29 November 2008

"alone together"

Of all 3,141 counties in the United States, New York County is the unrivaled leader in single-individual households, at 50.6 percent. More than three-quarters of the people in them are below the age of 65. Fifty-seven percent are female. In Brooklyn, the overall number is considerably lower, at 29.5 percent, and Queens is 26.1. But on the whole, in New York City, one in three homes contains a single dweller, just one lone man or woman who flips on the coffeemaker in the morning and switches off the lights at night. . . . These numbers should tell an unambiguous story. They should confirm the common belief about our city, which is that New York is an isolating, coldhearted sort of place. Mark Twain called it “a splendid desert—a domed and steepled solitude, where the stranger is lonely in the midst of a million of his race.” . . . Yet the picture of cities—and New York in particular—that has been emerging from the work of social scientists is that the people living in them are actually less lonely. Rather than driving people apart, large population centers pull them together, and as a rule tend to possess greater community virtues than smaller ones. This, even though cities are consistently, overwhelmingly, places where people are more likely to live on their own.

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

What a pithy article. Whew.

Personally, I see my DSL and the Intarwebs as a crucial factor in my (realtive) contentment as a single, live-alone adult. But it's also good to just go out and be with "society" too. My Saturday routine always includes some Goodwill visits and those are surprisingly social venues; if you're willing to be a bit out-going. Today I met this older black dude who was checking out an old reel-to-reel tape deck that I just looked at. Turns out he's a sax player and we talked about sax players and then I found an old jazz sax album and let him buy it because I already had a copy.

That kinda stuff is cool.

b