I’m sitting alone in a fast-food restaurant Sunday evening. There are people everywhere. A family with a couple of unhappy little girls. Tattooed men who rode up on motorcycles. Older couples dressed for church. Sullen teens ignoring each other and staring at their phones.
There’s noise all around me. Beeping machines in the kitchen. People shouting at children. An angry manager yelling at employees.
But I might as well be alone. The earbuds attached to my iPhone play music which drowns out the environment. The unreal world of social media on my MacBook is actually more real to me than any of these people are. They’re like cardboard cutouts with faces. I don’t know them and they don’t know me. And they don’t know each other.
We have more communication devices than ever. We don’t even go to bed without them. Media no longer just talks to us. Our most popular media is “social media.” These are the choices we’re making.
So why do so many feel so alone? Why is real human intimacy harder to find than ever — especially from the people who are supposed to know us best?

If I perform well enough for you, will you give me love, approval?
We’re becoming so selfish that our old ‘social scripts’ are dying
In praise of the weirdos who most people don’t really seem to like
Lucy’s fun afternoon at my office reminds me that work needs play
Trendy ‘anti-racists’ don’t realize they’ve been conned by Marxists
Society needs storytellers to help make sense of a changing world
Getting better at all I do is only way to fight ‘imposter syndrome’
Future reality starts in what we believe inside about who we are