Maintaining a Social Life with a Chronic Illness

When you have to frequently cancel plans at the last minute because of a chronic illness, you miss out on having a social life. You miss out on activities, games, new friendships, weddings, graduations, girls’ trips, guys’ nights, travel, craft fairs, home and garden shows, game nights, going out to dinner with friends, and every kind of celebration.

You feel left out because you are left out, even though it isn’t anyone’s fault. Eventually, your friends stop including you, and who can blame them? You become unreliable. It feels like too much trouble to include you. You stop getting asked. You start self-isolating to avoid constant disappointment, both yours and theirs.

When you stop being included and you are alone most of the time, you don’t really have much to talk about except the daily intrusions of your illness. That becomes too heavy to carry when it’s your only source of conversation. Something that is already uncomfortable becomes the center of every interaction. Over time, people, often without realizing it, start to distance themselves.

This is how people with chronic illnesses lose social connection and their sense of belonging. Isolation reduces anyone’s quality of life. When you feel like you’re merely existing instead of living, your mental and physical health suffer. When you don’t feel like you belong, you lose that lifeline that binds people together. The world feels bleak. You start to feel hopeless because you can’t see a way out of the isolation.

It’s often hard for an able-bodied person to understand just how isolating this life can be.  It can be even harder to imagine ways around this isolation.  Here are just a few ways that people with a chronic illness can stay connected and maintain a social life.

If You Are the Friend of a Chronically Ill Person

If you love someone whose health limits them, don’t just keep inviting them to things that are beyond what they can do. Instead, create activities and conversations where they can succeed. Make flexible plans. Keep visits short. Go to them when they can’t get out. Use Zoom or FaceTime when in-person visits aren’t possible. Meet them where they are. And don’t stop asking.

Focus on one-on-one time instead of group plans. Build simple micro-rituals, like a weekly 20-minute phone call or video chat. Replace big outings with couch chats or car-side visits. Those are much easier to manage than a two-hour concert or dinner in a crowded restaurant.

When you talk with your friend, don’t always lead with “How are you?” That centers the conversation on illness. Widen it. Ask about books they’ve read, shows they’ve watched, ideas they’ve had, memories they want to share, or their thoughts on current events. Let them exist as more than their symptoms.

If they have to miss an event they were really looking forward to, you can still include them. Step outside and video chat for a few minutes. Let mutual friends take turns saying hello. A small window into the gathering can mean more than you realize.

You could also watch the same show at the same time and text during it. Play online games together for short, flexible blocks of time. Choose a book you both want to read and message each other as you move through the chapters.

Remind yourself that most chronically ill people cancel because they physically cannot function, not because they don’t care. Holding on to that truth changes everything.

If You Are the Chronically Ill Person Who Is Trying to Stay Connected

If you’re the one who keeps canceling, don’t disappear in shame. Stay connected in small ways. Send a short text. Leave a voice message. Let people know you’re thinking about them.

If your world feels like it’s shrinking and your social life is fading, it’s okay to admit that not every friendship is meant to last forever. People move in and out of our lives. That’s part of being human.

Look for ways to bring new people into your world. Join an online support group. Play online games and connect with others who enjoy them. Start or join a writing group or interest group on Zoom. Building new friendships with chronic illness isn’t easy, but it isn’t impossible.  Friendships may look different now, but you still have chances to build social connections.


Here are some other articles by Jan Mariet that you might enjoy:

When Change Sneaks Up on You – Jan Mariet’s A Day in the Life

Recognizing When You’re Struggling with Chronic Illness – Jan Mariet’s A Day in the Life

How People Disappear – Jan Mariet’s A Day in the Life

Can I or Should I? Living With Disability, Risk, and Hard Choices – Jan Mariet’s A Day in the Life

Living with Invisible Losses: Finding Meaning in Chronic Illness – Jan Mariet’s A Day in the Life

Living with Invisible Losses: Finding Meaning in Chronic Illness

Image of a person fading away into the background, and faint words saying, "The quiet grief, the missed moments, the life that used to be yours..."

When you live with a chronic illness, there are so many things you wish you didn’t have to face, yet they become part of your life.

There is the loneliness of watching the world move forward while you stand still. Friends make plans, families gather, and life goes on, even when you can’t take part.

There is the heartbreak of memories that belong to the person you used to be. You remember the energy, the freedom, and the ease of doing simple things without thinking twice.

There is the pain of not being able to show up for the people you love in the ways you once could. You miss birthdays, dinners, trips, and quiet everyday moments that used to come easily.

There is the grief of living with a loss no one else can see. The world doesn’t recognize this kind of pain, but it lives inside you every day.

There is the ache of missing out on the small, ordinary moments that most people take for granted. Even something as simple as going for a walk, running errands, or sharing a meal can feel out of reach.

And there is the loss of freedom. The freedom to wake up and simply do what you want, without calculating pain, fatigue, or consequences.

These are the unseen losses that shape your world in quiet, lasting ways; changes that settle deep within you, reinventing how you see yourself and the world around you. Acknowledging them doesn’t mean giving up. It means honoring the strength it takes to live a life that looks different, yet still holds meaning, love, and hope.


Take a moment to explore other articles about living with disabilities or chronic illnesses by Jan Mariet.

Disabled People Don’t Need Permission to Enjoy Life – Jan Mariet’s A Day in the Life

How People Respond to Your Chronic Illness – Jan Mariet’s A Day in the Life


Our Resilient Hearts is more than a collection of stories; it’s a journey toward hope, healing, and hard-earned strength. Author Jan Mariet weaves together powerful personal essays, thought-provoking prompts, and inspiring affirmations that help readers reflect on their own resilience and reclaim meaning in the face of adversity. Our Resilient Hearts by Jan Mariet is available in paperback on Amazon.

Our Resilient Hearts: Thriving Beyond Chronic Illness: Mariet, Jan: 9798315554523: Amazon.com: Books


Have you felt invisible losses too? Leave a comment and let’s create a space where our stories remind others they’re not alone.