Six months into running my business alone, I realized I’d gone three full days without a single unplanned conversation with another person. Client calls, sure, scheduled and purposeful, but nothing resembling the casual, unplanned interaction that used to happen constantly when I worked in an office, a hallway comment, someone stopping by to ask an unrelated question, the small, low-stakes social contact that I hadn’t realized was doing real work in my day until it disappeared entirely.
Nobody had warned me about this specifically. Every piece of advice I’d encountered about going solo focused on the practical and financial risks, and none of it mentioned that the actual daily experience would involve a genuine, structural absence of casual human contact that I’d need to deliberately solve for, rather than something that would simply work itself out.
Why This Specific Kind of Loneliness Catches Founders Off Guard
Most warnings about solo work focus on isolation in an abstract, general sense, something founders anticipate and feel prepared for. What actually catches people off guard is more specific: the loss of casual, low-stakes social contact throughout an ordinary day, not the more obvious absence of close friendships or deep relationships, which most founders maintain outside of work regardless of their employment situation.
I had a genuinely full personal life outside of work, close friends, a partner, regular social plans. None of that addressed the specific, daily gap left by the disappearance of casual workplace interaction, the kind of low-stakes, unplanned social contact that doesn’t require scheduling or deep emotional investment, just proximity to other people going about their own day. That specific kind of contact turned out to matter more to daily wellbeing than I’d have guessed before losing it entirely.
Why This Particular Gap Is Hard to Notice and Harder to Name
Because the loneliness of solo work is specifically about a narrow, structural gap, not necessarily a broader deficit in meaningful relationships, it’s easy to dismiss or fail to name accurately. “I have plenty of friends and a good relationship, so I shouldn’t feel isolated” is a genuinely reasonable thought that misses the specific, narrower thing actually missing: casual, low-stakes daily contact, which close relationships, however strong, don’t structurally replace, since they typically happen in scheduled, higher-investment blocks rather than the constant, unplanned background presence a workplace naturally provides.
I spent months feeling a vague, hard-to-name discomfort without connecting it clearly to this specific gap, partly because my life looked, from any reasonable outside assessment, entirely socially healthy.
What Actually Helped, Once I Named the Real Problem
Deliberately working from spaces with other people present, even without direct interaction. Working from a coffee shop or a coworking space some days, even without any meaningful conversation happening, restored some of the low-stakes ambient social presence that had disappeared, a surprisingly real effect given how passive the actual contact involved.
Building in genuinely casual, low-stakes contact with other solo operators, not just formal networking. A regular, informal coffee or call with another solo founder, without a specific agenda or professional purpose beyond just catching up, replicated some of the casual, low-investment social contact that workplace relationships used to provide, in a way that more formal networking events, ironically, didn’t.
Scheduling brief, genuinely unplanned-feeling breaks that involve real people, even briefly. A short walk that included a genuine, if brief, interaction, a regular coffee shop where the same barista recognized me, small, low-stakes daily contact that added up to something meaningfully different than a day spent entirely without any such interaction.
Why This Is Worth Taking Seriously, Not Dismissing as a Minor Inconvenience
Genuine, sustained isolation affects wellbeing in real, measurable ways, and the specific structural loneliness of solo work is a real version of that risk, even for people with otherwise healthy, full personal lives outside of work. Dismissing it as a minor inconvenience of an otherwise appealing work arrangement risks letting a genuine, ongoing wellbeing cost go unaddressed simply because it doesn’t match the more commonly discussed picture of isolation.
If this kind of loneliness feels like it’s affecting your mood or wellbeing more broadly, not just as a minor daily annoyance, that’s worth discussing with a doctor or therapist directly, since solo work’s specific structural gap is real, and its effects are worth taking seriously rather than assuming they’ll resolve on their own.
What to Do Now
If you’re working solo and haven’t specifically addressed this structural gap, deliberately build in at least one source of low-stakes, casual human contact into your regular week, whether that’s working from a shared space some days, a regular informal check-in with another solo operator, or simply a daily routine that includes brief, real interaction with other people.
This isn’t about replacing deep relationships, which solo work doesn’t inherently threaten. It’s about deliberately rebuilding a specific, narrower kind of contact that a traditional workplace provides automatically and solo work removes entirely, unless you build it back in on purpose.