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John Carter's avatar

This is very relatable. I don't use IG myself, in fact I've never tried to use any apps to find IRL friends. Nevertheless I've noticed that socializing has become inordinately difficult. "Community" is a bad joke these days. Everything seems to have fallen apart. I tried church but no one actually talks to one another - they leave as soon as the service is over. There's the bar but that's at best a friend simulator, if you're lucky you might meet a couple people over a few drinks but it's just as likely you'll spend an hour staring at your phone because that's all anyone else is doing. Professional connections disappear as quickly as you change jobs. It's all just incredibly depressing and demoralizing.

FWIW, I'm not in a suburb or a big city, but a small town. The social wasteland is universal.

Part of the problem is that the Internet has delocalized relationships. People have text buddies all over the planet, but don't know their neighbors. Because of that, at a cultural level you end up having more in common with an online group of weirdos than with the people sharing your physical locale - and everyone is in the same boat. When one does manage to strike up a conversation, it frequently turns out that the interlocutor is embedded in a hostile ideological matrix - thus every in person interaction becomes fraught and guarded, they can't fully relax and neither can you. Of course one can always attend meetups from whatever online circles one is plugged into, but that's generally not a weekend thing as it involves long distance travel to collect any reasonable number of people together.

I don't have any good advice here. If I did, I wouldn't have found your scream of frustration so relatable.

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Tizona Aquilonia (Shadow T)'s avatar

It's not just friendships are hard to come by, but community in general is dead in America. Ever read Bowling Alone by Robert Putnam? The situation reminds me of his research in that book. Over the years, my wife and I have noticed that our social circle seemed to shrink year by year. Part of it was the kids, but the fights over Covid, and then moving not just to another state but to rural country and a smaller parish, and the inflation on gas, food and entertainment....gathering with others has more obstacles to it. Even at church, it's tough to get people to stay and interact after Mass...everyone just wants to head back home.

Btw, Putnam's research showed that as you increase diversity, you decrease trust. Over and over. He actually sat on his research because he hated the results, but he was eventually forced to publish it.

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