When Everyone's Gone: Why Summer Feels So Empty

Gildas GarrecCBT Psychotherapist
10 min read

This article is available in French only.
In summer, everyone seems happy. Social media overflows with photos of beaches, barbecues with friends, couple getaways. But behind this sunny backdrop, millions of people live a very different reality: that of summer loneliness. A suffering that is all the more difficult because it is invisible and taboo.

The Summer Paradox: When the Season of Happiness Makes You Unhappy

A Massive Yet Silent Phenomenon

We often talk about winter dépression. Much less frequently about the suffering of summer. Yet the numbers speak for themselves. According to the France Foundation, 7 million French people suffer from loneliness, and this feeling intensifies considerably during the summer vacation period. SOS Friendship reports a 20 to 30% increase in calls during the summer months.

How can we explain this paradox? Summer has no shortage of sunlight, warmth, or opportunities to go out. But that's precisely where the trap closes.

Why Summer Amplifies Loneliness

Several psychological mechanisms converge to make summer a particularly challenging period for lonely people:

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The disappearance of social structures. Throughout the year, work, school, regular activities, and associations provide an almost automatic social framework. You see colleagues, classmates, activity partners. Summer suspends all of this. Colleagues go on vacation, activities stop, routines dissolve. And with them, the human contacts that accompanied them. The social pressure of summer happiness. The injunction is clear: in summer, you must enjoy life, travel, have barbecues, show yourself tanned and fulfilled. For someone who is alone, this pressure produces a devastating mirror effect. Each vacation photo with friends on Instagram becomes a reminder of what you don't have. The slowdown that makes room for thoughts. During the year, professional hyperactivity can serve as an anesthetic. In summer, the pace slows down. Evenings grow long. The silence of your apartment becomes deafening. Thoughts of loneliness, usually drowned out by daily noise, resurface with force. The closure of support structures. Here's the irony: many healthcare professionals, associations, and support organizations reduce their activities in summer, precisely when some people need them most.

The Vicious Cycle of Summer Loneliness Through a CBT Lens

In cognitive behavioral therapy, we analyze loneliness not as a simple state of fact ("I am alone"), but as a system of thoughts, emotions, and behaviors that feeds itself.

Automatic Thoughts of Summer Loneliness

Here are the thoughts I encounter most frequently in people I support during this period:

  • "Everyone has someone except me."
  • "If nobody calls me, it's because I don't matter to anyone."
  • "I'm incapable of making friends, it's too late."
  • "People who are alone in summer are losers."
  • "If people knew I was alone, they would pity me."
These thoughts all have one thing in common: they are absolute, generalizing, and unverified. They don't describe reality — they describe the interpretation your mind makes of reality. And this interpretation is biased by pain.

The Vicious Cycle in Four Steps

  • Thought: "Nobody wants me, I'm too boring for people to invite me."
  • Émotion: sadness, shame, discouragement.
  • Behavior: isolation (not calling, refusing rare invitations, staying home).
  • Consequence: loneliness is confirmed, reinforcing the initial thought.
  • This mechanism is insidious because it presents itself as proof: "See, nobody calls me." But it's the isolating behavior that creates the absence of contact, not the absence of the person's worth.


    Who Is Affected?

    Summer loneliness doesn't affect a single profile. Among the people I see during this period:

    Recently Separated People

    The first summer after a breakup is often the hardest. Vacations were a shared experience. Memories are everywhere. The question "What am I doing this summer?" becomes dizzying when you no longer have a partner to answer it with.

    Isolated Young Adults

    Students returning to a city where they no longer have their network, young professionals recently settled in a new city, people early in their careers who haven't yet built a local social circle. Summer can be terribly long when you (still) don't know anyone.

    Elderly People

    This is the most publicized profile, but also the most dramatic. The summer of 2003, the heat wave revealed to the French public the reality of elderly isolation in France. Twenty years later, the problem persists. Children on vacation, absent neighbors, suspended activities: summer can be a period of complete isolation.

    Single Parents

    For a single parent, summer vacations can be a logistical and emotional nightmare. When children go to the other parent, the house empties. The silence is brutal.

    People Suffering from Social Phobia or Anxiety

    For these people, summer poses a cruel dilemma: the work structure that provided a social alibi disappears, but social anxiety makes spontaneous outings (cafés, beaches, festivals) terrifying.


    6 CBT Strategies to Get Through Summer

    1. Question the Narrative of Loneliness

    The first step is to examine the truthfulness of your thoughts. Take the thought "Everyone is having fun except me" and put it under scrutiny:

    • What concrete evidence do I have? (Social media is not evidence — it shows a filtered version of reality.)
    • Is "everyone" really actually on vacation with friends? (No. Millions of people are in the same situation as you.)
    • What would I tell a friend who thought that? (Probably something much more nuanced and kind.)
    This cognitive restructuring exercise doesn't remove the pain, but it prevents it from becoming an absolute conviction.

