Hey hey friends and welcome back to Faithfield Woman.
Speaker AThis is your host, Kristen.
Speaker AToday we are starting a three part series on community, friendship and why so many of us feel alone.
Speaker AAnd I can't wait to dive into today's episode.
Speaker AHey friend, are you craving deeper faith, renewed purpose and more joy in your everyday life?
Speaker AWelcome to Faith Fueled Woman podcast that helps Christian women grow spiritually, pursue God's calling and embrace the abundant life he has for you.
Speaker AI'm Kristin and an encourager, mentor, entrepreneur, wife and mom here to uplift, equip and inspire you with faith filled conversations and biblical wisdom.
Speaker ASubscribe now so you never miss an episode and join our Faith fueled community for more encouragement.
Speaker AHey hey friends.
Speaker AWe are going to start a three part series around community.
Speaker AWe will end up on the end of the street Part series talking about friendship and talking about building community partners.
Speaker ABefore we get there, we're going to dig into why so many of us are feeling lonely and isolated and what we can do about it and why it's so important.
Speaker AThe second part of the series we're going to talk about hospitality.
Speaker AWhat is biblical hospitality and why do we need to be more aware of, you know, our habits, our patterns and if we're actually inviting people in to our lives.
Speaker AAnd then finally we will wrap up with friendship and building community and why we're all called to do that and why it's so important for a healthy, vital and a life where we're thriving and Christlike.
Speaker ASo I can't wait to share this series with you.
Speaker AToday we're going to dive into what is going on.
Speaker AWhy are the stats on loneliness and isolation so high and how can we all try to do something about that?
Speaker AFirst, I want to start off with a little excerpt from the book Find you'd People by Jenny Allen about loneliness.
Speaker AShe says, I'm convinced a key reason for our loneliness is that we give up too easily.
Speaker AFriendships take time.
Speaker AA lot of time.
Speaker AA lot of working it out, a lot of showing up, a lot of cleaning out closets, a lot of tears, a lot of laughter, a lot of food, a lot of inconvenience.
Speaker AWe give up so easily because it's costly, it's messy, it's hard is hard.
Speaker ATake a minute, breathe in and accept that truth.
Speaker AOkay?
Speaker ANow hear me.
Speaker AYou can do hard things.
Speaker AGod is with you, in you and for you.
Speaker AYou, my friend, can show up, you can hurt someone and apologize, you can be hurt, forgive.
Speaker AYou can choose consistency and inconvenience and the friendship you will gain will be Worth it.
Speaker AOh, I love that.
Speaker AAnd later in the series, I'm going to share some more of what Jenny Allen says about finding your people and building community.
Speaker ABut for day today, I want to dig into what are the stats telling us on loneliness.
Speaker AOkay, so it says one in three Americans feel lonely every week.
Speaker AThat was from a Healthy Minds Monthly association poll or I'm sorry, monthly poll from January 2024 from the American Psychiatric Association.
Speaker AAnd it says that.
Speaker ALet's see, what else.
Speaker AThe Roots of Loneliness Project shares lots of stats and I want to share a couple of them with you.
Speaker AOn loneliness said 52% of Americans report feeling lonely.
Speaker AAnd these stats I believe are from several years ago.
Speaker AIt says 47% of Americans report relationship with others are not meaningful.
Speaker A57% of people that are single or not in America report eating all of their meals alone.
Speaker AVegas, D.C.
Speaker Aand Denver are three of the loneliest cities in the U.S.
Speaker Athree times above the national average.
Speaker ASouth Carolina, it leads second for the most singles.
Speaker AThere's 49% of adults and they're single.
Speaker ASeriously, the most searched term on Google trends is I'm lonely.
Speaker A80% of people under 18 are lonely.
Speaker ASometimes 43% of 17 to 25 year olds feel lonely and less than half feel loved.
