City of Lonely Angels



Posted: Wednesday, March 15, 2006

by Lisa Haisha
Soul Blazing








City of Lonely Angels



When I told some friends I was going to be writing an article about loneliness in L.A., I got a few raised eyebrows and smirking comments like, “What? You?! With the dozens of close friends and a family you love who lives not in Timbuktu but nearby San Diego?" Yes, I sighed, we all have our moments of loneliness – especially in a city like L.A., with its storied isolation and de-emphasis of family and community in favor of self-absorbed ambition.

Not long ago, I had broken up with a boyfriend and found myself at what normally would have been an exciting event, meeting new people and sharing a great experience with my beloved. Instead, I ended up feeling self-conscious and lonely even while surrounded by friendly people. Loneliness is not cured simply by sharing laughs with friends or being invited to A-list parties or even maxing out your credit card at Barney’s. All these are fleeting pleasures that stroke your ego rather than fill your soul.

So, how do we deal with loneliness? Well, one culture that shares some of L.A’s negative traits (i.e. excessive materialism and chronic alienation) is Japan – and while visiting Tokyo during a recent holiday season I learned from some of the locals of an interesting way they handle loneliness. When the holiday blues descend, the socially isolated can contract with a “Rent a Family" company to lease a surrogate grandparent, child, loving mother or pet – even a whole brood if they desire.

In advance, you give the company a bio of yourself so your surrogate family can learn all about you and make the relationship feel natural. On your special day, they knock on your door bearing gifts, compliments of how good you look, and that all elusive “love." When they leave, it is with hugs, tears, and promises of looking forward to seeing you again. Nice, huh?

Could this Japanese model work in L.A.? Well, you could try … but you’d probably end up with a bunch of struggling actors from Central Casting, most of whom would be far too good-looking to be your real family. And then, right in the middle of Thanksgiving dinner your beloved “son" might get paged for an audition and have to bolt. Or “Grandma" might trip on your carpet and sue you for everything you’re worth.

Nope, probably wouldn’t work here. So, what can you do if you’re lonely in L.A. during the holiday season? One friend of mine makes a point of fleeing the country between Thanksgiving and New Year so he doesn’t have to listen to two months of sappy “holiday favorites" piped in from every Starbucks, TV set and radio station in the city.

A better solution, in my mind, would be to shift your focus off your own loneliness by volunteering your time to help others. Put in a few hours at a soup kitchen, read to kids at an orphanage, or visit with elderly folks at a nursing home who have no one else to care about them. The smiles and the light you see in their eyes will probably not only make you forget your loneliness, they may even make your loneliness go away.



Until next time … detach and become.




Your Soul Blazer,



Lisa Haisha


www.lisahaisha.com










Lisa Haisha is an author, speaker, and transformational coach. She

has a film background where she has directed and/or produced several

features and written over a dozen screenplays. In the past decade, Lisa

has traveled and worked in more than fifty countries around the world.

She currently lives in Los Angeles, Tokyo, and in hidden corners off

the world’s beaten path. She also holds a Masters Degree in Spiritual

Psychology and developed her own form of therapy called SOUL BLAZING(tm). www.lisahaisha.com

This Article has been viewed 297 times. (Not updated in real-time.)
Top-level comments on this article: (1 total)
» left by Reader
from Oregon
5 years 280 days ago.
This was interesting, especially the part about the "rent a family" idea in Japan. Weird. I think your idea for volunteering is a good one, it does help a lot.
We want your comments! If you can read this, you don't have javascript enabled, so you can't use this comment system. Please enable javascript.