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  • I was supposed to meet a friend here today,

  • but I think he's ten minutes late right now

  • and I don't see him, so I hope I didn't get ghosted.

  • ( ringing )

  • Operator: Your call has been forwarded

  • to an automated voice messaging system.

  • Alex: Almost everyone knows what it feels like to be lonely.

  • ( groans )

  • And in 2018, nearly half

  • the U.S. population reported

  • feeling lonely regularly...

  • Woman: Loneliness is a major threat

  • to Americans' well-being.

  • ...leading some experts to say that we're actually

  • in the middle of a loneliness epidemic.

  • Woman: This rises to the level of true public health concern.

  • And we often make assumptions about the things that make us lonely.

  • But research has shown that the amount of time that we spend with other people...

  • Did this make you less lonely?

  • ...and the quality of our social skills

  • don't really make a difference.

  • Loneliness may be a greater fear than death.

  • So why do so many of us feel lonely?

  • And what should we do about it?

  • ( music playing )

  • So, how many friends do you have? Like, close friends.

  • Probably, like, 10 or 15 really close friends,

  • - who I talk to weekly, at least. - Wow.

  • Christophe: But I do feel that changing.

  • - Got out of college pretty recently... - Ahh, I see.

  • ...and a lot of these people

  • I'm starting to not see that much anymore.

  • Alex: When I got out of college, I would say I had

  • - eight to nine good friends. - Yeah.

  • And out of those eight to nine, only one is left.

  • As a guy myself, I'm more reluctant to reach out

  • - and put myself out there. - Yeah.

  • Christophe: From the studies that I've read,

  • there isn't a conclusive difference

  • in loneliness rates between men and women.

  • But there is some evidence that women are more comfortable

  • admitting that they're lonely.

  • Alex: And loneliness is something I've dealt with

  • - all my life. - Yeah.

  • So I'm gonna take it on. I'm gonna go online,

  • see if I can make new friends using an app,

  • and maybe that's gonna help out with the loneliness.

  • I swiped through, like, 200 dudes.

  • - Really? And he was the one? - And he was the one.

  • So I'm going to a restaurant to meet with Maximilian.

  • - I'm a little nervous. - What are you nervous about?

  • - Will we click? - Right.

  • Just be yourself.

  • Smile.

  • Not like that. That's--

  • - See you, dude. - Stay dry.

  • Hey. You're Alex, right?

  • - Are you Maximilian? - Yes.

  • - Good to meet you, man. - Good to meet you, man.

  • - After you. - Thanks, brother.

  • Yeah, dating is normal using the app.

  • But making friends using the app is kind of--

  • people see it as weird, I guess.

  • Everything about what we're doing is weird.

  • Yeah. Yeah, yeah, exactly.

  • What do you do when you're feeling lonely?

  • I don't know. I can't answer that, dude. I don't know.

  • I just feel that, to be totally honest.

  • A couple weeks ago, I was really vibing with this guy

  • 'cause we shared so much in common.

  • I was just like, "Hey, we should hang out,"

  • like in the middle of a conversation.

  • And he was kind of taken back by it, I could tell.

  • Like, he wasn't disgusted, but I just feel like he'd never been--

  • - nobody's ever said that to him. - Oh, no!

  • Like, "I've never heard somebody say that before."

  • And it takes a bit of time to break down those barriers, you know?

  • It is a little more difficult

  • because it's, like, are you gonna give up that masculinity

  • by becoming friends with this person?

  • That's the weird thing,

  • is I have no trouble making friends.

  • I'm a very open person.

  • I really just want a tight-knit group of friends.

  • It takes a lot of time to get out and build those relationships.

  • All right, good meeting you.

  • - It was good meeting you, Alex. - I'll be in touch.

  • The term "loneliness epidemic"

  • suggests that this is some modern crisis

  • that is just starting to effect us right now.

  • But the roots of this problem

  • actually go back much further than you might think.

  • In the late 1700s

  • at the start of the Industrial Revolution

  • in Europe and the United States,

  • people started to move out of small communities

  • and into cities to work in factories.

