Loneliness article in The Atlantic

Move along, nothing to see here!
jacob
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Post by jacob »

Also this: http://prometheussociety.com/?page_id=33
It has many interesting observations and conclusions. It's mainly study of very high quantitative IQs, but aside from that I think the conclusions have greater implications in terms of unusual/extreme "mentalities" (for lack of a better word). For example, I think one has a potential to feel much more alone as an intelligent INTJ than as an intelligent ESTJ.
I think many here (the typical ERE-phyte: smart INTJs) are affected by at least some of the problems described in that article. Given the NT predilection for developing mental systems which to a large degree can add substantial intellectual power (nothing helps one to look/act smart than having already thought about a given question in advance), this can seriously increase such problems [of being not-normal but having to live with normal people].
(Note that the IQs are old scale, so when they say 180, it's really 150... or about 3 sdevs. In other words, the numbers are really high but not superhumanly high as a first impression would suggest.)
Uh oh ... eh? So going back to the original question on how one can tell when one has retreated too much? I don't think facebook is a particular problem in this regard. One could easily imagine the extrovert problem of desperately hanging out in a bar trying to talk to everybody (see TV show: Cheers).
ERE might actually be because it does give you immense freedom to not have to deal with things like jobs which does force substantial interaction and adherence to various bureacrazies (I spell that with a z) on most people (unless you work in a light house).
I think this is a hard problem. Namely, what happens if you adopt beliefs that are so different from everybody else that you become unrelatable. It's not just a one-sided problem, because relatively speaking, they are unrelatable too.
Here's a quote from the genius page:
"Perhaps men of genius are the only true men. In all the history of the race there have been only a few thousand real men. And the rest of us–what are we? Teachable animals. Without the help of the real man, we should have found out almost nothing at all. Almost all the ideas with which we are familiar could never have occurred to minds like ours. Plant the seeds there and they will grow; but our minds could never spontaneously have generated them." ---Aldous Huxley.
Again, this doesn't have anything to do with the genius problem as much as it has to do with the problem of living in a world where "normal" by rational means would be considered insane and you have to deal with the problem of being considered crazy by "normal" people because they're the crazy ones. What you're asking is essentially to which degree you can allow yourself to be crazy in order to still fit in or at least relate.
I'm not sure I have an answer for that.
(I would say, though, that I've long given up on making any further attempts to store a repository of exchangeable gossip or fake an interest in sports.)


Chad
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Post by Chad »

Jacob's arguments, that valid online relationships exist, are logical and I have experienced some myself. This forum being a broader example. However, I have yet to experience this on Facebook, but that is probably because I fall in the Gen X (not under 25) demographic which treats Facebook differenly than the new generation. It's not as incorporated into my life.
I find these two comments/quotes interesting:
"The [possibly perceived] inabilities cut both ways. Digitally, people find that they have much more in common with others who are like them than with people they just happen to live within 5 miles off. Traditional delineaters like gender, skin color, nationality, degree, etc. become irrelevant."
Being someone who hasn't traveled outsdie the U.S. much, I still find the idea of "world citizen" to be a positive movement. Many in the U.S. wouldn't and a large portion of those would be screaming for my head just because I suggested it wasn't a terrible idea. Hopefully, Facebook can be part of that.
"Perhaps men of genius are the only true men. In all the history of the race there have been only a few thousand real men. And the rest of us–what are we? Teachable animals. Without the help of the real man, we should have found out almost nothing at all. Almost all the ideas with which we are familiar could never have occurred to minds like ours. Plant the seeds there and they will grow; but our minds could never spontaneously have generated them." ---Aldous Huxley.
I definitely have had the same idea. I even wonder if some people can even be classified as human...I'm not kidding when I say that.


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jennypenny
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Post by jennypenny »

“Traditional delineaters like gender, skin color, nationality, degree, etc. become irrelevant."

