Tag: Showing up for friends

  • The Erosion of Empathy: How Modern Culture Profits from Our Disconnection

    The Erosion of Empathy: How Modern Culture Profits from Our Disconnection

    There was a time when the measure of a man — or a woman — was found not in the size of their following or the polish of their online image, but in the quiet and consistent act of showing up. I wrote about this recently, about the sacred obligation of standing beside a friend or loved one when the air is heavy and the road is hard. I thought it was simple and uncontroversial. But the responses — some of them sharp and cynical — told me otherwise.

    Somewhere along the line, “showing up” became suspect. An intrusion. A threat to the self-sufficient myths we’ve been sold. Our culture now thrives on the idea that we don’t need each other. That independence is the highest virtue, and connection is optional. This isn’t by accident. There’s money to be made in our isolation.

    Once, the things we needed most — counsel, comfort, the passing down of wisdom — were woven into the fabric of family, neighbors, and community. Now, those things are outsourced. We buy courses instead of seeking out elders. We pay for subscription boxes to send meals rather than cooking together at home. We hire therapists — valuable as they are — because we no longer know how to lean on a friend’s kitchen table at midnight, coffee going cold, until the words finally spill. We have apps to tell us when to breathe because no one close enough is there to notice when we’ve been holding our breath for days.

    The machine prefers it this way. The less we depend on one another, the more we can be sold.

    And the machine has its willing prophets — reality TV, dressed up as truth, but built on humiliation and betrayal. Shows that turn infidelity, family fractures, and public shaming into plotlines. We applaud contestants for cutting each other down because we’ve been told that winning matters more than being whole. Our entertainments train us to cheer for isolation, to accept the destruction of trust as inevitable.

    Even violence — the kind that once would have driven people into each other’s arms — is now another currency. We scroll past death in high definition, processed into algorithm-friendly clips, sandwiched between memes and ads for things we don’t need. It echoes the old coliseum, except now the arena is digital, and the crowd doesn’t even have to leave the couch.

    And then there’s AI. It promises efficiency, companionship, and even creativity. But beneath the marvel, there’s a subtle and dangerous bargain: if we can outsource our conversations, our art, our thought, we can also outsource the messy, difficult work of being human together. What happens to empathy when we can simulate its language without its labor? When our words are polished but our hearts stay untouched?

    This erosion of empathy is not just a cultural inconvenience — it is a slow unspooling of the threads that hold us together. Without them, mental health frays. Communities collapse. The moral muscle that once made us rush to the side of a grieving friend weakens from lack of use.

    Showing up — in person, in spirit, with presence — has never been about convenience. It’s about resistance. Against a culture that profits when we stay alone. Against the idea that our worth can be measured in clicks and comments. Against the creeping belief that we can do without one another.

    Showing up still matters. Maybe more than ever. And I am still stunned that anyone would argue otherwise. But I also know that, in a world where connection is commodified, showing up is an act of quiet rebellion.

    The question is whether we are willing to rebel. Whether we are willing to remember that no app, no feed, no AI can replace the feel of someone’s hand on yours when you can’t speak. Whether we are willing to reclaim what we’ve lost before the last of it slips away, sold back to us at a premium.

    Because if we’re not — if we continue to mistake isolation for strength — the erosion of empathy won’t just be complete; it will be irreversible. It will be irreversible.

    By Kyle J. Hayes

    kylehayesblog.com

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  • Two Birds, One Road

    Two Birds, One Road

    Hello.

    If you’ve read my words before, you already know—I don’t go out often. Not in the way people mean when they talk about “getting out” as a lifestyle. I don’t float from brunch tables to crowded patios, nor do I glide through farmers’ markets with tote bags heavy with fresh basil and conversation. I have to make myself go out. Sometimes I have to bargain with myself, like a parent coaxing a child out from behind a locked bathroom door. I’ll say: It’s just for an hour. You might even enjoy it. But most of the time, the weight of silence wins.

    Earlier this week, I had a plan. A road trip. Nothing grand—just the promise of motion, listening to some good Road Trip music, and visions of a horizon pulling me forward. But sickness found me first. It crept in the way it always does: slow enough to ignore at first, fast enough to take the whole day hostage. So the trip was shelved, another pin in the corkboard of things I’ll get to eventually.

    But today was different. Today, I found myself behind the wheel again, heading north to Rio Rancho for a Pinning ceremony—a milestone for my friend Ralph. Not just any milestone, but the culmination of years of work that most people wouldn’t survive, let alone endure. He put in hours that stretched into the small, skeletal hours of morning when most of us are asleep and dreaming. He worked shifts that bled into each other until time stopped feeling linear—just a long, unbroken stretch of effort. Weekends vanished, holidays blurred, and what little rest he got came with the weight of what still needed to be done. He trained, studied, and pushed through exhaustion that could crush a lesser will.

    And now, here he was—standing in front of a room filled with people, receiving a pin that meant he made it. That every bleary-eyed morning, every missed gathering, every hour spent grinding when others would have quit, had led to this moment.

    Rio Rancho isn’t far, not really. It’s no cross-state odyssey. But somewhere between the last stretch of I-25 and the city’s wide, sun-bleached streets, I started thinking: distance isn’t the measure of a road trip. It could be the leaving. It could be the act of turning the key, of trusting the road to change you, even in ways you won’t notice until later.

    The ceremony itself was a tide of voices, pressed uniforms, and the scent of starch in the air. Ralph stood at the center, that pin catching the light. Pride radiated from him—not the loud, brash kind, but the deep, quiet pride of someone who knows exactly what it cost to get here.

    I thought about the bargain I made with myself: Go see your friend. Stand in that room. Then you can retreat. But standing there, I realized I’d already doubled the wager. I wasn’t just showing up for him; I was showing up for me. I was in motion again—out of the house, into the mess and warmth of other people. Two birds with one stone.

    Driving back, the city falling away in my rearview, I felt lighter. Not in the euphoric way people talk about “getting out of your comfort zone.” This was quieter, less photogenic. A reminder that life doesn’t just happen in the grand gestures or the far-flung miles. Sometimes it’s in the short drives, the small rooms, the simple act of showing up for someone who has fought their way to a moment worth celebrating.

    Maybe Rio Rancho counts as a road trip. Perhaps it doesn’t. But for today, it was far enough to leave myself behind for a while—and close enough to witness a friend’s hard-earned triumph, one that made the journey worth every mile.

    By Kyle J. Hayes

    kylehayesblog.com

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