  • It's around then that you first start to see

  • the use of the word loneliness in English printed works.

  • Loneliness became the first word

  • to describe the experience of being alone.

  • Before that, the closest thing that we had was "oneliness."

  • But that just referred to the physical state of being alone.

  • It wasn't until the 1970s

  • that experts started to describe loneliness

  • as a public health crisis,

  • like in these American newspaper clippings

  • where they describe a "Loneliness Epidemic In Our Time."

  • All these headlines are talking about this loneliness epidemic

  • in the same way that you would see

  • media coverage talk about this today.

  • So, for example, this one says,

  • "There is an epidemic of loneliness

  • in America today that drives people

  • to seek companionship

  • in laundromats, shopping centers,

  • Weight Watchers and bars."

  • That's from 1973.

  • Articles like these were reacting to the start

  • of some major societal shifts.

  • Like, when we get married in the U.S.,

  • people have been getting married

  • later and later since the 1950s.

  • And young unmarried people report feeling more lonely

  • than their married peers.

  • And organized community groups like church

  • have become less prominent than ever.

  • Today, a quarter of the U.S. population

  • is unaffiliated with organized religion

  • versus just five percent in 1972.

  • And those who attend religious services less frequently tend to be lonelier.

  • So we can't say that we're lonelier than ever,

  • because we haven't really had a consistent way

  • to measure loneliness over time.

  • And we can't say whether those social changes

  • have caused higher rates of loneliness today.

  • But we do know that more people

  • are spending big chunks of their lives

  • isolated from close-knit communities.

  • That's important because our brains are wired

  • to want those social circles.

  • There's one theory that could help us understand the impact

  • that has on loneliness.

  • There's this idea that there is a cognitive limit

  • on the number of people that humans can have,

  • basically, a meaningful, social relationship with.

  • That idea is known as Dunbar's number.

  • The guy who came up with this, his name is Robin Dunbar.

  • What he did to find that number is he basically looked

  • at average brain size of different primates

  • and average social group size.

  • And he made sort of trend line based off of that

  • and extrapolated that humans probably are meant to be

  • in a group of about 150.

  • And when he double-checked that with modern

  • hunter-gatherer societies at the time,

  • it totally checked out. The average number was about 148.

  • - Hunter-gatherer societies were usually 150 people? - Small.

  • - Yeah. - Huh.

  • But Dunbar's number is really a set of numbers,

  • so there are a whole bunch of subgroups within this.

  • The first number is five.

  • This is kind of like the family and friends

  • that you were absolutely closest with.

  • You tend spend about 40% of your social time

  • with these five people.

  • I wanna know who these people are...

  • - Really? - ...for you. Yeah.

  • You're gonna make me namecheck them?

  • So then, moving up from this level

  • is what Dunbar calls

  • sort of your sympathy group of 15 people.

  • These are the people I would allow to see me cry.

  • One level up from that is what Dunbar calls the close network.

  • So these are people that you would probably invite to a big dinner party.

  • It's interesting. I would put in this category people I see every day.

  • - So I fit in this one. Is that what you're saying? - Yeah.

  • - Yeah, you go here. - Cool, cool, cool, cool.

  • And in the last level, coming back to 150,

  • it's sort of the max number of meaningful relationships that you have.

  • - These are my casual friends. - Mm.

  • For most of human history,

  • you would've lived with these people

  • for almost your entire life.

  • If I didn't live with my boyfriend

  • - or if this person lived out of town... - Mm-hmm.

  • I would not in my daily life see any of the people that I was closest to.

  • Yeah, which is crazy.

  • - Which is crazy. - It's important to note

  • that you can feel lonely at any one of these levels.

  • And the fact that we're not interacting with a lot

  • of these people face-to-face every day

  • does have an actual impact on those relationships.

  • Dunbar said that emotional proximity decreases by 15% every year

  • that you don't see someone face-to-face.

  • Which means that it just takes a few years

  • for someone who might've been in your top five,

  • say, in college, to go all the way

  • to sort of the outer limits of your 150 people.

