More Americans are lonelier than ever. I have an idea.
vox.com/culture CULTURE The Wednesday edition of the Vox Culture newsletter is all about internet culture, brought to you by senior reporter Rebecca Jennings. The Wednesday edition of the Vox Culture newsletter is all about internet culture, brought to you by senior reporter Rebecca Jennings. ð« The joy of pointless clubs ð¬ Here is a list of clubs I am currently part of: the Difficult Book Book Club, where we read 90 pages per week of a very long and/or complex book and then meet up at a bar to discuss (so far weâve read all of Infinite Jest and about one-third of The Power Broker, currently accepting recs for book number three); the Fellowship, a.k.a. a Lord of the Rings-themed role-playing tabletop game group; a monthly Zoom meetup where me and four women around the country workshop our novels-in-progress (weâre going on two years now!); Wednesday Club, where two of my friends and I make dinner at one of our apartments and discuss our most recent Wâs and Lâs (wins and losses); Creative Project of Your Choice Club, where whoeverâs around in the neighborhood meets up at a cafe and writes or reads or crochets or whatever else theyâre working on; and finally, a knitting club where only one of us knows what theyâre doing, called â with a logo and everything â the New York Knits. This all might make me sound like a spirited 84-year-old woman in a particularly community-oriented senior living home, but I swear in reality I am simply a spirited 31-year-old in a walkable part of Brooklyn. To be clear, none of these are like, official clubs. I did not go on Meetup.com and advertise for people to join them, although you could totally [do that](. Rather, this is a method for organizing my social life post-lockdown, a method that has brought me both many new friends and incalculable joy. Paige Vickers/Vox That early period of the pandemic truly illuminated the desire to club-ify my life. It began with random little rituals â my boyfriend and I had this thing called Pizza Saturdays where, if it was nice out, weâd walk to one of the slice joints on [this Eater list]( of the best pizza slices in the city. In the late spring of 2020, when exercise was one of the few activities that made me feel like I still had some grip on reality, I posted an Instagram story of the view from a run around Prospect Park. A colleague who lived nearby then asked if I wanted to do a socially distanced run together sometime. Within a few weeks, weâd added several more people to the ranks of what became christened âRun Club,â and within a year, sheâd become one of my closest friends. Itâs sort of a cliché to tell someone looking for advice on how to [make friends]( to âjust join a club!â When people say this, what theyâre usually referring to are, say, kickball leagues that cost a couple hundred dollars to join, or arts courses that, naturally, also cost hundreds of dollars to join. Nothing against them, but Iâve always had far greater luck meeting new people through people I already know. This is the joy of the self-directed, as opposed to privately operated, club: You donât really have to commit to anything. You can post on your Instagram story, âHey, a bunch of us were talking about doing an Infinite Jest book club. Does anyone else want to join?â and then start a [Slack]( group. Sure, a pretty big percentage of the people who say theyâre totally interested are going to drop out after the first hundred pages or never say anything in the group chat. You canât take that stuff personally, though, because youâll still be surprised at who actually sticks with it, and the five people still going strong will have had an incredible time. Itâs been heartwarming to see these types of ritualized social activities spread online over the past three years. It all started with a few viral TikToks of chaotic PowerPoint nights where each guest gives a presentation on, say, â[An exploration of Shadow the Hedgehogâs True Moral Compass](â or â[Dorothy Zbornak outfits as zodiac signs](.â Driven in part by young peopleâs disillusionment with exclusive and expensive bars and clubs and, in some cases, disillusionment with alcohol entirely, the theme party feels like an extension of the club, where, in order to attend, everyone has to be equally on board. And these types of gatherings are contagious, too: âComments like âI want to be in your friend groupâ are common on theme party videos,â explains [Darshita Goyal in the Cut]( on the trend. âWatching others have this relationship online encourages people to invest more in their own friendships too, like they start initiating plans or text on the group chat more,â said one friendship coach. Itâs just as easy to imagine having the opposite effect, though. Women in particular tend to compare themselves to other people they see on social media and [end up feeling worse about themselves](; the [same is true of FOMO](. But while we tend to think of clubs as exclusionary, the point is that these clubs are by definition inclusive of anyone with a shared goal or interest. The Difficult Book Book Club, for instance, is small because itâs a group of people committed to understanding a complex or otherwise frustrating book, and not that many people have the time or desire to do so. Clubs are about fun, sure, but they can also be about accountability: Being part of Run Club made it so that there was a 100 percent chance Iâd actually go on a run that day as opposed to, say, sitting around in gym clothes and telling myself I was going on a run later, at some point. Friendship, as the surgeon general has warned us all, has never been more crucial. Half of Americans say theyâre lonely, according to [several]( recent [surveys](, and less than 40 percent said they felt very connected to others. As Dylan Scott [previously noted in Vox](, in the 1970s, almost half of Americans said they could generally trust other people, and today, less than a third [say]( that. And [22 percent]( of Americans say they havenât made a new friend in the past five years. Men have been [hit the hardest]( by the loneliness epidemic, for reasons that are both economic and cultural: Theyâre less likely to share and receive emotional support from their friends, and 1 in 5 single men say they have no close friendships. No wonder, then, that friendship has also become a major focus for both big business and grassroots movements. Those in search of new friends can sign up for [Bumble BFF](, which since 2016 has worked like a swipe dating app but for platonic connections; those looking to deepen their friendship with existing acquaintances can play viral card games like [Weâre Not Really Strangers](. There have been at least a [handful of successful startups]( and [restaurants]( whose premise is âhave a dinner party with strangersâ and at least three NYC-based meetups explicitly for making friends ([#NoMoreLonelyFriends](, [City Girls Who Walk](, and Depths of Wikipediaâs [Perpetual Stew](). You can even make yourself a âfriendship resumeâ and drop it into one of the [many Facebook groups]( for young women to meet new people. Just as with clubs, these are all rather ingenious ways that people are getting around the ever-awkward conundrum of how to ask someone to hang out. Itâs a lot less risky to ask someone â or all of your Instagram followers â if they want to join your book club or pizza club or whatever club than to ask them to hang out one-on-one; much like [small talk]( is an audition for a more substantive conversation, clubs are an audition for regular friend hangs. When thereâs a schedule and an activity, thereâs less room for either party to feel as though theyâre contributing too much or not enough, to convince themselves every uncomfortable silence equals imminent humiliation. You donât even have to be an extrovert or have a large social network to start a club: Thatâs what clubs of two (or even one!) are for, and if youâre too shy to ask people online or IRL, there are a million Meetup or Facebook groups already in existence. But the best part of starting a club is that it can be as pointless as you want it to be. You donât even have to be that interested in anything to join a club: You can turn your weekly grocery shopping trips into Grocery Club; you can start Ice Cream Club or Movie Club or Wine Club; you can start Letâs All Get Together and Do Boring Administrative Life Tasks Club where people schedule doctorâs appointments or write thank-you cards, if only because giving this practice a name makes it feel slightly more romantic. Through constantly expanding group chats and callouts on Instagram, Iâve become fully club-pilled, where now I see club potential in almost everything I do. To that end, if you would like to join my new Sit at the Computer and Go on Twitter and Sometimes Write Essays Club, weâre currently accepting new members. One Last Thing Speaking of social events: Make sure you're always [being a Vibe Contributor](!
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