alien megastructure. Great so far! I understand our main character's need to prover herself, the magnitude of what she's discovered, and can infer the genre without you stating it. With the support of her senior mentor Paula, an accomplished physicist with Martian heritage, Screech of brakes. So is having Maritan heritage just a normal, unquestioned thing in this ficitonal world? You just kind of throw it in there as an aside. Is Paula's DNA a secret? Uma gradually unveils a mysterious mathematical sequence hidden in the pattern of the megastructure’s orbits. Is "unveils" the right word? That implies sharing it with others, usually quite a few. Does this need to be kept secret? What's the tension here? What are the ramifications of the exitence of this thing? Meanwhile, the reader meets Abdo, I would get rid of "the reader meets" an agronomist in the North-West territories of the African Federation. He balances his life between programming his agro-bots working in the crop fields and his girlfriend Aisha, who is working in a large company contracted to develop bots for an international mission to Titan, one of Saturn’s moon.Missing "s" on moons. When the discovery of the alien megastructure hits the news, the global scientific priorities shift and the Titan program is canceled. Abdo and Aisha’s lives are shaken and paranoia creeps in. They will end up hacking the raw data, digging into the true nature of the signal from the megastructure and traveling to New York to meet Uma. What they discover is beyond their most cynical imagination, and their next actions will change Uma’s future for ever, again.

Right now this is in pretty good shape as far as conveying information, but you're not setting up any kind of struggle, beyond Uma's need to prove herself as more than just a pretty face. Are there people trying to keep this information hidden? Is there a danger somewhere? What is actually at stake here? I don't know. I'm sure there's something, but right now this just seems to read like a series of discoveries with no real fallout.

PUSHING PLANETS (83,600 words) is my debut novel: an adult science fiction story in the close future, split between New York City, Africa and Mars, and with two POVs. Developed as a stand-alone, Pushing Planets contains many hooks for a potential sequel. It will appeal to readers of hard science fiction’s authors such as Asimov and Sagan, although the ending will surprise most of them.

Good info here, but if there's a Mars setting that should probably be made clear in the query. I'm not seeing it here, currently.

I am an academic at a prestigious university in London (UK), with a background in physics and biology. I have published a good number of research papers in scientific journals and written about science for most of my career. Before moving to London I lived for 15 years in NYC, where some of the inspiration for the book comes from. I have always been a sci-fi fan, and I finally decided to write the story I always wanted to read.

Great bio! You're clearly qualified to write this story. Get the tension into the query and some clarification about setting, such as the Mars element, and Paula's DNA.