Britney was really onto something with “Hit Me Baby One More Time.” Loneliness is killing us.
And that’s not really hyperbole. Being lonely or feeling socially isolated is linked to chronic diseases like hypertension and cardiovascular disease, psychological problems like depression and anxiety, and even increased risk of premature death.
Enter: social prescribing.
In addition to loneliness, a social prescription can help improve:
- Mood
- Attention
- Creativity
And reduce:
- Stress
- Depression
- Anxiety
Basically, if you’ve got a problem, a social prescription may very well be beneficial.
We tapped Julia Hotz, who literally wrote the book on the topic—The Connection Cure: The Prescriptive Power of Movement, Nature, Art, Service, and Belonging—to help explain what a social prescription is and how you can figure out which one may be right for you.
What is a social prescription?
“A social prescription is officially defined as a nonmedical community resource or activity that aims to improve our health and strengthen our connections,” Julia explains. “To offer social prescriptions, instead of asking ‘what’s the matter with you?’, health workers are flipping the script, and asking ‘what matters to you?’ And then, based on the patient’s answer, they prescribe everything from hiking groups and art classes to swimming lessons and theater tickets.”
Here are a few examples:
Problem: Dealing with loss
Symptoms: Sad, stuck, exhausted
Potential Rxs:
- Running
- Walking
- Cycling
- Sea swimming
- Joining a sports team
Problem: Trouble paying attention
Symptoms: Distracted, bored, overwhelmed
Potential Rxs:
- Bird-watching
- Forest-bathing
- Joining a local nature group
Problem: Dealing with an upsetting event/catastrophizing
Symptoms: Worried, anxious, can’t sleep
Potential Rxs:
- Drawing
- Painting
- Watercoloring
- Joining a book club
- Visiting a museum
- Listening to music
- Attending a concert
Problem: Ruminating on a frustrating event
Symptoms: Angry, grumpy, self-pitying
Potential Rxs:
- Volunteering
- Community gardening
- Joining a mutual aid group
Problem: Dealing with loneliness
Symptoms: Left out, isolated, alone
Potential Rxs:
- Joining a cooking group
- Joining a language-learning group
- Joining groups premised on deeper connection (like Skip the Small Talk or Living Room Conversations)