What do you think about the following reflection I recently read on inevitable loneliness? Does social media really connect folks?
It's Inevitable: We're Human, We're Christian, and We're Lonely
By:Enuma Okoro
From: Her.meneutics
Earlier this summer in The New Republic, Judith Shulevitz opened up an ugly can of worms, writing that "loneliness lay at the heart of nearly all mental illness and the lonely person was just about the most terrifying spectacle in the world."
She explores the fascinating history of loneliness and mental health
and how it slowly became an area for scientific research. Going by
Shulevitz's definition of loneliness—"the want of intimacy"— we're all
suffering. Most of us aren't mentally ill or chronically depressed;
we're just human. We can't help but feel this pervasive sense of
disconnectedness.
In the Christian tradition, we have a certain understanding that
loneliness is inevitable and part of the human condition. We're created
for complete union with God, but unable to fully consummate that union
this side of God's Kingdom. There is an Augustinian
element of truth from which we cannot escape no matter how much
intimacy we do cultivate. Still, that doesn't seem like a sufficient
response for our loneliness predicament. If anything, it's an invitation
for Christians to communicate more openly about the challenges of the
loneliness we are all bound to experience at various seasons of our
lives.
In our age of social media, when new "friends" are a click away on
Facebook and Twitter users actively form real-time communities around
everything from favorite TV shows to breaking political news, we can
easily be led to think that loneliness is an outdated phenomenon. But it
is not.
An animation on Vimeo called "The Innovation of Loneliness"
illustrated how these social networks can perpetuate our feelings of
being alone. Our modern society largely measures individual success by
personal achievements that have little to do with maintaining healthy
social communities. "Many people lose their social and familial
communities in favor of a self-actualization ideal," said Shimi Cohen,
the video's creator. He plays off the research of Sherry Turkel, an MIT professor and author of Alone Together, who
suggests that the false sense of intimacy created in the virtual world
fails to satisfy people's real needs for knowing others and being known
by others.
After all, being lonely is not necessarily about a-lone-ness, but about
lack of intimate, meaningful connection. Intimacy comes from
recognizing the value of vulnerability, that needing other people is not
a sign of weakness but a mere fact of human existence. This necessary
criteria for intimacy goes against our cultural conditioning to laud the
self-made, self-sufficient person.
On the other hand, I think of the West African culture in which I was
raised, where living and working together with others gets so interwoven
into the daily fabric of life that one barely has the opportunity to
sit in feelings of loneliness for very long. I've noticed that in many
"developing" countries and in Southern Europe, cultural patterns provide
ample opportunity for fostering intimate relationships over the mundane
aspects of shared lives, with families across generations living
together under one roof and random visitors showing up at your doorstep,
only to be welcomed with a sense of hospitality.
As I continue to come across articles that deal with our loneliness—revealing
not only the emotional effects of the condition, but physical ones,
like illness and early death, as well—I wonder if we are talking about
it in our communities, or just writing about it on the Internet?
As communities of faith we can and should reflect on what we might do
to help one another respond well in those moments, hours, days, and
seasons. As Christians, how do we prepare one another for the
inevitability of loneliness, whether married, single, socially
overactive or not?
The lonely can easily fall into the unfulfilling trap of the quick fix:
the new romantic relationship or sexual encounter, the new material
item, or novel experience that we hope will fill that space (turns out shopping is linked to loneliness). Loneliness can make our head lie to our heart and vice-versa.
As Christians, we're called to train one another in the theological virtue of caritas,
as understood by Thomas Aquinas as friendship with God that ultimately
leads to deepened friendship with one another. In that space, we learn
to cultivate more genuine depths of safe intimacy with one another not
merely for our own sakes but for the sake of the one who first called us
friends and never sent his disciples out alone.
I think that our connections made with other people via social media don't have much hope for being anything other than superficial. It doesn't take long to exhaust the benefits provided by those contacts. Real, meaningful human connection must occur on a deeper level.
ReplyDeleteThat's not to say that the Internet can't be a viable platform for interpersonal relationships. I believe, for instance, that a lot of healing can and does take place in online support forums and user groups where people are bound by commonalities.
I think that this culture that is dominated by sound bytes and 140-character tweets, and iphones attached at the hip (self included) is damaging to our relationships, and ultimately there will need to be some sort of shift back to basics or we will lose touch altogether. I see social skills going down the drain, interpersonal relationships getting shallower and shallower - we must play an active role in upending this disturbing trend that most of us are quite guilty of perpetuating.