Some of the best conversations I’ve had in years have been online for this reason. There is still self-segregating (we’ve all come to this forum) but it’s not based on appearance or social group. Let’s face it, how many of the 20-30 something men on this board would start a conversation with someone like me? I'm a 45yo woman usually with a bunch of kids in tow. I don't necessarily look like a typical mom (I'm more suited to Sturgis than Stepford) but you'd still make assumptions about me.
I don't like the assumption here and in the article that people are having online conversations in lieu of face-to-face interaction. Most of the time I’m reading/posting from my phone because I’m sitting in my car waiting to pick up one of my kids, or (like yesterday) sitting in a doctor’s office. I wasn’t avoiding a "regular" conversation, I was seeking out a meaningful one that I couldn’t get where I was.
I think online interactions can increase the number of positive social interactions that people like us have.* That's a good thing. But I wonder if there is some minimum amount of contact required for contentment. I have a partner, children, and siblings that I interact with daily. Maybe that's enough? Maybe this is harder on people who don't have that and they need to make sure they have at least a couple of people in their life to interact with directly.
*Jacob, I acknowledge yours have not always been positive.


Freedom_2018
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Post by Freedom_2018 »

Don't write-of the 20/30s men yet ;-)
My gf and I met when I was 33 and she was 50..and it was through an online interaction..been 5 yrs on going great.
To your point, we probably would not have connected if not for the web because the social circle I was 'supposed' to have, would not have included her. So thank you Craigslist!
However the web was only to see if we connect on some mental levels...but it was only when we met in person and spent time around each other that we realized how internally aligned we were despite differences in our external facades.
This is contrast to my previous marriage where wife and I would have made an 'ideal' couple on all the usual check-boxes.
Anyways...I digress..it was just the age thing mentioned above that got me commenting since I've found that societal expectations around age and age related relationships are so limiting...and a lot of wonderful interactions are probably not being had because of that.


livinlite
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Post by livinlite »

"Casting technology as some vague, impersonal spirit of history forcing our actions is a weak excuse. We make decisions about how we use our machines, not the other way around."
I could not disagree more with this little missive from the article's author.
I suggest he reads "The Shallows: What the Internet is Doing to Our Brains" by Nicholas Carr to try to understand how incredibly affected we are by the means and modes of technology surrounding us.
I actually chose NOT to use the self-checkout machine specifically so I can interact with a real human AND support their need for a job (a topic unto itself). In fact, I try to shop at stores that don't have self-checkout for that exact reason. F*ck efficiency...give me humanity or give me death.
Not that I always have that choice. My bank only dispenses cash through an ATM now. Who pays cash at the gas station? With ERE, we eat out less and spend even less time at a bar, chatting up the tender.
But for all that, I constantly look for ways to increase human connection. And I'm an INFP/J; go figure...


livinlite
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Post by livinlite »

Note: My wife and I met through MySpace in 2006. She worked in the restaurant on the first floor of the office building I worked in at the time; but it took me noticing her picture pop up (common interest) while listening to a favorite local band (and then snooping through her profile and noticing many connections/shared-interests before I contacted her, chatted, then met in person a month later) for us to connect in real life. Sparks flew. And 6 years later here we are. Happily married... As it turns out, our paths crossed multiple times, starting when we were 11 yrs old and my family stayed at the hotel her mom ran in Port Townsend, WA in the early 90s; then a Modest Mouse concert in '97 for which we both still have the ticket stub. But it took MySpace for us to meet...interesting. At the time, we both used it pretty much for finding out about music though. The same connection would not have happened on Facebook. Maybe on Pintrest, but I doubt it.
Neither of us use social networking at this point; we both have FB accounts, but they generally just point to our e-mail addresses so people can look us up if they need to...old friends, etc. We tired of the narcissism and extrovert-induced lifestyle comparison it bred.
For those interested: my Myspace tagline was "have fun, stay single", her favorite movie was listed as "Singles" -- the quintessential Seattle grunge-era movie and the origin of my quote, her other favorite movie was The Professional (Leon), which was also in mine; and we stated our favorite bands as Built to Spill and Modest Mouse...and happened to attend the Built to Spill show(s) together in the following weeks.
There's a line in High Fidelity about interests mattering...maybe its true. Or maybe its just that the music we like is a reflection of who we are and what we care about to a great enough extent that it can give insight to our personalities just enough to be a good indicator of possible matching.
Or maybe my wife and I are just statistical anomolies in a world rife with discontinuity.
We still love the same music and read the same books and grow more together every day...though she isn't into the developing of for-ends (as she calls them...forum-friends) as I am.


