The typical effects of daily social experiences for most children are short-term solitude, and for some children, these sensations become cumulative and impair their academic success, general welfare, and mental health. Social partnerships are important to children's welfare, and there may be significant consequences of these relationships. In solitude and social anxiety, such disorders play a central role. In the absence of resolution of the dispute between peers, records of soleness, social anxiety, and social evasion are associated with youth. Although such relationships are well known, the relationship between peer conflict-avoidance and various adjustment features has not been investigated. The findings showed that children who report being lonely and anxious for others who have not reported being lonely are anxious. Essentially, the former spoke more often about family matters and intimate subjects and made up for their poor social skills and encountered new people. The research aimed to investigate the significance of the relation between anxiety and loneliness of social support and self-esteem. The modelling of structural equation revealed partial stabilization results between anguish and loneliness through social reinforcement and self-esteem. In addition, a multi-group study has found, relative to their counterparts, which infants appear to have more adverse assessments. The research obtains the results: Fear of negative evaluation ratio is 87.6%, Intercept loneliness ratio is 88.77%, Reduce social anxiety ratio is 84.5%, Depression reduction ratio is 82.25%, Improving the self-confidence ratio is 93.80%. • Outward control locus and shyness, leading to solitude. • A social anxiety disorder can be linked with other traumatic experiences in life, • Self-esteem eliminates depression and increases the personality's optimistic facets.