For most of my life, I was rarely alone.
I was married for over 30 years and raised three children. My days were full of meals to make and pickups from school and activities. When my kids were young, I often dreamed of just one hour alone. One quiet hour to read, to breathe, to hear myself think.
Now I am 61. I am divorced. I’ve just moved back to Santa Fe, New Mexico. And I live alone.
If you had told my younger self this story, I’m not sure she would have welcomed it. I assumed being alone at this age would feel like failure, or loss, or something to fear.
But I’m learning that isn’t the whole truth.
Right now I’m sitting in the coffee shop inside a Santa Fe bookstore called Collected Works. I hear conversations, music, the clink of cups. I was reading, and now I’m writing. No one needs anything from me in this moment.
And it’s okay.
Why Being Alone at 60 Can Feel So Scary
Being alone isn’t always just about an empty house. It can bring up deeper questions.
Who am I if no one needs me today? What does it mean if I’m single now? Is this loneliness, or simply space?
It’s easy to confuse being alone with being abandoned. But they aren’t the same thing.
Loneliness is disconnection. Aloneness can be a pause. A reset. A chance to come back to yourself.
Five Ways Being Alone at 60 Can Be Wonderful
Here are five gifts I didn’t expect to find in this season.
1. You Hear Yourself Again
Without constant demands, your own voice gets clearer. You remember what you like and what you need.
2. You Get Your Time Back
You can move through your day at your own pace. There’s less rushing and more room to breathe.
3. Your Space Becomes Yours
Your home and your routines reflect you. You don’t have to compromise or explain your preferences.
4. You Choose Connection on Purpose
Instead of relationships happening by default, you build them intentionally. A coffee shop conversation can feel like a small doorway back into life.
5. You Remember Your Life Is Still Unfolding
This is not the end of your story. It is a new chapter, and it can hold freedom, creativity, and joy.
Learning How to Hold This Chapter
If you once longed for quiet when your children were young, you may be surprised by what it asks of you now.
Being alone can feel too quiet at first. Or too loud with your own thoughts. But over time, you may notice something gentle happening. You don’t have to fill every moment. You don’t have to have the next step figured out.
Sometimes learning how to be with yourself is the whole point.
A Quiet Truth Worth Remembering
Being alone at 60 does not mean you failed. It does not mean you were left behind. It does not mean your best years are over.
It means you are still here. And that means your life is still alive.
Let’s Have a Conversation:
Does being alone scare you? Is this a real fear or something you’ve learned to experience? Have you found that you like being alone?