Good advice in this Bluesky post from @jrosevear.bsky.social, isn’t it?
https://thumbs.dreamstime.com/b/multicultural-people-using-smartphones-ignoring-each-other-sitting-sofa-multicultural-young-people-using-smartphones-ignoring-144185438.jpg
A Fraying
of the Social Fabric?
John’s post invites
us to talk with actual people. Related to this topic, a headline in the Semafor
newsletter https://www.semafor.com/) surprised me;
“Falling wine sales represent not just a problem for the
industry, but perhaps also for society.”
The article
suggests wine consumption is being affected by decreased socialization, with
fewer people making time to talk face-to-face to actual people.
The Semafor newsletter referenced an article from
The Economist magazine in which they suggest that health consciousness is one
driver of the decline in wine consumption (they suggest a crisis in the
industry), but more significantly a “fraying of the social fabric” and the
related decrease in socialization. The magazine states “we Increasingly live
and eat alone.”
Are We
Less Skilled in Social Interaction?
Some studies
indicate that increased screen time has strong linkage to adverse health
outcomes. See this Center for Disease
Control article from 2025
https://www.cdc.gov/pcd/issues/2025/24_0537.htm
How to
Improve Social Skills
Are people
interested to improve their social skills? Improved social skills “mean you can
connect with other people in ways that feel meaningful, respectful, and clear. This
is important, as our relationships shape so much of how we experience life.”
https://blog.calm.com/blog/improve-social-skills
For a
summary, the article suggests;
1. Focus on listening, not performing
2. Use body language to signal openness
3. Practice grounding techniques before
or during social moments
4. Learn to tolerate pauses
Communication
is a Skill
Skills
require practice. The skill may be social graces, public speaking, writing,
hitting a golf ball, and on and on. Knowledge alone will not make the skill
strong.
Skills
require practice.
It appears
to me that for much of society the screen held inches from one’s face is more
interesting than a person sitting nearby. Or perhaps the screen observer simply
lacks the skills, and confidence, to engage.
I plan to encourage more face-to-face
interactions in 2026.
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