Welcome to Incels.is - Involuntary Celibate Forum

Welcome! This is a forum for involuntary celibates: people who lack a significant other. Are you lonely and wish you had someone in your life? You're not alone! Join our forum and talk to people just like you.

Blackpill 22 percent of millennials say they have “no friends”

Our generation was raised to be socially retarded, and the next one appears to be even worse.

This is what people wanted, apparently.
 
Anyone willing to spend time with you, without expecting something or money in return.

probably been said already but most men are busting their ass just trying to survive so they don't have time to fuck around anymore
 
probably been said already but most men are busting their ass just trying to survive so they don't have time to fuck around anymore
Probably the major reason why loneliness is increasing, and its only going to get worse.
 
I'm waiting for the guy who's completely conscious of the blackpill, writes a manifesto on it, and targets a sorority house or something similar. Kill young women. That would be great.
Be the change you want to see in the world...in your Minecraft server world I mean.
 
Not surprising. If you haven't got friends by the time you left school, you will most likely never have friends. Adults rarely make new friends.
 
i think i have friends but in the end they kick my ass back stabing steal from me or just run away and tell others im not worth the time and yes im ugly i know
 
alot of people i know say they dont have friends while they have tons those people can just die
 
And all of them are men.
Women cannot know true loneliness.
 
With all the degeneracy and economic desperation accelerating, nuclear war will draw near. I await the hellfire with open arms at this rate. Put an end to this empire of filth we call society. End it.
 
Not necessarily. You have to remember that 1/3 of men in that age group are incel, so 1/5 having no friends makes sense
 
i'm 37 yo and the last time i had a non-job related conversation was when I was 29

I did tried anything until that point to have friends, even going to extreme like paying all food/drinks for them

they didn't care, they didn't invite back, didn't ask me how I'm doing

But I'm sure it was my personality :soy: & not my subhuman presence
 
22 percent of millennials say they have “no friends”

Loneliness can be helpful, unless it becomes chronic.

