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Why Small Talk Is Making You More Lonely (And What To Do Instead)

Published 5 hours ago
Description

I recorded this episode in the middle of one of the most emotional weeks of my life. My daughter Cora was three days from graduating high school, and I found myself at backyard parties where the conversation kept drifting to the same familiar places: the weather, work, the kids.

And I felt that quiet ache I believe so many of us are carrying right now. The longing for something deeper. More real. More connected.

So that’s what today’s episode is about: how we find the courage to have more connection.

Something Is Shifting

Because I think we all feel it. This quiet ache underneath the busyness of our lives. We reach for our phones in line for coffee instead of turning to the person next to us. We text instead of call. We scroll instead of sit. We show up to gatherings and perform a version of ourselves the edited, polished, “I’m fine” version instead of actually arriving in all our beautiful messiness.

And from this? We feel less connected. More lonely. More invisible.

Here’s what I’ve learned in 25 years as a therapist: loneliness isn’t about being alone. You can be surrounded by people at a party, in a marriage, in an office full of colleagues and still feel profoundly unseen. The opposite of loneliness isn’t proximity. It’s depth.

And the data tells us loneliness is worse for your health than smoking, obesity, or high blood pressure. Anxiety and depression are the highest ever, and we are more likely to die from feeling lonely. The epidemic is real.

But here’s what I know after 25 years of sitting with people in my office: loneliness is not the problem. It’s the symptom. Connection is the medicine. And the prescription? COURAGE.

The courage to ask a real question. To say the true thing. To let someone love you back. So here are the four pillars of courage to create more connection and therefore more LOVE.

The Four Pillars of Courage for Connection

✨1. Ask for Help

Here’s the thing about asking for help: we avoid it because we think it makes us look weak or like a burden. A Harvard and Wharton study found the number one reason people don’t ask for help: it makes us feel incompetent.

But here’s what the research actually shows. When you ask someone for help, they see you as more competent. They trust you more. And this is the part I love so much: they feel like they matter.

I have been a therapist for decades, and I still feel resistance every single time I walk into my own therapist’s office. But this week, in the middle of all the graduation chaos, I asked a couple of friends for help. And I felt the weight lift. I wasn’t just giving love anymore. I was letting people give me love back.

Next time someone asks how you’re doing, try this instead of “fine”:

  • “I’ve been wrestling with something lately. Can I get your take on it?”
  • “Honestly, I could use some advice. I’ve been dealing with something hard.”

Watch what happens to their face. Watch their eyes change. You just told them they have something real to offer you. You just allowed them to love you.

✨2. Be Authentic

I know authenticity gets thrown around so much it almost loses its meaning. So here’s what I actually mean by it: tell the truth. Not the highlight reel, not the LinkedIn version. The real one.

I was on a walk with a dear friend recently, and I could feel she’d been carrying something heavy for months. I kept holding back, not wanting to push. But finally I said: “I see something going on with you. I feel like you’re carrying something hard. Can I be here for you?”

She was honest. She cried. And then I could share my own fears about Cora leaving for college. We walked away closer than we’d been in years.

Try slipping one of these into your next conversation:

  • “What’s been the hardest part of your week?”
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