I want to tell this story honestly, which means telling it without the version that sounds good at dinner parties.
The dinner party version goes like this: I moved to Saigon, met amazing people, built a life, found my tribe. It’s clean. It’s uplifting. And it’s not really what happened.
What actually happened is that I spent the better part of my late twenties and early thirties feeling profoundly lonely, even when I was surrounded by people. I had friends. I had a social life. I had all the outward ingredients of connection. And none of it touched the thing that was actually wrong, which was that I’d been sitting around for years waiting for the right people to show up and recognize me, without ever asking myself whether I was someone worth recognizing.
The shift didn’t come from finding better people. It came from becoming a different person. And the research, it turns out, supports exactly that sequence.
Loneliness isn’t what you think it is
The first thing I had to unlearn was the idea that loneliness is about being alone. It isn’t.
A comprehensive review by Hawkley and Cacioppo published in the Annals of Behavioral Medicine makes this distinction clearly: loneliness is synonymous with perceived social isolation, not objective social isolation. You can live a relatively solitary life and not feel lonely. And you can live an apparently rich social life and feel lonely constantly.
That second category was me. I had people around. I went out. I had conversations. But the connections felt thin, like they were resting on the surface of something without ever reaching the part of me that actually needed to be reached. I kept blaming the people, or the city, or the circumstances. If I could just find the right group, the right community, the right kind of friend, the loneliness would resolve.
It didn’t. Because the problem wasn’t outside me. It was inside me.
The most effective intervention isn’t what you’d expect
In 2011, a team of researchers at the University of Chicago published what remains one of the most cited studies on loneliness interventions. The meta-analysis, led by Christopher Masi and including John Cacioppo, examined 50 studies and identified four primary strategies for reducing loneliness: improving social skills, enhancing social support, increasing opportunities for social contact, and addressing maladaptive social cognition.
The finding that changed how I understood my own situation was this: the most effective interventions weren’t the ones that gave people more social contact. They were the ones that changed how people thought about themselves and their social world. Addressing maladaptive social cognition produced an effect size nearly three times larger than the other approaches.
In plain language: the thing that most reliably reduces loneliness isn’t meeting more people. It’s changing the mental patterns that make connection feel impossible even when people are right in front of you.
When I read that, something clicked. I’d been treating my loneliness as a supply problem. Not enough interesting people. Not enough opportunities. Not enough invitations. But it was actually a perception problem. I was filtering every social interaction through a lens of self-protection that made genuine connection nearly impossible.
What I was actually doing wrong
Here’s the part I’m not proud of. For years, my social strategy was essentially passive. I showed up. I was pleasant. I waited for people to find me interesting. And when they didn’t pursue the connection, I took it as confirmation that something was wrong with either them or me.
I wasn’t putting anything real into the world. I wasn’t writing honestly. I wasn’t sharing what I actually thought about things. I wasn’t vulnerable in conversations. I wasn’t initiating. I was sitting in the back of every room, physically present but emotionally absent, waiting for someone to notice me and do the work of connection on my behalf.
That’s not a social skills deficit. That’s a hiding strategy dressed up as introversion.
The Hawkley and Cacioppo review describes this cycle precisely. Loneliness triggers implicit hypervigilance for social threats. You become hypersensitive to signs of rejection. That sensitivity biases your attention toward negative aspects of every interaction. You start reading neutral signals as hostile ones. A person who doesn’t text back isn’t busy; they don’t like you. A conversation that trails off isn’t natural; it’s evidence of your inadequacy. And those interpretations shape your behavior in ways that create exactly the outcome you fear. You withdraw. You hold back. You stop initiating. And the people around you, sensing your guardedness, give you space. Which feels like abandonment. Which confirms the story.
The loop is airtight. And it runs entirely on perception, not reality.
What actually changed
I didn’t fix my loneliness by finding my people. I fixed it by becoming someone who could actually be found.
That meant doing things that terrified me. I started writing publicly about my actual thoughts, not polished takes designed to impress, but honest reflections on what I was learning, struggling with, and getting wrong. I started writing a book about Buddhism that I wasn’t sure anyone would read. I started Hack Spirit with no audience and no guarantee that anyone would care.
I started initiating conversations instead of waiting for them. I started saying yes to things I would normally avoid. I started being honest in situations where I would normally perform. I started treating connection as something I had to build, not something I was owed.
None of this felt natural. All of it felt like exposure therapy, which, in a sense, it was. The Masi meta-analysis found that the most effective loneliness interventions used cognitive behavioral approaches to challenge the distorted thinking patterns that keep lonely people trapped. My version of that was less clinical but structurally identical. I was forcing myself to behave differently and then watching the results contradict my expectations.
I expected rejection and got curiosity. I expected indifference and got engagement. I expected people to see through me and instead they saw me, which was what I’d wanted all along but had been too guarded to allow.
The quiet part
The part of this story that doesn’t fit neatly into an article is that the process took years. Not months. Years. There was no single breakthrough. There was a long, slow accumulation of small decisions to show up differently, each one slightly less terrifying than the last.
My meditation practice was part of it. In Buddhism, there’s a concept called metta, or loving-kindness, which starts with directing warmth toward yourself before extending it to others. I used to skip the self-directed part because it felt indulgent. It took me an embarrassingly long time to understand that the self-directed part is the foundation. You can’t extend genuine warmth to others if you’re running on empty yourself. And you can’t connect with people if you fundamentally believe you’re not worth connecting with.
My wife was part of it. Meeting her wasn’t the cure for my loneliness, but the relationship showed me what connection looks like when you stop performing. She didn’t fall in love with the curated version of me. She fell in love with the actual one, the one I’d been hiding behind a decade of careful self-presentation.
My daughter was part of it. Having a child strips away pretense in a way that nothing else does. You can’t perform fatherhood. You just do it, badly and beautifully and in real time, and in the process you discover that the unedited version of yourself is the only one that actually works.
And the business was part of it. Building something real, something that required me to put genuine thinking into the world and stand behind it, gave me a sense of substance that no amount of social maneuvering ever could. I stopped waiting to be discovered because I was too busy building something worth discovering.
What I’d say to someone who’s lonely right now
I wouldn’t say “put yourself out there.” That advice is technically correct and practically useless, because the problem was never about physical presence. It was about emotional availability.
I’d say this: stop waiting to be found. Not because nobody’s looking, but because the version of you that’s hiding isn’t the version anyone can connect with. The real version, the one you’re protecting, the one you think isn’t enough, is the only version that has the capacity to form the kind of bond you’re actually hungry for.
Becoming someone worth finding doesn’t mean becoming impressive. It means becoming honest. It means having something you care about and doing it publicly. It means initiating instead of waiting. It means letting people see the unfinished, imperfect, still-figuring-it-out version of you, and trusting that the right people will respond to that more than they’d ever respond to the polished performance.
I live in Saigon now with my wife and daughter. I run a business with my brothers. I have a close friend, Mal, whose wife is close with my wife, and we spend time together in the easy, unforced way that I spent years thinking wasn’t available to me. I’m not lonely anymore. Not because I found the right people, but because I stopped being the wrong version of myself.
That’s the honest version. It’s less flattering than “I found my tribe.” But it’s the one that’s true.