Speaker AAnd actually newer data on that, it's from a different Source said from 2023 to 2025, 15 to 24 year olds felt lonely in the past week, 55 to 57% of them.
Speaker ASo the number isn't going down.
Speaker AIt stayed the same or barely.
Speaker AIt just slightly gone up.
Speaker AMillennials say they are lonely.
Speaker A73% of millennials say they're lonely at least sometimes.
Speaker A22% of Gen Xers have feel like they have no close friends.
Speaker AAnd in the US 61% of Gen Zers feel lonely.
Speaker AAnd it said the percentage of high school seniors who were lonely, well let's see, sorry, in 2012 was 26%.
Speaker AIt went up to 39% in 2017.
Speaker ABut imagine the numbers now or since COVID If it was 39% in 2017, that number has surely gone up.
Speaker AAnd here is a stat.
Speaker AIt says pre Covid, 20% of people struggled with feelings of loneliness.
Speaker ADuring COVID 58.1% of people felt much lonelier.
Speaker AYou guys, these stats are heartbreaking.
Speaker AI literally started to have tears in my eyes when I was reading some of these numbers.
Speaker AAnd I had heard something last week when I was at a one day workshop in D.C.
Speaker Aand someone said the devil blocks us through isolation.
Speaker AAnd let me tell you, we are More isolated and lonely than ever now.
Speaker ATrue, it's not the same as when Covid first happened, right?
Speaker AThat first year and a half, two years, everyone or most everyone was feeling isolated, and surely a lot of people were feeling lonely.
Speaker ABut the thing is, while those numbers have improved some in a lot of the age groups, we are still feeling lonely, we're feeling lost, and it's.
Speaker AIt's just a sad and scary thing, and we have to do something about it, both if we're the ones feeling lonely, but also we need to be the people that bring people in, that make people not feel lonely.
Speaker AWe can't just stay in our houses, Netflix, binging in on social media thinking because we have online friends, that that's the same as striking up a conversation, inviting somebody in.
Speaker AWe have to break this loneliness thing.
Speaker AAnd here's the thing about it.
Speaker AThe reason I think we feel lonely is because we live in such bigger communities that we don't always have to get to know our neighbors.
Speaker AAnd we somehow think that that's acceptable.
Speaker AWe go in our homes or our apartments or wherever we live, and we close the door when we're walking down the street or we're taking transportation or we're driving in our own cars.
Speaker AWe are self absorbed.
Speaker AWe're absorbed with our earbuds in, and we're not even noticing the people on the streets.
Speaker AAnd we're definitely not many of us talking to our neighbors or talking to our friends that often, other than maybe texting, which is not the same as people showing up in our lives.
Speaker ASo what do we do about it?
Speaker AWell, what we do about it is we start acknowledging that if we feel lonely or isolated, we're not the only ones.
Speaker AMost of these stats showed that almost half of people in almost every age range, every demographic, every ethnicity, I mean, the data went on and on, on this project, the Roots of Loneliness project, but it's literally 47%, excuse me, to 80% for some things, that some people feel lonely regularly or some people feel lonely all the time.
Speaker AThey don't feel like they have those friends or people they can rely on.
Speaker AIt is literally a crisis.
Speaker AAnd so, you know, suicide rates are up, levels of depression and mental health are up.
Speaker ASomething's got to give.
Speaker AAnd so this first episode about building community is to just set the stage, right?
Speaker AIt's to say this is kind of the context of what's going on under the surface.
Speaker AThis is what's going on behind the closed doors.
Speaker AThis is what's going on behind our earbuds.
Speaker AWe're lonely and we don't know how to fix it.
Speaker AWe're isolated and we don't know what to do about it.
Speaker AI actually met one of the people I met last week at the event that I was at, told me that they have been going to their same church for a very long time.
Speaker AI mean, a decade, maybe two decades.
Speaker AAnd they've been in different groups, but they really don't feel connected or like they have any close friends at their church.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker AI'm sure they have acquaintances, people they see regularly there.
