The Loneliness of Being Needed
The strongest person you know is running on empty. It might be you.
Updated May 30, 2026 | Reviewed by Hara Estroff Marano
A few months ago, a member of my team messaged me on WhatsApp. It wasn’t about a project or a deadline. It was much simpler than that.
“How are you doing?” he asked. “Because it’s a lot right now—work, family, the whole roller coaster of life’s journey.”
That was it. Just that. There’s a lot going on. How are you?
I did what I always do: I turned the conversation back outward. I reassured him. I told him I was good. I told him that keeping my eye on the prize kept me motivated, and that making my team successful made me happy.
Every word in my answer was and remains true. But it’s also just the type of response that leaders learn to give. Because leaders need to have the answers. And when they don’t, they need to be able to bear the weight of the uncertainty—alone. Their team needs to feel: He’s got this. We’re going to be alright.
It’s just part of the role to perform competence and calm and cheerfulness, especially when you don’t feel it. And most leaders I know don’t complain about this. They just do it. But they pay a price for doing it, one that is easy to ignore because at first glance it doesn’t look like there’s a price at all.
The price is loneliness .
The Invisibility of the Everyday Caregiver
We know by now that loneliness is very harmful. The U.S. Surgeon General’s 2023 advisory declared loneliness a public health epidemic, with health risks comparable to those " caused by smoking up to 15 cigarettes a day ." But those warnings describe the loneliness of the disconnected—empty rooms, unanswered calls. And at first glance, that seems to be the exact opposite of the life of a busy leader. Leaders are rarely disconnected. Their calendars are full, and they’re the first person called when something happens. So why do I say the price of leadership is loneliness?
Because there is another kind of loneliness: the loneliness of being the person everyone depends on.
And this isn’t a burden faced only by leaders. It is the condition of anyone who takes care of others. The parent who holds a family together, the nurse at the end of a double shift, the partner who never breaks down, the friend everyone calls first. Every day, people in all walks of life become the person others lean on. And every day, they carry what no one thinks to ask them about. The corner office has no monopoly on being needed. Anywhere there is someone on whom others count, there is someone at risk of being unseen.
The late social neuroscientist John Cacioppo , who spent decades studying loneliness, showed that loneliness is not simply a matter of being physically alone. It is better understood as perceived social isolation : the subjective sense that our connections are insufficient or insecure or unreciprocated. This perception can distort how we read the world and how we behave toward others. It can even change how our bodies function. Loneliness, on this account, is not a function of how many people surround us. Rather, it is about how we feel about the relationships we are in and how we bring our presence to them—or not.
For the indispensable, this is the danger. Leaders may be surrounded by people who need and admire them, who consult and depend on them—and yet they can still feel unseen. Indeed, the former may help cause the latter, because the more people rely on a leader, the less room there seems to be for uncertainty, unfinishedness, or simple tiredness.
I’ve spent decades working with leaders of various kinds. And what I’ve observed again and again is that the people others depend on most are often the least likely to be asked how they are doing—and the least likely to answer honestly if they are. Instead of expressing vulnerability, they perform certainty. And this is not because they’re emotionally insensitive. They feel the vulnerability acutely. Just, when everyone else is vulnerable, too, the leader steps up to hold it, which can mean putting their own feelings to the side.
Maybe I can put it like this: The more skillfully we carry others, the less anyone suspects we might need carrying ourselves.
The Zen teacher Thich Nhat Hanh taught that “the most precious gift” we can offer someone we love is our “ true presence .” I’ve thought about this often since that WhatsApp message. My colleague offered me his true presence—he made contact without an agenda, without needing anything from me. It was a small act of generosity that cut through the noise of everything else. And it made me wonder how often leaders receive that gift—and how often they’re too deep in the role to even notice it’s being offered.
Now, it’s important to say that being present and being reliable aren’t flaws. The problem arises when those virtues become rigid prisons in which we trap ourselves, when being needed becomes the only way we allow ourselves to be connected. That’s when leading turns into loneliness.
The path out of this loneliness is not to become less needed. It is to become more visible. And that requires practices most that indispensable people find deeply uncomfortable:
The Courage to Be Known
Being needed is a gift. But it is not the same as being known. And being needed without being known is what causes the peculiar loneliness of leadership—and of every life spent taking care of others. That loneliness does not heal by becoming more useful. It heals by becoming more visible. And visibility, unlike indispensability, requires not strength but courage.
If I could reply to that WhatsApp message again, I’d say the same thing—that I’m motivated, that I care for my team, that the work matters.
But I might add: “And it is lonely sometimes. Thank you for asking.”
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Faisal Hoque is the author of 11 books, including TRANSCEND (2025) and REINVENT (2023). He is the founder of SHADOKA and NextChapter, among other companies, and serves as an Executive Fellow at IMD Business School in Switzerland.
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This article is part of the Bringwise Psychology Journal — daily insights on human behavior, mental health, and personal growth.