    2. Distinguish Between Loneliness and Isolation

    This is a fundamental distinction:

    • Isolation is an objective fact: the number of social contacts is reduced.
    • Loneliness is a subjective feeling: the painful feeling of not being connected to others.
    You can be surrounded and feel deeply alone. You can be alone and feel good. The problem isn't always the quantity of contacts, but the quality of the connection. Identifying what you actually need (a close friend? a group activity? a simple daily exchange?) allows you to target your efforts.

    3. Plan Daily Micro-Connections

    Behavioral activation is the antidote to isolation. But there's no need to aim for social evenings if the very idea exhausts you. Aim for micro-connections:

    • Send a message to a friend, even a short one: "Hi, I was thinking of you. How is your summer going?"
    • Buy your bread each morning and exchange a few words with the baker.
    • Join a walking group, an outdoor yoga class, a summer workshop.
    • Frequent a café regularly: familiarity creates connection.
    The goal isn't to fill your calendar. It's to maintain a thread of human connection, however thin.

    4. Use Summer to Explore Your Relationship With Yourself

    What if this period of loneliness were also an opportunity? In CBT, we work extensively on tolerance of discomfort. Loneliness is uncomfortable, but it's not dangerous. Learning to accept it also means developing a precious skill: the ability to be comfortable with yourself.

    A few ideas:

    • Keep a journal: write down what you feel, what you observe, what makes you feel good. Writing externalizes thoughts and reduces their grip.
    • Discover a solo activity: hiking, cycling, reading on a terrace, visiting a museum, cooking. Summer is the ideal time to experiment without pressure.
    • Practice mindfulness: 10 minutes a day of mindfulness meditation (apps like Petit Bambou or Headspace) significantly improve emotional well-being.
    Being alone and knowing how to be alone are two very different things. The latter is a strength.

    5. Reduce Your Social Media Consumption

    This isn't trivial advice. Studies are unanimous: excessive social media consumption during summer significantly aggravates the feeling of loneliness through social comparison.

    Each vacation photo you see activates an upward comparison process: "Others are living experiences I'm not living." This process is automatic and biased — you compare your real daily life to the edited storefront of others.

    Concretely:

    • Limit your time on Instagram and Facebook to 15 minutes a day.
    • Turn off notifications.
    • Replace scrolling with a concrete activity (even 5 minutes of walking).

    6. Online Therapy: A Valuable Tool in Summer

    If you feel that summer loneliness is weighing heavily on your mood, know that therapeutic support doesn't stop in summer. Online video consultation allows you to maintain follow-up wherever you are, without travel constraints.

    This is a particularly suitable option in summer: no need to go to the office, no vacation-related excuses. A space for listening and work, accessible from home.


    When to Consult?

    Temporary loneliness is part of life. But certain warning signs should prompt you to seek help:

    • You are increasingly isolating yourself and systematically refusing contact.
    • You feel persistent sadness that doesn't lift.
    • You lose your appetite, sleep, and motivation to do anything.
    • You experience recurring self-deprecating thoughts ("I'm worthless," "nobody loves me").
    • You consume alcohol or other substances to fill the void.
    • You have dark thoughts about the future or your own worth.
    If you recognize yourself in several of these points, it's important to talk to a professional. Loneliness is not inevitable, and CBT offers concrete tools to overcome it.

    Useful Numbers

    If you're going through a period of distress:

    • SOS Friendship: 09 72 39 40 50 (24/7)
    • 3114: national suicide prevention number (24/7)
    • Teen Health Line: 0 800 235 236 (ages 12-25, anonymous and free)

    Key Takeaways

    The essentials to remember:
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    Summer loneliness affects millions of people and is explained by the disappearance of social structures, pressure to be happy, and a slower pace of life. CBT identifies a vicious cycle: negative thoughts → isolation → confirmation of loneliness. The 6 strategies: cognitive restructuring, distinguishing loneliness from isolation, micro-connections, exploring your relationship with yourself, reducing social media, online consultation. Being alone and knowing how to be alone are two different skills. The latter can be developed. If loneliness comes with persistent sadness, self-devaluation, or dark thoughts, consult a professional.

    Summer Doesn't Have to Be a Trial

    You deserve to experience this season peacefully, whether you're surrounded by others or not. If summer loneliness weighs on your daily life, CBT support can help you break the cycle of isolation, strengthen your self-confidence, and build relationships that truly matter.

    Gildas Garrec — CBT Psychotherapist in Nantes

    Office: 16 Allée Jacques Berque, 44000 Nantes

    Individual session: €70 | Personalized program: €490

    Available in summer, including online

    Book an appointment
    Learn more about the CBT approach: My Practice and Methodology | Want to work on your self-confidence? Self-Confidence Program

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    When Everyone's Gone: Why Summer Feels So Empty | Psychologie et Sérénité