yego.me
💡 Stop wasting time. Read Youtube instead of watch. Download Chrome Extension

Why loneliness is a danger to individuals and societies | Andrew Horn | Big Think


2m read
·Nov 3, 2024

The reason that I’m so passionate about conversation and meaningful communication is because of this thing called the connection crisis. And I am not being hyperbolic when I call it a crisis.

So, AARP did a study in 1970 and they found out that 20 percent of their members identified as being lonely. They did that same study again in 2010, and the number had more than doubled to 45 percent—45 percent of their members that were identifying as lonely.

So the General Social Survey came out a few years ago and it found out that the most common response when people were asked, “How many friends do you have?”—wait for it—zero. Zero. That number has tripled over recent decades. Imagine going through life without a single confidant.

And this dearth of relationships is not just making us sad, it’s literally making us sick. It is killing us. Because what happens when we have weak social ties? We have increased inflammation; it decreases the body’s natural immune response.

There was a recent meta-analysis of 300,000 patients and it found that having weak social ties was as harmful to your health as being an alcoholic, and twice as harmful as having obesity. So these wild things are happening, but so often people are left to their own devices to figure out how to communicate, how to connect.

We spend 15 years studying something like social studies and we don’t even spend 15 minutes on social skills. And communication is the fundamental building block of creating these important relationships, which are so important for our personal lives and also our professional success.

So that’s why we need to be intentional about communication, because with a little bit of practice and a little bit of focus anyone can connect more deeply with the people they meet and the people they love.

And when you think about that, if you don’t have friends that is what opens you up for extremism; it’s that when you don’t belong you will do anything to belong, you know what I mean? So that's why providing frameworks for people to connect is such a vital thing.

More Articles

View All
The vowel-shift irregular verb | The parts of speech | Grammar | Khan Academy
Hello grammarians! We’re talking about vowel shifting in irregular verbs, which is gonna sound a little weird, but bear with me. To review what a vowel is super quick, a vowel is any sound that your mouth can make while your tongue isn’t touching your li…
Make Time Your Friend, Not Your Enemy
In A Christmas Carol, Charles Dicken’s wrote, “I will live in the Past, the Present, and the Future. The Spirits of all Three shall strive within me. I will not shut out the lessons that they teach.” What does it mean to live in the Past, the Present, and…
Conservation of momentum and energy example
[Instructor] Blocks A and B are pressed together with a spring between them. When the blocks are released from rest, the spring pushes the blocks apart so that the 0.75 kilogram block A moves up the 30 degree ramp to the left and the 0.25 kilogram block B…
Applying the chain rule and product rule | Advanced derivatives | AP Calculus AB | Khan Academy
What we’re going to do in this video is try to find the derivative with respect to X of (x^2 \sin(X)) all of that to the third power. And what’s going to be interesting is that there are multiple ways to tackle it. I encourage you to pause the video and …
1998 Berkshire Hathaway Annual Meeting (Full Version)
[Applause] Morning! [Applause] Good morning, I’m Warren Buffett, chairman of Berkshire, and this is my partner. This hyperactivity fellow over here is Charlie Munger. We’ll do this as we’ve done in the past, following the Saddam Hussein School of Manageme…
Rounding whole numbers: missing digit | Math | 4th grade | Khan Academy
What digits could replace the question mark in the hundreds place to make this statement true? 4,000 question mark hundreds 29 rounds to 5,000 if we round to the nearest thousand. So we want a number whose nearest thousand is 5,000. It’s closer to 5,000 …