{"id":224329,"date":"2018-11-06T00:00:00","date_gmt":"2018-11-05T14:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.relationships.org.au\/compassion-engagement-and-connection-how-we-end-loneliness\/"},"modified":"2021-11-16T14:33:34","modified_gmt":"2021-11-16T04:33:34","slug":"compassion-engagement-and-connection-how-we-end-loneliness","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.relationships.org.au\/compassion-engagement-and-connection-how-we-end-loneliness\/","title":{"rendered":"Compassion, engagement and connection \u2013 how we end loneliness"},"content":{"rendered":"

Hugh Mackay
<\/strong>7 November, 2018<\/i><\/p>\n

<\/i><\/p>\n

The deepest truth about human beings also happens to be the sweetest and noblest truth about us: we are social beings. \u00a0We absolutely need each other. We depend utterly on neighbourhoods, communities, families, groups of all kinds to nurture us, to protect us, and even give us a sense of our identity.<\/p>\n

If you want to know who you are, don\u2019t look into the mirror: look into the faces of the people who love you, the people you work with, the people in your neighbourhood, the people who will put up with you and most particularly the people who need you. That\u2019s who you are.<\/p>\n

Being members of a social species explains why, in our criminal justice system, the harshest punishment we can think of is solitary confinement. For herd animals like us, the bitterest punishment is indeed to be cut off from the herd. That doesn\u2019t mean we don\u2019t need and enjoy periods of isolation. We all need time on our own but what we need that time for<\/i> is to replenish our resources for the very challenging task of belonging to a social species.<\/p>\n

Now if you bear that in mind and think about contemporary Australia, it\u2019s very clear what our major social problem has become: we are more socially fragmented than we have ever been.<\/p>\n