  • I'm gonna leave this shoot and just book a flight

  • - to see my best friend. - Exactly.

  • So, if these all represent different flavors of loneliness,

  • how do people deal with each of them today?

  • That's what we want to figure out.

  • We're here in Branford, Connecticut

  • talking to a group of people called Romeos.

  • That stands for Retired Old Men Eating Out.

  • There's a really strong appeal to groups like this.

  • Research shows older men are more at risk

  • of social isolation when compared to older women.

  • A lot of these guys miss the connections that they had

  • either growing up or in school or in their working life.

  • And they want to find a way

  • to maintain those kinds of friendships in retirement.

  • When I retired, I tried to get in a few things,

  • but nothing seemed to click.

  • Most of the wives have book clubs,

  • - bridge clubs... - Yes. Yes.

  • - ...and garden clubs. - Garden clubs.

  • And this group was just perfect.

  • We just get together and we shoot the breeze,

  • and it's a bunch of very nice people.

  • Are there moments for all of you that stand out

  • that kind of brought you here?

  • Sometimes, it's a relative will say,

  • "I'm concerned about so and so being lonely."

  • We get those kinds of contacts

  • all the time through our website.

  • I became involved with the Romeo group

  • through my granddaughter

  • who did research and contacted Frank.

  • Because of my loneliness,

  • she convinced me to join the group,

  • and I'm glad I did.

  • And you weren't sure at first.

  • - You came very reluctantly to the first group. - Exactly.

  • Loneliness may be a greater fear than death.

  • During the day, even if you're a widowed guy,

  • you'll find things to do.

  • But when you're home at night all by yourself

  • and you close that door,

  • no matter how much family you have,

  • there's some point in time when you are all by yourself,

  • and you won't know that sense of loneliness till you're there.

  • It's just-- there's a void.

  • There's a part of you that's been taken from you

  • and there's no way to replace it.

  • So, you know, a place like this takes the edge off of it.

  • - This is kind of a depressing conversation. - Yes.

  • But normally when we get together, we have a bunch of yuks.

  • ( music playing )

  • Oh, my God. Thank you. What?

  • - What are you doing? - I feel like I can't.

  • - This is cheating. - Oh, how nice.

  • Speaking, I guess to me, as a--

  • Young whippersnapper?

  • - Young whippersnapper. - Okay, go ahead.

  • Are there things that stand out as advice to

  • how to build strong social connections

  • that last throughout your life?

  • I think it's recognizing that that's not the reality.

  • - Each change over time is a transition. - It's fluid.

  • Each transition is a potential for loneliness or a void

  • or whatever you wanna label it as.

  • So I think it's recognizing that's gonna happen

  • and it's in you to make the difference.

  • ( music playing )

  • - Christophe: Do you feel lonely? - I'm doing good recently,

  • but sometimes I feel a loneliness so intense

  • that my rib cage hurts and it just feels like

  • I don't even want to get up in the morning or move.

  • As bad as it is, I don't think you're alone

  • - in this by any means. - Yeah.

  • It's something that we'll all encounter at some point.

  • - It can affect anybody. - Yeah.

  • So we all feel lonely sometimes,

  • but where did this feeling come from?

  • There's this evolutionary theory

  • from neuroscientist John Cacioppo

  • who says that loneliness actually played

  • an important role in the survival of our species.

  • And Joss is gonna help us out with that.

  • - Hey, Alex. Good. - How's it going?

  • We're gonna take you on a trip through prehistoric times

  • to show you how we used to have to survive.

  • So, homo sapiens didn't survive because we were fast

  • or strong or equipped with natural weapons.

  • What they did have is the ability to cooperate

  • and communicate with others in their group.

  • Hey, guys. Let's cooperate.

  • So, those protective social bonds

  • help to guarantee us safety,

  • shelter, food,

  • and the ability to procreate.

  • - Aww, a baby. - Yeah, a baby. What's up?

  • The pain of loneliness acted like a stimulus.

  • It alerted us when our social bonds were at risk

  • and we were potentially going to be isolated.

