Loneliness and human connection have a measurement problem, and the number from Genwell's own Canadian research lands harder than most people expect. 52% of Canadians say they feel lonely on a weekly basis. Not occasionally. Not during hard seasons. Every week. And the research is clear that being surrounded by people does not fix it, because proximity and connection are not the same thing.
The Amazon order in your mailbox, the kiosk at McDonald's, the coffee app that skips the barista entirely: Pete Bombacci's argument is that those micro interactions, the ones being quietly automated out of daily life, are the ones that make people feel seen, valued, and heard. Not just the deep relationships with family and friends. The stranger at the grocery store. The neighbor you wave at. Genwell is launching Moments of Connection cards specifically because that tier of connection disappeared and nobody named it until now.
Men are at particular risk not because they feel more but because they build fewer networks to carry it. Put the social connection in the calendar the same way you put in the workout. Pete does it. Hockey every Tuesday. High school friends every six weeks. You don't make every one. But you're never more than six weeks away.
Topics: loneliness human connection, 52 percent Canadians lonely, micro connections daily life, men boys loneliness, social connection habits
GUEST: Pete Bombacci | genwell.ca
Originally aired on 2026-02-27

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