In the past, pneumonia was everywhere and a big killer too. Before antibiotics, there was little we could do to treat it effectively. It shortened lives.
Yet today, loneliness is on the rise. While technology advances relentlessly forward, it has hijacked face-to-face social interaction. Yes, we can twit this and tweet that, we can WhatsApp and send our pics. But is that not different to sitting there, in the room, with complete visceral awareness of your surroundings? Are we just living our lives vicariously, a lesser substitute for the real thing?
There has been plenty of research that suggests loneliness is a big killer. Those with good social networks have longer lives. The data is in. It is a fact.
Is loneliness the modern pneumonia equivalent, that just takes a little longer to shorten lives?
Yet today, loneliness is on the rise. While technology advances relentlessly forward, it has hijacked face-to-face social interaction. Yes, we can twit this and tweet that, we can WhatsApp and send our pics. But is that not different to sitting there, in the room, with complete visceral awareness of your surroundings? Are we just living our lives vicariously, a lesser substitute for the real thing?
There has been plenty of research that suggests loneliness is a big killer. Those with good social networks have longer lives. The data is in. It is a fact.
Is loneliness the modern pneumonia equivalent, that just takes a little longer to shorten lives?