Alone Together

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Rating
4.7
from
12 reviews
This podcast has
54 episodes
Language
Explicit
No
Date created
2021/01/04
Latest episode
2023/11/02
Average duration
27 min.
Release period
63 days

Description

A life of solitude was imposed on millions of us during the pandemic due to the coronavirus. Being alone is a life chosen deliberately by some; others are just alone, not by choice. We can end up unexpectedly alone and for many, the twists and turns of life, brought us to where we are. Experts and researchers around the world share their insights about what we know about loneliness, we find meaning of it from songs, art, books, films, history and pop culture. We isolate the lessons of loneliness from people like you and people like me who have unique stories to tell and to share. Everyone feels lonely at times. But let’s begin to explore why. My name is Peg Fong, I’m a journalist and an educator who has been fascinated by what loneliness means. We’re not here to solve loneliness. But to add one voice to another so that we are alone together. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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Check latest episodes from Alone Together podcast


Announcement: The Podcast is Now Available in Spanish
2023/11/02
Hello podcast listeners! I'm Peg Fong, writer and creator of "Alone Together." We are continuing our journey exploring loneliness...in Spanish: "Juntos en soledad." Listen to this new adaptation presented by business professor and producer Guillermo Serrano (@guilloserrano). "Juntos en soledad" – listen and subscribe on Spotify, Apple Podcasts or your favourite podcast app. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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Looking Back: The Lessons of Loneliness
2022/02/25
We are living in lonely times, but the human conditions make us wonder, are we alone in our loneliness?  And that answer is clear.  Somewhere, someone else is taking off for the unknown, moving to small towns or hitting the road to start a new life. We can understand loneliness when we peer up into the sky or see celebrities doing ordinary things, when we laugh at comedians and still feel sad because we recognize their loneliness.  And we may not be hermit crabs or whales in the ocean or rare birds or lone wolves, but the way animals behave tells us something about loneliness and isolation. There’s solace in discovering we all need a shell and we are allowed to grow out of that shell, or we need to be apart from others like lone wolves.  We can see it in clouds or in comics, read it in words and feel loneliness in our silence, in remembering and in those times when we can’t sleep or want to talk to someone else sitting on a bench. Those are the lessons in loneliness that come from understanding the way we see ourselves and the world around us as we wrap up with the final episode of this season.    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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Park Your Loneliness: Benches Are Made For Two
2022/02/18
Benches are places in public spaces where people can sit by themselves. They are special because they’re not just a place to sit,  they’re spots available to anyone and that availability turns benches into opportunities for connections. Benches are bridges between those eager to chat, and those wanting to just listen.  When we sit on a bench, we’re indicating we’re part of a world that maybe we feel too lonely or afraid to fully participate in. Benches give us an opportunity to be engaged in our surroundings whether it's observing from the side or opening up a chance for conversation. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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No Restaurants, Lawyers or... Loneliness: Life on the Remotest Island
2022/02/11
The first multiple blind dates in the world are believed to have taken place in April 1827. The story goes that Thomas Swain, a 52 year old bachelor, had vowed to take the first woman to step ashore the world’s most remote island. Her name was Sarah Jacobs, a widow, and Thomas Swain took her hand as soon as she put her foot on the island. The four other women who had arrived with Sarah Jacobs married the four other bachelors on the island.  From those beginnings, the island population at Tristan da Cunha grew exponentially.  By 1832, just five years after the five women arrived, Tristan had a population of 34--22 of them children.  The solitary outpost which had been a British garrison had become a community. Today, it is still the most isolated island in the world where people live and Tristan da Cunha is located in the middle of the ocean between two continents.  The residents who live there, all 247 of them, understand a type of loneliness like no one else. But their isolation has, for hundreds of years, been a place that others have learned from: how to survive away from anyone else. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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Why We Don't Talk About Bruno: Choosing Family Estrangement
2022/02/04
We Don’t Talk About Bruno, the number 1 hit song, written by Lin-Manual Miranda for the Disney movie Encanto, is all about a member of the Madrigal family who no one talks about, Bruno.  Encanto is a movie about family, but it’s also about trauma and how families connect, separate and become estranged. For a Disney movie, there are some very heavy themes, including war and violence and ruptures within what family members expect from each other and what they can’t accept.  We all have been told and taught that family bonds are unbreakable but for many, family is their pain, and these relationships are broken.  There’s a certain type of loneliness that comes from being estranged from family, in choosing to depart from the ties that are part of our genetics and our lineage.  Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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Hit the Hay: Rested & Ready to Relate
2022/01/28
Sleep is often viewed as something that takes us away from social interactions. We have to give up sleep in order to be social. Sometimes, it’s very tempting to stay home and sleep rather than be with others.  But when you think about it, sleep is actually something that connects us to each other.  Because without sleep, we lose the motivation to socially interact with others. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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We Need More Cowbells: How Nostalgia Keeps Us in the Present
2022/01/21
