400 Friends and No One to Call - Breaking through Isolation and Building Community
We can be well connected, with 400 friends on Facebook and still have no
one to count on. Ironically, despite social media, social isolation is a
growing epidemic in the United States. The National Science Foundation
reported in 2014 that the number of Americans with no close friends has
tripled since 1985. One out of four Americans has no one with whom they
can talk about their personal troubles. An unprecedented number of
Americans are living alone, particularly people over sixty (one in three
seniors compared to one in five just ten years ago). Millennials and
post-millennials increasingly report discomfort and avoidance with
face-to-face conversations.
Social isolation can shatter our
confidence. In isolating times, we're not only lonely, but we're ashamed
of our loneliness because our society stigmatizes people who are alone
without support. As a single, fifty-eight-year-old woman who finds
herself stranded after major surgery, Val Walker has woven into the
narrative her own story. As a well-established rehabilitation counselor,
she was too embarrassed to reveal on social media how utterly isolated
she was by asking for someone to help, and it felt agonizingly awkward
calling colleagues out of the blue. As she recovered, Val found her
voice and developed a plan of action for people who lack social support,
not only to heal from the pain of isolation, but to create a solid
strategy for rebuilding support. 400 Friends and No One to Call
spells out the how-tos for befriending our wider community, building a
social safety net, and fostering our sense of belonging. On a deeper
level, we are invited to befriend our loneliness, rather than feel
ashamed of it, and open our hearts and minds to others trapped in
isolation.