I admit that I am not one to strike up conversations with strangers. As an introverted writer, I prefer the written word to the spoken one. I like to use the self-checkout lane at the grocery store and have even gone so far as to choose doctors based on whether they use online scheduling. That said, I do try and smile or give a simple hello when I pass someone or enter a room—it’s just good manners, isn’t it?—and I’m often surprised at the number of acquaintances I have who will pass me by without any acknowledgement of my existence. These little moments with strangers and others are called microconnections, and although we usually brush them off, they have positive impacts on our mental health—and beyond. “ Talking to strangers has benefits for you, it has benefits for the person you’re talking to, and it has benefits for the community,” says Gillian Sandstrom, PhD, an associate professor of the psychology of kindness at the University of Sussex in the United Kingdom. Society is s...
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