Imagine forgetting John Lennon. It isn’t hard to do when collective memory fades.  We remember things because they have meaning for us and we forget things because other things become more important. Seeing people and hearing songs that aren’t part of our day-to-day conversation brings with it a sense of nostalgia, a longing for the past, and a remembrance of what had been. And in that longing and in those memories, we form a connection to what had been things or people who once mattered to us and then, the realization of all that has been lost.  Is it that realization that makes us lonely, or does the loneliness come when we remember what was once real.  How does nostalgia become a way for us to forget our loneliness? Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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Turn Up the Heat: How Temperature Affects Relationships
2022/01/14
The Saddest Day of the Year will apparently be on Monday, January 17, 2022. It’s called Blue Monday by some, and there’s even a formulation for how the date was decided. It’s a combination of weather, the due date of our credit card bills from our holiday spending and the failure of our ability to keep our New Year’s resolutions. It’s the cold reality that we failed at budgeting, exercising, finishing our novels or thesis, eating better, and learning a new language. There’s a version of Blue Monday in Denmark--called Bla Mandag and it has nothing to do with sadness. It’s actually a day for spending money and spending time with others. Blue Monday in Denmark happens in the spring when young people go shopping after their confirmation the day before on Sunday. Bla Mandag is when young people get together -- they get the day off school -- to go spend the money they received, head to restaurants, and celebrate. It is blue for the blue skies that emerge after a long cold winter. When we want to escape from loneliness, what we may be seeking is the warmth of another person. And when we’re feeling cold, we crave connections. Temperature can regulate our loneliness and how we warm up or cool down is based on social interactions. Huddle around this episode, where it’s warm and cozy-or cool and refreshing--depending on your needs at this moment. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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The Loneliest Wolf: Lessons Learned From Leaving the Pack
2022/01/07
A lone wolf named Takaya was spotted living on an island by himself and stayed there in isolation for eight years. Despite all the odds, on an island where there was no natural food source, Takaya survived. A lone wolf doesn’t fit in with the pack. A lone wolf is a strong and powerful wolf who wants to go off on their own and seek their own territory and let others stay in the family pack.  Takaya lived on his own and there are lessons we can learn from lone wolves. There are some people--and some animals--that prefer to be on their own, to figure out for themselves what they can do when they choose to leave the familiar for the unfamiliar. In the animal kingdom, there are lone wolves. Animals who break off from their families, their relatives and even their own offspring in order to form their own family of one. And when they strike out on their lonely journey, they leave behind tension and conflict with others who are part of their group. For lone wolves, it’s better to be on their own, than part of a pack.  Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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Hello Silence My Old Friend: The Quest For Quiet
2021/12/31
The key to the song of silence is personal and internal. In troubled times, people have endured silence as a way to learn to live in solitude.  Silence makes us lonelier, some say, and others say it’s just silence and it’s the only way we can learn to live with being alone. The default thinking is that being alone with only our thoughts swirling in our heads is destructive, negative. A constant cul-de-sac that leads nowhere. But silence allows us to listen to our innermost feelings and silence leads to an understanding of who we are- it helps us when we need it most critically – in stressful situations.  Silence has a message for us wanting to understand loneliness. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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ENCORE: Home Alone: Lessons Learned from Courageous Abandoned Children
2021/12/24
Imagine waking up one morning to discover you are entirely alone. Everyone else in your home has disappeared. You look out the window and the streets are empty. No cars on the road, no planes overhead. Shops are abandoned. Schools are deserted. Buildings completely vacant. No phone reception. No internet connection. No electricity. No television or radio. It is silent and eerie. Lonely. You are alone on an island with no one else and there's no way out. Now imagine if all this was happening and you are a child. Book and movies about children abandoned and left on their own are popular in fiction. But they also happen in real life. The most powerless and the most vulnerable have at times in history figured out how to survive on their own and they have lessons to teach the rest of us. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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Square Peg: When Words for Loneliness Don't Fit
2021/12/17
Late one night when he couldn’t sleep, John Koenig wrote up a definition that hadn’t existed before. It was the word SONDER. It’s the awareness that everyone around you is the main character of their own story and he posted this word on his website for the book he hoped to write one day. That book became The Dictionary of Obscure Sorrows.  The word Sonder became the most famous entry in the dictionary and Koenig still gets emails from readers thanking him for giving voice to something they’ve felt their whole life. It surprised him how universal a feeling that came from inside him could be...a feeling that he only felt in glimmers of solitude.  How do we give a name to something internal, an emotion? What’s in a name that everyone can recognize but all of us know it in different ways?  Is there a better name than just calling it loneliness? Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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Podcast reviews

Read Alone Together podcast reviews


4.7 out of 5
12 reviews
Enamily 2021/04/29
Short and incredibly sweet
This podcast provides insight and empathy in a time where we see that we need it most. The host explores loneliness and how we all cope with such empa...
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DateableDater 2021/04/20
Timely topic!
Loneliness has been so pronounced during the pandemic and I’m so glad there’s a podcast to dive deeper into this topic!
AnneFWong 2021/02/16
What an insightful podcast!
Loneliness is a challenging topic, especially during a pandemic. But what a thoughtful podcast to show how we all can help each other through kindnes...
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