George the original one
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Post by George the original one »

> (I'm more suited to Sturgis than Stepford)
Oh, man, that really messed with my mental images!


anastrophe
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Post by anastrophe »

Well, I can't quite relate to some of what you INFs experience, because as extrovert I find it very easy to speak to strangers in the grocery store, on the bus, at the park, anywhere online, etc. I do think shallow interactions are worthwhile and fill an important emotional role.
But this
what happens if you adopt beliefs that are so different from everybody else that you become unrelatable. It's not just a one-sided problem, because relatively speaking, they are unrelatable too.
has become a serious problem for me--I find my conversations with acquaintances have become less satisfying. That is to say, I have an arsenal of "small talk" which I use comfortably in typical social exchanges that don't have real meaning, but that doesn't bother me, the point is just to maintain those points of social contact throughout my life/day (mailman, cashier, coworker, etc) because it makes me feel socially secure. But as my habits have become more ERE-ish, I find it more difficult to conduct these exchanges, it feels "fake" where it didn't before. One by one, dropping out of mainstream culture: can't talk about car problems, traffic, don't have a license. Can't talk about iphones, android phones, don't have one. No, I don't know anything about Downton Abbey. Sometimes I read pop culture aggregate sites (Gawker Media, etc) so I can participate in these exchanges, but increasingly I can't be bothered.
Which is why the internet is so amazing, in short.


livinlite
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Post by livinlite »

"I find it more difficult to conduct these exchanges, it feels "fake" where it didn't before"
Bingo - but I feel the same comes from everything from understanding Peak Oil to grokking the realities of current Neuroscience research... It becomes harder and harder to relate to the mouth-breathers of the world.
But so it goes; if you continue to try to find points of continuity, I believe you'll find that they do exist and there is a level on which you can relate to everyone.
We are all human; some just moreso than others.
Reminds me of this: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A2PlAUzAFIU


Hoplite
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Post by Hoplite »

I had to laugh at the small talk problem. I had a friend who resolved to steer all small talk to questions that were on his mind, in a good natured and somewhat irreverant way. He'd answer a weather/sports question and then ask something like, so what do you think the end result of entropy will be, complete disorder or what? What about the 2d law of thermodymamics? What do you think? Drawing a blank stare he'd say, ok, what do you think about the situation in Jordan?


Hoplite
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Post by Hoplite »

A Slate piece rebutting the Atlantic article, with some retrenchment from the Atlantic author:
http://www.slate.com/articles/life/cult ... ingle.html


anastrophe
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Post by anastrophe »

He'd answer a weather/sports question and then ask something like, so what do you think the end result of entropy will be, complete disorder or what? What about the 2d law of thermodymamics? What do you think? Drawing a blank stare he'd say, ok, what do you think about the situation in Jordan?
Ha! Wouldn't win me any friends, but I definitely would enjoy that--"sure, it *has* been unseasonably warm this spring, what's your take on the use of unmanned drones in civilian airspace?" "why, yes, your child IS adorable! personally, I prefer to make omelettes with duck eggs since they're higher in protein, do you like quail or chicken better..."


jacob
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Post by jacob »

Haha, I wish I could think up replies like that on my feet.


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jennypenny
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Post by jennypenny »

George--

"Oh, man, that really messed with my mental images!"