  • Guys, where are you?

  • So that feeling actually triggers physical responses

  • just like other needs in your body.

  • So, like, when you're being swiped left on,

  • it's just like... ( grunts )

  • That's loneliness hitting you in the face.

  • So it was advantageous to feel uncomfortable

  • when your social bonds were at risk

  • because people who felt that were more likely to survive.

  • Right? If you're super comfortable alone,

  • you're probably in danger.

  • Yeah. Your body, and more specifically,

  • your brain are trying to keep you alive.

  • So if you'll turn to the side, I'll show you how that works.

  • We now know that the pain of social rejection

  • activates the same part of your brain as physical pain.

  • Loneliness is a motivational force coded in our DNA.

  • Just like the pain of hunger tells us to eat,

  • loneliness tells us to seek the safety of companionship.

  • Huh.

  • When you start to feel the stress of loneliness,

  • What?

  • Your body releases stress hormones like cortisol,

  • which make us more alert,

  • and epinephrine, which constricts your blood vessels

  • and increases blood pressure.

  • Your heart beats faster to send blood throughout the body.

  • This is what's called the flight or fight response.

  • - You may have heard of it. - Mm-hmm.

  • It's triggered by the sympathetic nervous system

  • and it's an immediate reaction.

  • It's like your body reminding you

  • - that you need your people. - Yeah, exactly.

  • All of these physiological reactions like hyper-vigilance

  • and restless sleep could drive you

  • to reconnect with your group.

  • But the problem is while these reactions

  • haven't changed all that much since early human history,

  • their context actually has.

  • - Make sense? - It does.

  • It's not like you're gonna run out of food

  • because no one's texting you back.

  • - Right. - However, this does have tremendous

  • health effects on your body.

  • What we found was being more socially connected,

  • was associated with a 50% reduced risk

  • for premature mortality.

  • The effect of lacking social connection

  • carried a similar risk

  • to smoking up to 15 cigarettes per day.

  • Loneliness and depression are not the same thing,

  • but being lonely can put you at increased risk for depression.

  • Alex: When you feel lonely, it also affects you socially

  • in ways that prevent you from going out more.

  • So people who are lonely are actually more sensitive to social cues.

  • Those who are chronically lonely also tend to interpret

  • neutral kinds of social situations

  • as more threatening.

  • Wow. So your brain is scrambled,

  • and then as you're trying to reach out,

  • you're maybe reading things wrong.

  • ( phone rings )

  • Alex: I've been online, I've been offline searching

  • to try to make friends.

  • Operator: Your call has been forwarded

  • to an automated voice messaging system.

  • So, Chase was supposed to be here 15 minutes ago.

  • Oh, he's calling.

  • Hello?

  • All right.

  • I thought he ghosted me,

  • but he just-- he just has train issues.

  • - There he is. - Oh, hi.

  • - Hello, everyone. - So glad you made it.

  • Thank you so much. I'm happy I made it, too.

  • Woman: So, we're gonna start off doing a small gradation.

  • So it goes from dark to light.

  • How do you twist your hair?

  • Actually, I use a sponge.

  • I'm kinda losing some hair up in here.

  • Like, it's getting kind of thin up in here.

  • - Black castor oil. - Yeah, they also say it's good for beards.

  • - See, my beard grows in kind of patchy, so I was-- - Mine, too, yeah.

  • Like, how many close emotional friends do you have?

  • - Four. - Four.

  • And out of the four, three of them is family.

  • - Do you ever feel lonely? - At times.

  • It's crazy because the way that the world has played it

  • is that black men can't be openly to one another.

  • Like, a female can say, "Girl, you look great.

  • You got a nice body, nice shape."

  • Guys can't say, "Yo, homey, I think

  • that haircut looks nice on you. You're a handsome guy."

  • I haven't talked to another black guy about hair

  • - in a while. - See?

  • Like, I find trouble making friends

  • who have similar interests to me,

  • but also who are, you know, the same as me.

  • So this recent report came out from this group called AEI.

  • And they found that 54% of black Americans

  • are lonely every now and then compared to 36% of whites.

