Last month, I ran into an old colleague at the grocery store. We chatted for a few minutes, promised to grab coffee soon, and went our separate ways. Walking to my car, I realized something that stopped me cold: he was the fourth person that week I’d made vague plans with, and I hadn’t followed through on any of them.
Why? Because I kept telling myself I had enough friends. Enough people to call if I needed something. Enough social connection to keep me going.
But here’s the thing that hit me like a ton of bricks: three years ago, before I lost my closest friend to cancer, I would have said the same thing. And now? That “enough” had quietly become “barely hanging on” without me even noticing.
The invisible shrinking of our social circles
When you’re in your sixties like I am, you start to notice patterns. Friends move to be closer to grandkids. Health issues make it harder for some to get out. And yes, some pass away, leaving gaps that feel impossible to fill.
I used to think my social circle was solid. Unshakeable, even. But retirement taught me a harsh lesson: many of those “work friends” were really just people I saw at work. Once the daily coffee runs and lunch breaks ended, so did most of those relationships.
PBS News reports that “Loneliness affects between 19% and 43% of adults ages 60 and older, and many adults ages 50 and over are at risk of poor health from prolonged loneliness.”
Those numbers aren’t just statistics. They’re our neighbors, our former coworkers, maybe even us.
Why “enough” becomes dangerous thinking
Here’s what makes this mindset so insidious: it feels responsible. Mature, even. We tell ourselves we’re being realistic about our energy levels, our time, our capacity for maintaining relationships.
But what we’re really doing is closing the door before life does it for us.
Think about it. If you have five close friends today and lose two over the next few years (which, let’s be honest, happens more often as we age), you’re down to three. If one moves away and another develops health issues that limit their social activities, suddenly your robust social circle has become dangerously thin.
The worst part? This happens so gradually that we don’t notice until we’re sitting alone on a Saturday afternoon, scrolling through our phone contacts, realizing how many of those numbers belong to people we no longer really know.
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The compound effect of social withdrawal
When I lost my closest friend three years ago, grief hit me like nothing I’d experienced before. We’d been friends for decades, shared everything from career struggles to family celebrations. His absence left a hole I thought would never heal.
For months, I withdrew. Not dramatically, just quietly. Turned down a few invitations. Stopped reaching out as much. Told myself I needed time.
But isolation has a sneaky way of becoming comfortable. Soon, staying home felt easier than going out. Making excuses became second nature. Before I knew it, I’d created my own prison of solitude.
Dr. Shah captures this perfectly: “It can be very difficult, especially for those who live into their 90s or 100s, as a person might have a group of friends or work hard to make new friends only to see those friends lose function or pass away.”
The temptation is to protect ourselves from future loss by not investing in new relationships. But that’s like refusing to plant a garden because winter will eventually come.
Breaking through the resistance
Making new friends in your sixties feels different than it did in your thirties. There’s no workplace to naturally throw you together with people. No kids’ activities where you bond with other parents on the sidelines.
- Women who spent their 40s and 50s holding everything together for everyone else don’t arrive at their 60s feeling proud of their endurance—they arrive exhausted in a way that sleep doesn’t fix, wondering when it became their permanent role to be the person who needed nothing - Global English Editing
- Psychology says one of the quietest forms of self-respect in later life is the decision to stop explaining yourself to people who have already decided what they think, and most people who finally make that decision describe the same thing afterwards, not conflict, not distance, but a lightness they hadn’t realised was available and can’t believe they waited so long to find - Global English Editing
- Psychology says the boomer men now entering their late 60s and 70s are carrying a specific kind of unhappiness that has almost no cultural language—they were raised to provide, protect and endure, and most of them did all three brilliantly, and the cruelest reward for a lifetime of quiet service is silence from the very people it was all for - Global English Editing
I’ll be honest: it’s harder. It takes more intentional effort. And sometimes, it feels downright awkward.
But I’ve learned something important. The alternative—watching your social world shrink while telling yourself you have enough—is far worse than any temporary discomfort from putting yourself out there.
So I started volunteering at a local charity shop one morning a week. Partly to feel useful, partly to be around different people. At first, I kept to myself, focused on sorting donations. But gradually, conversations started. Real conversations, not just weather talk.
The unexpected power of vulnerability
You know what really changed things for me? I stopped pretending everything was fine all the time.
When someone at the charity shop asked how I was doing, I started answering honestly. Not dumping my whole life story on them, but sharing real things. How I missed my friend. How retirement was harder than I expected. How I worried about my health sometimes.
And something magical happened. People opened up back. Suddenly, we weren’t just volunteers sorting clothes together. We were real people sharing real experiences.
Alison Rataj, a research scientist at the Institute for Health Policy and Practice, confirms what I discovered: “Social connection is incredibly important. It’s linked to both physical and mental health outcomes.”
These deeper connections, built on honesty rather than pleasantries, have become lifelines I didn’t know I needed.
Practical ways to expand your circle
If you’re sitting there thinking, “Okay, but how do I actually make new friends at this age?” I get it. Here’s what’s worked for me:
First, follow through on those vague plans. When you run into someone and say, “We should get together,” pull out your phone right then and schedule it. Don’t let it become another empty promise.
Join something regular. A book club, a walking group, a volunteer commitment. The key word is regular. One-off events rarely lead to lasting friendships, but seeing the same people weekly creates natural bonds.
Be the one who reaches out. Text that old friend you’ve been meaning to contact. Call your neighbor to check in. Most people are waiting for someone else to make the first move.
And here’s a big one: be willing to befriend people of different ages. Some of my newest meaningful friendships are with people twenty years younger or ten years older. Limiting yourself to your exact age group unnecessarily shrinks your pool of potential connections.
Closing thoughts
As I write this, I’m thinking about the coffee date I have tomorrow with someone I met at the charity shop. Six months ago, I would have told myself I didn’t need any more friends. That my social calendar was full enough.
But “enough” is a moving target, and life has a way of shifting it when we’re not looking. The question I leave you with is this: Are you building your social connections for the person you are today, or for the person you’ll be in five years who might desperately need them?
Don’t wait until your “enough” becomes “not nearly enough.” The best time to make new friends isn’t when you need them. It’s now, while you still have the energy and opportunity to invest in relationships that could sustain you through whatever comes next.
