A Senior Woman’s Routine Living Alone for Decades in Copacabana Reveals Personal Autonomy and Reflects Changes in the Profile of Brazilian Housing, Where Households with Only One Resident Are Growing Consistently According to Recent Official Data.
Mrs. Lulu is 91 years old and lives alone in an apartment in Copacabana, in the South Zone of Rio de Janeiro.
She has lived alone for more than five decades and summarizes her own choice directly: “being able to do what you want, when you want, is priceless.”
The story was aired by the program Globo Repórter and gained attention for portraying, in concrete terms, a routine marked by personal autonomy and organization in advanced age, in line with demographic transformations officially recorded in the country.
-
A street cleaner who earns R$ 2,100 per month put her cell phone aside for a few minutes and returned to find a Pix transfer of R$ 203,000 mistakenly deposited into her account, an amount that, according to her, she wouldn’t be able to save even if she worked for a hundred years.
-
R$ 5,000 scattered on the street, a lost wallet, and an honest decision: the case in Goiás that moved even those who only read the story
-
Dissatisfied with seeing people sleeping on the street, a man named Ryan Donais started building small mobile homes so that homeless people can escape the cold, each equipped with a bed, running water, electricity, and heating.
-
ET in Paraná? After intriguing videos, mysterious sounds in the forest, and theories that dominated social media, the Brazilian Air Force reveals what its radars recorded and increases the mystery about the alleged UFO seen in Campo Largo.
Living Alone as a Consolidated Way of Life
Mrs. Lulu’s daily life is presented as simple and structured based on her own decisions.
Living alone, for her, does not appear as improvisation or a transitional situation, but as a way of life consolidated over decades in the same neighborhood.
Copacabana emerges as a backdrop for a common urban routine, where commutes, household tasks, and schedules are defined by the resident herself, without the need to share decisions with others.

Growth of One-Person Households in Brazil
The individual story connects to a national data measured by the Brazilian Institute of Geography and Statistics.
The 2022 Demographic Census identified that Brazil had 72.3 million households, of which 13.6 million were occupied by only one person.
This number corresponds to 19.1% of the total, meaning that nearly one in five homes in the country houses only one resident.
This is a significant increase compared to previous censuses.
IBGE Data on Who Lives Alone
In 2000, Brazil recorded 4.1 million one-person households. In 2022, that total more than tripled, reaching 13.6 million.
The IBGE research shows that this expansion did not occur uniformly across age groups.
The majority of people living alone in the country are 40 years or older, and a significant portion consists of elderly individuals. According to the institute, 41.8% of the residents of one-person households in 2022 were 60 years or older.
Elderly People Living Alone and Their Relationship with Autonomy

In this context, Mrs. Lulu’s routine fits into an increasingly present statistical pattern.
The presence of elderly individuals living alone has ceased to be an isolated exception and has become part of the real configuration of Brazilian housing.
What stands out in the specific case shown by Globo Repórter is the duration of this arrangement, maintained for over half a century at the same address, and the way the resident associates this choice with a sense of daily freedom.
Women, Aging, and Individual Housing
The Census also indicates a balance between men and women in one-person households. In 2022, there were 6.837 million homes occupied by men living alone and 6.784 million by women.
The story of Mrs. Lulu fits into this female segment, where old age is linked to residential autonomy and maintaining one’s own routine, without presenting this as an exceptional or improvised situation.
Changes in the Composition of Brazilian Families
In addition to the growth of households with only one resident, the IBGE identified significant changes in the composition of Brazilian families.
In 2022, for the first time, arrangements formed by couples with children ceased to be the majority, representing 42.0% of households, compared to 56.4% in 2000.
Couples without children increased from 13.0% to 24.1% over the same period. This data helps to explain why living alone has become a more visible and socially recognized reality.

Everyday Freedom as a Central Value
In the material shown by Globo Repórter, Mrs. Lulu’s speech serves as a summary of a recurring sentiment in part of this group.
The appreciation of control over one’s own time and space emerges as a central element of the narrative.
The report presents the resident as someone satisfied with the routine she has built, not associating the condition of living alone with fragility or abandonment, but rather with a form of personal organization consolidated throughout adulthood and old age.
Individual Story and Demographic Trend
Stories of this kind tend to generate immediate identification as they combine advanced age, recognizable daily life, and straightforward discourse about individual choices.
At the same time, IBGE numbers provide the objective basis that shows this is not an isolated case, but part of a measurable trend in the country.
The coexistence of statistical data and personal accounts helps to understand how demographic changes reflect in concrete trajectories.
The Globo Repórter piece depicting Mrs. Lulu is titled “Elderly Woman Who Has Lived Alone for Over 50 Years Would Not Trade Freedom for Anything” and is available on Globoplay.

Acho triste, a idade deixa a gente muito fragil, queda e acidentes domesticos podem ser fatais.
Não ter ninguém pra pertubar o juízo é maravolhoso. O problema é quando começam a surgir as limitações. Para tanto, é necessário ter a qiem recorrer em.sitiaćões emergenciais. Morei sozinha e confesso que com.o tempo passei a gostar muito. Chegar em casa e encontrar tudo como deixamos, não ter conflitos, brigas, é maravilhoso. Liberdade não tem preço.
Loved this ….good for her!