  • And they say that's because we all have our own communities

  • and friend groups, and we have unique social needs.

  • - Mm-hmm. - So, when you're not interacting

  • with people who are from these groups,

  • whether it's racial, religious, otherwise,

  • - that can lead to loneliness. - Yes.

  • Um, I'm about ready to show you. How are you doing over there?

  • Uh, you just promise me you won't laugh.

  • I won't laugh, no.

  • All right, one, two, three.

  • All right.

  • Yours looks phenomenal.

  • Mine looks like a kindergartener did it.

  • I like your clouds a lot more than mine.

  • Look at the bird. Like, that's the Lone Ranger.

  • - Where's his friends? - Just one bird.

  • He's lonely.

  • I guess he is.

  • We're gonna fix his little wing.

  • - So then they flying together. - All right.

  • We are going to talk to Delilah.

  • If you have listened to late night radio in the U.S.,

  • you probably are familiar with her voice.

  • Delilah: Welcome to the "Delilah Show."

  • How are you tonight?

  • Is there someone special on your heart?

  • So, you're 21 years old and you've never been

  • in a intimate, loving relationship.

  • I'm Delilah, and I do the "Delilah Show,"

  • which is a nationally syndicated radio show

  • heard in about 200 countries around the world.

  • I've been doing this a long time.

  • How would you describe what is special

  • about the format of radio that lets you have conversations like these?

  • So, when people are at home listening to me

  • or driving in the car listening to me,

  • I'm just this sort of voice in the night.

  • So I can be whatever they imagine me to do.

  • And it allows me to connect with people

  • in a way that I don't think I could in any other medium.

  • Do you feel like the kinds of conversations

  • that you with people on the radio have changed?

  • People today,

  • they don't have that inner circle.

  • The one thing that I have noticed

  • the last 10 or 15 years that has changed

  • is the level of desperation I hear in people's voices.

  • So I'm listening for what they're not saying

  • as much as I'm listening for what they are saying.

  • And I believe people are not saying, "I hurt."

  • What do you tell someone who's struggling with loneliness?

  • My first question is who can you turn to?

  • And if they say, "I don't have anybody,"

  • I'm, like, okay, therein lies the problem.

  • When you feel lonely, you become more isolated.

  • When you become more isolated, you start cutting yourself off.

  • And after a while, loneliness begets loneliness.

  • I tell them they need to form a real relationship

  • with somebody who needs them.

  • Just step outside of your comfort zone

  • and pretend you're Delilah and ask a few questions.

  • Alex: So why are we so lonely?

  • At the most basic level,

  • it's our body's way of telling us

  • we need to reach out and connect with other people.

  • That was true of our prehistoric ancestors

  • and it's still true for us today.

  • I told one of my close male friends that I loved them.

  • It was, like, the end of our phone conversation.

  • I was like, "Hey, I love you"

  • And he was kind of, like, very taken back by it,

  • but he was like, "I love you, too.

  • I don't know why I've never said that

  • that to another male friend."

  • Christophe: But the time that we're living in

  • also presents us with more opportunities

  • to chose our own tribes.

  • Delilah: We need to feel like we're a part of something.

  • A part of a family, a part of a village.

  • Something bigger than ourselves.

  • So you pick the people that you really wanna be with

  • and you'll never be lonely.

  • - That's what-- - I like that.

  • But if you are ever feeling overwhelmed by this,

  • and I know I have, it happens,

  • there's actually links in the description

  • that you can check out for help.

  • - Hey, how's it going? - Good.

  • Christophe: The thing to remember is that of all different kinds

  • of emotional pain that you can go through,

  • loneliness is the one kind that you can't solve by yourself.

  • We need other people, and other people need us.

  • Thanks so much for watching that video.

  • A lot of work went into it.

  • If you wanna see more "Glad You Asked" content,

  • check out the videos over here on the right.

  • And if you just wanna see more from "YouTube Learning,"

  • over here, we got more for you.

  • Enjoy.

I was supposed to meet a friend here today,

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