Speaker AAnd that just broke my heart.
Speaker ABut it's because it does take time.
Speaker AMuch like Jenny Allen's comment at the beginning, it takes time.
Speaker AIt takes hard work.
Speaker AIt takes commitment and clocking hours with someone to become their friend.
Speaker AAnd in one of the future episodes, we'll talk about the different levels of getting to know somebody.
Speaker AAnd it's good to have people at different levels.
Speaker AIt's not that everyone's going to become our closest friend.
Speaker AYou're only going to have a small one or two or three or four, or maybe a little bit more than that of a close group.
Speaker ABut we all need a couple people in our lives that we can count on, that we can call when we're having a hard time, when we're in crisis, when we want to celebrate, we need people to rally around us.
Speaker AAnd so one of the things.
Speaker AWell, one quote.
Speaker AI'm sorry, one scripture that I want to share is one that most of you have probably heard before.
Speaker AIt's Ecclesiastes 4, 9, 12, which is basically just talking about two is better than one.
Speaker ASo it says two are better than one because they have a good reward for their toil.
Speaker AFor if they fall, one will lift up his fellow.
Speaker ABut woe to him who is alone when he falls and has not another to lift him up again.
Speaker AIf two lie together, they will keep warm.
Speaker ABut how can one keep warm alone?
Speaker AAnd though a man might prevail against one who is alone, two will withstand him.
Speaker AA threefold cord is not quickly broken.
Speaker AThis is the thing.
Speaker AThroughout scripture, it talks about being in community with other people, doing a life with other people.
Speaker AWe were designed, for sure, for two things.
Speaker AOne was to be in community, right?
Speaker AWay back, it might have been called a tribe or a village.
Speaker AWe were meant to live in community.
Speaker AThat's how we that's even how animals, they protect themselves by being part of a pack or part of a group or whatever they might be called.
Speaker AAnd humans are the same way.
Speaker AWe can't go through life alone.
Speaker AAnd Actually, there was a stat.
Speaker AWhere did I put it?
Speaker AHold on.
Speaker AIt was about, what is the detriment of.
Speaker AOh, here it is.
Speaker AThere's actually a real health impact to us with experiencing loneliness.
Speaker AAnd I'm not talking about on occasion, I think we've all felt lonely, lonely or alone when we've walked through something, or maybe if we're struggling in a relationship or going through something hard.
Speaker ASo that's one thing.
Speaker ABut what I'm talking about is the longer we experience loneliness and we don't develop at least a single or more deep friendship, it really has profound impacts on our health.
Speaker ASo one study said the health effect of loneliness is profound on mortality.
Speaker AIt is similar to smoking 15 cigarettes a day, day in and day out.
Speaker APeople that are lonely, people that don't have a couple, close people or a close community, they tend to not live as long of lives.
Speaker AThe stats have shown that.
Speaker AThat in the flu zones, the people that live the longest have either a few meaningful relationships or they're part of a group, or they're part village or their area where they do meaningful work.
Speaker AAnd they have.
Speaker AThey regularly see people.
Speaker ASo this truly does matter.
Speaker AAnd we have got to fix something.
Speaker AIf 80% of people under 18 feel lonely sometimes, if 57% of people 18 to 24 years old feel lonely, 73% of millennials say they're lonely.
Speaker AGuys.
Speaker AWhat?
Speaker AI don't know what we've done wrong, but we've got to fix it.
Speaker AWe have to start reaching across the aisle, inviting people in.
Speaker AWe have to start talking to our kids, do more with them.
Speaker AEven if they tell us no, we have to try harder.
Speaker AIt seems that we get so focused on work and all of these commitments, taking our kids places.
Speaker AIf your kids are younger or if they're older, watching and cheering them on in the activities they do.
Speaker AOr maybe we're doing so much volunteer work, but we're so exhausted and we're worn out around the edges.