By Brian Resnick@B_resnick[email protected] Aug 1, 2019, 12:30pm EDT

Share this story


Illustration of single person walking on a path of light against a dark, foreboding background.
27 percent of millennials said they had “no close friends.” Getty Images/iStockphoto
Today, members of the millennial generation are ages 23 to 38. These ought to be prime years of careers taking off and starting families, before joints really begin to ache. Yet as a recent poll and some corresponding research indicate, there’s something missing for many in this generation: companionship.
A recent poll from YouGov, a polling firm and market research company, found that 30 percent of millennials say they feel lonely. This is the highest percentage of all the generations surveyed.
Friendship_Millennials_1.png
YouGov
Furthermore, 22 percent of millennials in the poll said they had zero friends. Twenty-seven percent said they had “no close friends,” 30 percent said they have “no best friends,” and 25 percent said they have no acquaintances. (I wonder if the poll respondents have differing thoughts on what “acquaintance” means; I take it to mean “people you interact with now and then.”)
In comparison, just 16 percent of Gen Xers and 9 percent of baby boomers say they have no friends.
If you or anyone you know is considering suicide or self-harm or is anxious, depressed, upset, or needs to talk, there are people who want to help:
In the US:
Crisis Text Line: Text START to 741741 from anywhere in the USA, at any time, about any type of crisis
The National Suicide Prevention Lifeline: 1-800-273-8255
The Trevor Project: 1-866-488-7386
Outside the US:
The International Association for Suicide Prevention lists a number of suicide hotlines by country. Click here to find them.
Befrienders Worldwide
The poll, which looked at 1,254 adults 18 and up, did not report results for the up-and-coming Gen Z (who report high levels of loneliness on other surveys), or for the oldest adults in the country. And we should note: Loneliness tends to increase markedly after age 75; social isolation among the elderly remains a huge problem that will only grow worse as baby boomers age. So perhaps it’s not the case that millennials are the loneliest of all.
Still, the findings on millennials are surprising. Why do a fifth of these 20- and 30-somethings say they lack friends? YouGov’s poll didn’t measure why.
If this generation is truly lonelier, that’s concerning for a number of reasons: Research shows that loneliness tends to increase as we get older. What will happen to millennials, who are already reporting high levels of loneliness, when they reach old age?
It also raises the question of whether everyone who’s lonely, millennials included, is more isolated from spending more time on the internet. (Though there’s also evidence that the internet can help lonely, isolated people connect with others.)
But while there may be something particular happening with millennials, it’s also possible loneliness naturally ebbs and flows throughout life. A 1990 meta-analysis (a study of studies), which included data on 25,000 people, found that “loneliness was highest among young adults, declined over midlife, and increased modestly in old age.”
So there may be a cycle and it might not be new. Many 30-somethings find it gets harder to make new friends as they age. Friends move, family and work obligations increase, and plans to reconnect get perpetually booted into the future on email chains.
More recently, in a 2016 paper, researchers in Germany found a peak of loneliness in a sample of 16,000 Germans at around age 30, another around age 50, and then increasing again at age 80.
“We don’t quite know why this is happening,” said Maike Luhmann, a psychologist who researches loneliness at Ruhr-Universität Bochum and co-authored the paper. “So most of the previous research has focused on old age, and for good reason, because it’s when loneliness levels are high.”
The bigger point, she said, was “researchers have ignored that loneliness can happen at any time.”
And that’s important. Because loneliness is bad for our health.
Loneliness is associated with higher blood pressure and heart disease — it literally breaks our hearts. A 2015 meta-review of 70 studies showed that loneliness increases the risk of dying by 26 percent. (Compare that to depression and anxiety, which is associated with a comparable 21 percent increase in mortality.) There’s evidence that chronic loneliness can turn on genes involved with inflammation, which can be a risk factor for heart disease and cancer.
Make no mistake: We need stress. We need some amount of loneliness. The pain of loneliness is a reminder that we are social creatures who need other people. It’s also important to recognize that loneliness isn’t the same as having few friends. It’s the perceived social isolation that harms us. We can certainly have fulfilling, protective relationships with just a few people.
“As long as we then do what we should do — reconnect with people — then loneliness is a good thing,” Luhmann said. “It becomes a bad thing when it becomes chronic. That’s when the health effects kick in. And it becomes harder and harder to connect with other people the longer you are in the state of loneliness.”








I’m pretty sure I know why

Instant-gratification-based structure of society means people are utterly disinterested and don’t give a fuck about you unless you’re very attractive (opposite sex will pursue you heavily) or are extremely valuable and/or interesting to a stronger degree than peoples short attention span, ie you need to jestermaxx or useful-skillmaxx just to have friends. Nobody is interested in personality anymore, or being friends just for the sake of friendship and company
 
Friendship is all digitized now based on fleeting moments & shallow superficial specifications.

Even when the person sprouts the "personality meme" they're exposed as a bunch of virtue signalling fake fraudsters thereby entrenching cynicism/ scepticism & rationalism more so which in effect means that we can't believe any thing we're told even if it's genuinely sincerely good.
I’m pretty sure I know why

Instant-gratification-based structure of society means people are utterly disinterested and don’t give a fuck about you unless you’re very attractive (opposite sex will pursue you heavily) or are extremely valuable and/or interesting to a stronger degree than peoples short attention span, ie you need to jestermaxx or useful-skillmaxx just to have friends. Nobody is interested in personality anymore, or being friends just for the sake of friendship and company

Bullseye.
And all of them are men.
Women cannot know true loneliness.
You have to remember that 1/3 of men in that age group are incel, so 1/5 having no friends makes sense
 

Similar threads

daydreamER
Replies
11
Views
233
92 drowsiness?
92 drowsiness?
brainless442
Replies
2
Views
119
brainless442
brainless442
Limitcel
Replies
1
Views
130
Lonelyus
Lonelyus
Nordicel94
Replies
3
Views
139
NiggerSlayer
NiggerSlayer

Users who are viewing this thread

shape1
shape2
shape3
shape4
shape5
shape6
Back
Top