Julieanna Stolley showed up 15
minutes early to Anita Michaud’s party. It was too soon to arrive, she decided,
so she paced up and down the block seven times before ringing the bell.
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Stolley, 25, who studies acting at Brooklyn
College in New York, had never met Michaud or any of the other guests. She was
attending Dinner With Friends, an event hosted by Michaud at which she invites
eight strangers online to sign up and then convene for a meal at her
one-bedroom apartment in Brooklyn.
The event on this day was an all-women’s
brunch, with guests meeting at 2pm for tea tastings and baked treats. Many of
the other guests said they shared Stolley’s trepidation about arriving too
early and being first in the door but, a few minutes after the event’s official
start, the doorbell was buzzing nonstop.
Nobody wanted to be the first to arrive,
but everyone had come for the same reason: to connect with strangers in real
life and potentially make a new friend.
Michaud, 24, launched Dinner With Friends
in May 2022 after moving to New York the year before and struggling to find
community during the pandemic. When she arrived in the city, she thought new
friends would come with the territory, but she found she had trouble
jump-starting relationships. So she had the idea to invite a group of strangers
over to her apartment for a home-cooked dinner. As a test run, she gathered a
bunch of people from different parts of her life who did not know each other.
The results were promising. “It was really heartwarming,” she said.
Lacking connection has… been found to be worse for your health than smoking, obesity, or high blood pressure. As a predictor for a happy life, strong relationships are more reliable than such factors as wealth and IQ.
A week later, she pulled together six
strangers — a mix of friends of friends and people she messaged on Bumble BFF,
an offshoot of the dating app that is designed to facilitate new friendships —
for her first official Dinner With Friends event. The group ended up meshing
well and the party lasted late into the night. “That was the signal to me,”
said Michaud. “OK, this idea actually does have legs.”
She has since posted about the dinners —
most of which have a themed menu, often inspired by places she has traveled —
on TikTok and Instagram, and been met with an eager response. Over 800 people —
mainly young women, like Michaud — have signed up for her events so far, a
waitlist that Michaud, who has a full-time job in financial services, said
would take her four years to get through, one dinner-party-of-eight at a time.
The Dinner With Friends idea came along at
an ideal moment — a time when, for many people, casual relationships had taken
a hit and social circles had shrunk after three years of pandemic deprivation.
Dr Marissa King, a professor at the Wharton School of the University of
Pennsylvania and author of “Social Chemistry: Decoding the Elements of Human
Connection”, found in her research that, during the pandemic, people’s social
networks decreased in size by an average of 16 percent, with most of the losses
occurring among men.
One psychological trait that experts identify as essential to pursuing and creating new connections is optimism. After all, what could be more fundamentally optimistic than attending a dinner with a table full of strangers, expecting to make a new friend?
Nurturing these networks is crucially important.
A 2010 report in The Journal of Health and Social Behavior showed that low
social connection is linked to poor health outcomes, including heart attacks
and cancer, as well as other conditions. Lacking connection has also been found
to be worse for your health than smoking, obesity, or high blood pressure. As a
predictor for a happy life, strong relationships are more reliable than such
factors as wealth and IQ.
“It’s such a human need to really be seen
and recognized and heard by another person,” King said. We now realize, she
said, that social connection “brings us lots of joy”, in addition to being
critical “to our own mental well-being”.
‘The more we start to engage, the more
joy we get’After an initial warm-up period, the
women’s brunch was in full swing. First came a flurry of compliments, shared
among unfamiliar faces. Then the host shared some warm welcomes and brief
introductions. After that, Michaud — seated at the table with the guests, near
the kitchen for easy serving — left everyone to fend for themselves and, within
a few minutes, the stilted mood among strangers turned cozy and natural.
Anita Michaud serves
dessert at Dinner With Friends, an event in which strangers dine together in
Michaud’s one-bedroom apartment in Brooklyn Heights, New York, on February 24,
2023.
One psychological trait that experts identify
as essential to pursuing and creating new connections is optimism. After all,
what could be more fundamentally optimistic than attending a dinner with a
table full of strangers, expecting to make a new friend?
“Optimism is really critical for just
starting to get us over the hump,” King said. After that, “our sense of social
connections really do become a self-fulfilling prophecy: The more we start to
engage, the more joy we get, and the more willingness we have to continue
engaging.”
What the Dinner With Friends concept gets
right, according to King, is that it provides a framework for meeting new
people, which lowers the barriers to connection. Facilitating structured
interaction (like limiting the guest list to a manageable eight people) and creating
a sense of safety for guests to be authentic with each other are some of the
most powerful ways to make social connections happen, she said.
“Having that resilience, the ability to
cope, having hope, being curious about other people: All of the assets of
optimism, as I’ve observed them, are so necessary for forming community,” said
Danielle Bayard Jackson, a friendship coach who has a quarter-million followers
on TikTok, where she gives advice for making new friends and having healthy
relationships.
“Having that resilience, the ability to cope, having hope, being curious about other people: All of the assets of optimism, as I’ve observed them, are so necessary for forming community.”
When pursuing new relationships, optimism
can work both ways: It can prompt you to seek out new friends and it can also
draw new friends to you. People who demonstrate optimism may also enjoy higher
quality interactions, according to Dr Emma Seppala, a lecturer at Yale
University’s School of Management and author of “The Happiness Track”. People
are often attracted to those who are “positively reenergizing”, in what Seppala
describes as a heliotropic effect: Just as plants are drawn to the sun, we are
drawn to those who have life-giving qualities.
‘Allow yourself to feel your feelings’Though Stolley reported experiencing some
social anxiety at the beginning of the brunch, she ultimately eased in — and
was even able to open up and be vulnerable at times. She recalled one specific
moment when, all at once, everyone erupted into their own side discussions. “I
was like, oh, this is awesome,” she said.
Jackson and Seppala agree that people
should feel OK with moments of awkwardness when meeting strangers. Seppala
pointed out that research indicates that people can tell when someone is
wearing a mask, so it is important to “be your awkward self”. This will give
permission to others to be themselves, too.
Jackson suggested that, when meeting new
people, you “allow yourself to feel your feelings” in the present moment.
“Allow yourself to have moments where you don’t really know what to say, and
give yourself permission to experience, you know, maybe forgetting somebody’s
name,” she said.
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