The Art Of Being Whole: 7 Beautiful Secrets Of People Who Are Joyfully Single

Being single has more perks than you realize.

Last updated on Oct 31, 2025

Smiling young woman relaxing at home, illustrating the beautiful secrets of people who are joyfully single and whole Rido | Canva
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Producers of shows such as The Bachelor don't want you to know this. Peddlers of dating guides try to keep it a secret. Some of my fellow scholars pretend it's not true. Even some of your closest friends might contort their faces into expressions of disbelief if you were to suggest it to them. But it is true. Plenty of single people are leading happy and successful lives.

They are not pining for "The One" or crying into their beer. Instead, they are living their single lives fully, joyfully, and unapologetically — whether they plan to do so for one month, for one year, or for the rest of their lives. What are the secrets of these happily single people?

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I've been studying singles for well over a decade, and I think that the happiest and most fulfilled single people have a strong sense of self. They know themselves and trust themselves. Stuck in a matrimaniacal culture — one that is laden with over-the-top hyping of marriage, weddings, and coupling — they are secure enough to know that they can live meaningful and rewarding single lives if they choose to do so — even if they're open to finding a partner, but just not actively looking.

It can seem so much easier to follow the prescribed path that is supposed to lead to happiness: finding your soulmate as soon as possible and then investing just about all of your time, energy, wishes, and dreams into that one person. But what if you decided to forge your own path?  What might your life look like then? Strong, happy, successful single people who resist the relentless matrimania and listen to their own hearts practice these habits.

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Here are 7 beautiful secrets of joyfully single people:

1. They observe themselves

woman who secretly is joyfully single as she observes herself PeopleImages / Shutterstock

That's an important step toward knowing yourself. Take, for example, the issue of "finding someone." Do you tell yourself and others that you are interested in finding The One — yet, somehow, taking specific steps to do so seems to rank somewhere below cleaning out your sock drawer and deleting old emails? 

Maybe you just think you should "find someone" because our culture is teeming with such messages, but it's not really what you want to do. Maybe not now. Maybe not ever. Know yourself. Then honor your sense of what kind of life is the best life for you.

RELATED: The Art Of Being Single: 7 Meaningful Things I Get To Do Because I Don’t Have To Ask Anyone’s Permission

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2. They decide for themselves who counts as special

woman who is joyfully single as she decides who's special Josep Suria / Shutterstock

Maybe they have one special person in their life, but that person is a close friend or a sibling and not a romantic partner. Or maybe they have a whole convoy of important people in their lives, including friends and relatives, mentors and neighbors.

RELATED: 6 Scientific Things About Being Single That’ll Make You Say ‘Wait, That’s Actually Amazing’

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3. They recognize that not everyone wants to be with another person all the time

woman who is joyfully single as she recognizes not everybody wants another person ShotPrime Studio / Shutterstock

No matter how special that person may be. Some people are "single at heart." As I've explained in my own research, the risk isn't what we would miss if we didn't put a romantic partner at the center of our lives; it's what we would miss if we did. We wouldn't get to be who we really are.

RELATED: 30 Simple Habits People Who Genuinely Love Being Alone Practice Every Single Day

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4. They know that all of us want to spend time alone and time with other people

woman who is joyfully single as she wants to spend time alone Antonio Guillem / Shutterstock

The preferred mix of solitude and sociability is different for different people. If they crave plenty of time alone, they give themselves the gift of solitude. If they like lots of time with other people, they create a life filled with togetherness. They know whether they like being self-sufficient. And if they do, they go ahead and deal with things and make decisions, mostly on their own. 

A study of more than 100 Americans who were over 40 and had been single all their lives found that self-sufficiency was linked to their well-being. The more self-sufficient they were, the less likely they were to experience negative feelings. For married people, it was the opposite: The more they liked dealing with things on their own, the more likely they were to experience negative feelings. 

Self-sufficiency does not necessarily imply a lack of interest in different perspectives or opinions. Instead, I think it means that after considering whatever input you find valuable, you ultimately make the decision that feels right to you.

RELATED: 30 Simple Habits People Who Genuinely Love Being Alone Practice Every Single Day

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5. They realize some people are single at heart

woman who is joyfully single as she realizes some people are single at heart YouAreMagic Space / Shutterstock

Through surveys of more than 20,000 people from over 100 countries, as well as in-depth interviews, I've discovered something that challenges everything our culture tells us about happiness and fulfillment: Being single at heart isn't a phase we're going through or a defense mechanism we've developed. 

People who are single at heart live their best lives, their most meaningful lives, and their most authentic lives as single people.

RELATED: No Relationship, No Problem: Why I'm In Love With Being Alone

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6. Those who do want to marry are wise about what marriage really means

woman who is joyfully single as she is wise about what marriage means Stokkete / Shutterstock

They do not expect marriage to transform them into something they are not. Studies that have followed the same people over many years of their lives, as they stay single or get married, have produced some remarkable, myth-busting results. 

For example, 18 long-term studies have shown that getting married does not make people lastingly happier or more satisfied with their lives than they were before. Sometimes there is a honeymoon effect — when you first get married, you feel better about your life than you did before. 

But that feeling dissipates, and eventually, people feel about the same as they did when they were single. A study of American marriages found that people who had been married more than three years were not any happier, they were not any less depressed, they were not healthier, and they had no higher self-esteem than when they were single. 

RELATED: 17 Rare Traits Of People Who Love Being Alone And Never Settle For Shallow Connections, According To Psychology

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7. They know what the purveyors of conventional wisdom do not

woman who is joyfully single as it gets better with age fizkes / Shutterstock

And here's what that is: For many people, single life gets even better with age. By studying the stereotypes of single people, my colleagues and I learned that most of society tends to think that single people are not very happy, and as they get older, they become even more miserable. 

In fact, though, many single people become more secure about their lives over time, and they are less buffeted about by the opinions of other people. They may not even think all that much about being single; they are too busy living their lives.

RELATED: 10 Most Relatable Truths About Being Single Nobody Talks About

Bella DePaulo, PhD., is the author of Singled Out and has written the “Living Single” blog for Psychology Today since 2008; and has been published by the New York Times, the Washington Post, Time magazine, The Atlantic, and many other outlets.

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