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Never Been So Connected, Never Been So Alone: Dr. Anthony Silard on Loneliness, Leadership, and Love

Published 1 week, 3 days ago
Description

What if the loneliness you feel right now is not a personal failure, but a collective wound we have never been honest enough to talk about? We are living in the most connected era in human history. More messages, more followers, more feeds. And yet loneliness, depression, and anxiety are climbing. This episode asks the question that makes most productivity conversations uncomfortable: what is actually going on inside the people who are supposedly leading the world?

Dr. Anthony Silard has spent decades coaching Fortune 500 executives, G20 cabinet ministers, and leaders of the world's largest nonprofits, and his finding is quiet and consistent: leadership breaks down at the level of relationships, and relationships break down at the level of emotion. In this conversation with host Sana, he brings together research on social convoys, the displacement effect of screen time, the loneliness crisis among men, and what it actually takes to build a life worth leading. A gentle, evidence-grounded conversation that leaves you with something to sit with long after it ends.

About the Guest:

Dr. Anthony Silard is a professor of leadership and organizational psychology and Director of the Center for Sustainable Leadership at Luiss Business School in Rome. He is the author of Love and Suffering: Break the Emotional Chains that Prevent You from Experiencing Love, a multi-award-winning book whose full proceeds go to nonprofit education programs in Africa and Latin America. He has coached leaders at Disney, IBM, GE, CARE, and Save the Children, lectured at Harvard, Stanford, and Georgetown, and is CEO of the Global Leadership Institute.

Key Takeaways:

  • Leadership is not about authority, it is about relationships. The most widely accepted definition of leadership is the capacity to mobilize people toward shared goals, and research shows that 85% of a leader's long-term success comes down to personal character and socio-emotional skills, not technical expertise.
  • There is a critical difference between being in contact and being connected. We are in contact with more people than ever before, and genuinely connected with fewer. The displacement effect of screen time means that every extra hour online comes at a real cost to in-person relationships.
  • Social convoys are not a luxury, they are a lifeline. The close relationships that travel with us through life determine not just our happiness, but our health and longevity. People with strong social convoys live longer, recover faster, and age with far greater resilience.
  • Caretaking chosen freely builds rather than depletes. Research shows that when caretaking feels like a choice rather than an obligation, it increases wellbeing rather than reducing it. The meaning changes everything.
  • Male loneliness is a quiet crisis with visible consequences. Men who outsource the work of relationships, and who leave no room for male friendship, are arriving at midlife and old age without the social infrastructure to survive loss, and the numbers on deaths of despair reflect it.
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