@PapaDave "...the risk of emotional intimacy became more attractive than the predictability of loneliness."
True words, my friend. True words. Many people experiencing loneliness are quite busy with social interactions, but are lonely because none of those interactions is meaningful to them.
@grubworm I'll go ahead and agree with this one, too! It's the same concept, just on the other side of the coin. If you interact with people expecting emotional intimacy, mostly you'll dig through an inch of dirt and hit bedrock. Most people will also test others with "meaningless" interactions to see how they respond, and depending on that, will keep or discard them as friends. Some people have gold, but it's under the bedrock. And some people, you dig for months and years, looking for the gold, or even just the bedrock, and all you find is more dirt.
Again, not to derail this about relationships, but loneliness comes from interactions in the absence of relationships (workmates vs. friends, for example). My ex-GF vented to me for several months before she finally settled down and we started actually having two-sided conversations. Complained nonstop about how annoying people are, in very specific ways, and provided no shortage of examples from her personal life. School, work, home, friends, all annoying.
I know, lady. They annoy me too. But I heard her out, all the way out, until she finally RAN out, and we stayed together for 5 years. Although she told me that she felt that those 5 years were wasted, I feel that they had been the best 5 years of my life.
That relationship was very draining and inconvenient to me, but it was all worth it because of the personal development.
To bring it around to my point, solo wheeling and overlanding is the best way to know what's in yourself. Introspective time, reflective time, time to think about your thoughts. It brings out what's in your heart. You can sing, laugh, hoot and holler, you can sit quietly and watch the environment, you can run over fallen trees or flex on some rocks. And there is nobody there to care about it, or judge you for it. It's all about your relationship with yourself, with the environment, and with your rig.
If what's in you is a desire to share these experiences, find ye a gal for shotgun.