Ha! I'm afraid to ask if that's a good thing or a bad thing! I play the Stepford wife well enough, and I do love to cook and garden, but I've posted on enough hunting and prepping threads to show what's underneath the Stepford facade ;)


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Post by zarathustra »

hoplite - i wanna meet that guy! :) though it's a little show-off-y, it's kinda hot.
i also get annoyed with the FB or online interaction bashing. it's fallacious because the value of interactions is based solely on subjectivity and the context, which can be the SAME no matter what forum you are interacting in.
this is quite a relevant post for me in general, but especially lately since i'm still pretty new to the bay area and my very small group of friends that i have meaningful dialogue with are still in pdx. it's hard.
i've always tested intj or entj . . . a friend recently called me the most extroverted introvert he's ever met. i can play and even genuinely be outgoing, but i do have a limit of about 2 hours max and then i need my recharge of solitude. i withdraw and start to get anxious; looking like an addict dying for a fix. UNLESS there is meaningful interaction; then i can go on for hours. (that's what she said)
i think that what was said earlier about exercising that social muscle is important. there are many weekends i'd much prefer to read alone in the bath, but i force myself one night a week to walk to the pub and have a drink and try to seem approachable (i bring a homemade one with me in my bag). at least 75% of the time i come away disappointed with the interaction, but there are times i can get at least one meaningful conversation in with someone. that helps restore a little faith.
now, i think it's easier for those with kids, spouses, or significant others to lean on those relationships, which i'm not saying is bad or good. what i'm saying is that i'm not in any of those boats, so i am in a position where i HAVE to venture out of my "comfort zone" to give life a chance to show me people i can have meaningful interactions with and possibly a love interest.
i tend to try to focus on getting people to "reveal a bit of real" if you know what i mean. i value "the real" in people but i think most are not used to it being required or desired from others, so they stick to what is "socially acceptable", which is boring and meaningless drivel and/or lame come-ons. the tactic hoplite's friend uses i don't think would work with most people because it's a little attacky, but to each his own.
when you get through with someone, though, the payoff is amazing and relationships can be formed. just because someone starts off with the shallow convos we all despise does not mean they can't do the deeper ones. we, as a society, are just conditioned to keep that in and/or ignore it. i think a lot of people are HUNGRY to be genuine but can't take the first step. i can't tell you how many times people have told me how refreshing it was to let go and be real for once. that makes my "attempts" at being social worth it.
so i guess i'm saying: exercise the muscle and focus less on how lowly everyone else's conversations are and think about the fact that maybe there are a lot more people than you think who have something deep and meaningful to offer but don't know how or don't think it's desired from others. give people a chance and try not to be judgy in your approach!


rachelFLF
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Post by rachelFLF »

i don't think we should group fb bashing and internet bashing together. to me, the conversations on a forum like this feel real and thoughtful, whereas the majority of those on fb do not. so feeling like fb is lame does not mean one dislikes all internet interaction. i think fb is just its own animal.
full disclosure: i don't have fb. maybe i'm wrong and the truth is that it is what you make of it. i notice my husband having deep conversations with friends on fb - someone will post an article and they'll debate it. but it think the way it's set up easily lends itself to a lot of superficiality.


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Ego
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Post by Ego »

The New York Times had an interesting OpEd piece yesterday about this titled, The Flight From Conversation.
A few of the more interesting quotes:
Human relationships are rich; they’re messy and demanding. We have learned the habit of cleaning them up with technology. And the move from conversation to connection is part of this. But it’s a process in which we shortchange ourselves. Worse, it seems that over time we stop caring, we forget that there is a difference.
and
FACE-TO-FACE conversation unfolds slowly. It teaches patience. When we communicate on our digital devices, we learn different habits. As we ramp up the volume and velocity of online connections, we start to expect faster answers. To get these, we ask one another simpler questions; we dumb down our communications, even on the most important matters.
and
And we use conversation with others to learn to converse with ourselves. So our flight from conversation can mean diminished chances to learn skills of self-reflection. These days, social media continually asks us what’s “on our mind,” but we have little motivation to say something truly self-reflective. Self-reflection in conversation requires trust. It’s hard to do anything with 3,000 Facebook friends except connect.
http://www.nytimes.com/2012/04/22/opini ... ef=general#


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