Speaker ABut my question to you is, how much of our day or week or month or year in that decade are we committing to developing deep and meaningful relationships with other people?
Speaker ABecause at the end of the day, at the end of our life, it will not the amount of hours we clocked or the amount of times that we did carpool.
Speaker AAnd I am surely not saying that our work is not important and that taking our children places isn't important.
Speaker AWhat I'm saying is that cannot be to the detriment of building community and developing deep friendships and deep family connections.
Speaker AThat matters for eternity.
Speaker ALoving Other people.
Speaker AWell, matters for eternity.
Speaker AWorking two more hours every day, working late into the night and exhausting yourself on work that will be there tomorrow is not going to change the world.
Speaker AIt will not change generations to come, and it will not change the love that you're putting out in the world.
Speaker ASo we all need to get intentional.
Speaker AWe need to kind of reflect on are we feeling lonely?
Speaker AAre the people around us seeming lonely?
Speaker AAre we ignoring the people we're walking by?
Speaker AAre we ignoring our neighbors?
Speaker AAre we part of the problem?
Speaker AOr are we getting brave and we're asking the Holy Spirit to come into our day and help us be the person that says hello, that helps us be the person that says, hey, I'd love to meet you for coffee or hey, are you free?
Speaker AI was thinking about having a couple people over.
Speaker AIt means going and joining a group, doing something new, getting out of your comfort zone.
Speaker AAnd I what I will tell you is if you're feeling lonely, if you're feeling isolated, the way that we get out of that place is by being a friend to someone else.
Speaker AIt's by being brave enough, putting down the fear or the worry or the anxiety about doing something new or being rejected by someone and showing the world, turning off our tv, setting down our our phones, maybe turning the ringer off and setting foot into the world in new rooms, in new spaces and new conversations.
Speaker AThat is how we're going to change this world of loneliness and despair and hopelessness.
Speaker ABut it's going to happen through conversations and connections.
Speaker AIt's not going to specifically happen online, and it's surely not going to happen when we're staring at our TV or staring at our smartphone as we're wa for our doctor's appointment or waiting in line at the grocery.
Speaker AStrike up a conversation, say hello, look people in the eyes and smile.
Speaker AGive them a compliment.
Speaker ALet people know they're being seen.
Speaker AListen to people, give them hugs, even if you barely know them.
Speaker AOh, friends.
Speaker ASo this is just the setup for the next two conversations.
Speaker ANext, we're going to talk about hospitality and what that looks like.
Speaker AHow can we all practice biblical hospitality?
Speaker AHow can we all have open hearts and open hands?
Speaker AAnd then we will wrap up this series talking about friendship and how do we actually make friends as adults?
Speaker AHow do we allow ourselves to be vulnerable and build relationships?
Speaker ASo I can't wait for you to join me in these next two series.
Speaker AAnd listen, if you need some encouragement, you need a little pep talk, you just need to tell somebody, look, I have been feeling this way.
Speaker AReach out my email is kristinristenfitch.com you can message me on Instagram.
Speaker AI'm hristenfitch, but I'm here for you and friends.
Speaker AI hope that you have someone in your corner, but if you don't, I'm happy to be that person as you step through this journey of getting to know more people in your community.
Speaker AUntil next time, big hugs, big friends.
Speaker AIf you haven't already signed up to join our email newsletter, head over to KristinFitch.com and grab that now.
Speaker AAnd while you're at it, grab one of our many freebies.
Speaker AWe have a Reignite your passion workbook or Create a life you love workbook.
Speaker ABoth of those you can grab on the freebies page and I know that they will help you so much.
Speaker AStep into a life you love.
Speaker AStep into a life that's filled with faith and deep relationships and meaning.
Speaker AThanks again for listening to the show and if you enjoyed today's episode, we would love it if you could take a minute to leave a rating and review on Apple podcast because it helps our show get discovered by more people.