Tools
Change country:

Don’t Turn Inward

One month to the day before the 2024 presidential election, The New York Times reported on a new analysis of how Americans spend their time. More and more of the average American’s day is being spent at home: one hour and 39 minutes more in 2022 than in 2003. For each extra hour at home, a bit of it was spent with family—7.4 minutes. More of it, 21 minutes, was spent alone.

Obviously, because of the coronavirus pandemic, time at home spiked in 2020. Some of this homebody impulse may well be the stubborn persistence of habits formed during the isolating early days of lockdown. But this trend is more than just a pandemic hangover. For years before COVID-19 hit, time spent alone had been increasing as time spent socializing had been decreasing. Though solitude and loneliness are not the same, this downturn in social connection happened alongside a rise in loneliness so pronounced that the surgeon general called it an epidemic.

And now this: the reelection to the nation’s highest office of Donald Trump, a man who has attacked the very idea of a communal, democratic form of government, and who has indicated that he aspires to move the United States toward autocracy—auto, of course, meaning “self,” and autocracy being the concentration of power for and within the self. Self over others is one of Trump’s defining principles. In his first term as president, he used an office intended for public service to enrich himself. He has vowed to use it this time to take revenge on his enemies and—“within two seconds” of taking office—to fire the special counsel overseeing criminal cases against him.

Yet self over others, or at the very least self before others, has long been a prominent aspect of American culture—not always to Trumpian levels, certainly, but individualism for better and worse shapes both the structure of society and our personal lives. And it will surely shape Americans’ responses to the election: for the winners, perhaps, self-congratulation; for the losers, the risk of allowing despair to pull them into a deeper, more dangerous seclusion. On Election Day, the Times published an article on voters’ plans to manage stress. Two separate people in that story said they were deliberately avoiding social settings. To extend that strategy into the next four years would be a mistake.

[Read: Don’t give up on America]

In 1831, the French aristocrat Alexis de Tocqueville traveled to the United States. He observed and analyzed its people and culture, and published his thoughts in a massive two-volume report called Democracy in America. Alongside his praise for the country’s professed value of equality—which he wrote “possesses all the characteristics of a divine decree”—he warned of the individualism he saw as baked into American society and the isolation it could cause. “Each man is forever thrown back on himself alone,” he wrote, “and there is danger that he may be shut up in the solitude of his own heart.”

More than a century and a half later, Habits of the Heart: Individualism and Commitment in American Life, a sociological book by five scholars, followed explicitly in Tocqueville’s footsteps, examining how individualism affects institutions and personal relationships in the United States. Published in 1985, it reads today as wildly prescient. The authors feared that the danger Tocqueville described had already come to pass. “It seems to us,” they wrote, “that it is individualism, and not equality, as Tocqueville thought, that has marched inexorably through our history. We are concerned that this individualism may have grown cancerous … that it may be threatening the survival of freedom itself.”

Tempering American individualism, in Tocqueville’s view, was Americans’ propensity to form associations and participate in civic life. “These he saw as moderating the isolating tendencies of private ambition on one hand and limiting the despotic proclivities of government on the other,” the authors of Habits of the Heart wrote. But American associational life began hollowing out starting in the 1960s and ’70s, as people became less and less likely to attend any kind of club, league, church, or other community organization (a shift that Robert Putnam documented in his 2000 book, Bowling Alone). Since the late ’70s, faith in large-scale institutions such as organized religion, organized labor, the media, and the U.S. government has also been dwindling; in 2023, Gallup declared it “historically low.”

A few months ago I spoke with Ann Swidler, one of the authors of Habits of the Heart. “We obviously did not succeed in having things go the direction we might have hoped,” she told me. “I would say that every horrible thing we worried about has gotten worse.” Americans are spending measurably more time shut up in the solitude of their homes, and perhaps in the solitude of their own hearts as well.

It might be difficult to imagine the renaissance of many civic associations—the kind that could be good for both democracy and our relationships—given that a majority of Americans just voted for a man who has little interest in or respect for institutions beyond what they can do for him. If autocracy is indeed where the country is headed, Tocqueville’s prediction regarding our relationships is not a positive one. As he wrote in The Old Regime and the Revolution, his book on the French revolution:

Despotism does not combat this tendency [toward individualism]; on the contrary, it renders it irresistible, for it deprives citizens of all common passions, mutual necessities, need of a common understanding, opportunity for combined action: it ripens them, so to speak, in private life. They had a tendency to hold themselves aloof from each other: it isolates them. They looked coldly on each other: it freezes their souls.

If individualism is, as the authors of Habits of the Heart wrote, “the first language in which Americans tend to think about their lives,” it makes sense that people would reach for their mother tongue in times of upheaval. In the days after the 2016 election, for example, searches for the term self-care spiked. Caring for yourself takes different forms, of course, though in mainstream culture, self-care is commonly used to mean treating yourself, by yourself. Self-soothing, alone. (One can see in this echoes of Ralph Waldo Emerson’s essay “Self-Reliance”: “Nothing can bring you peace but yourself.”)

But caring for yourself doesn’t always have to breed isolation. Among activists and in the helping professions, self-care is often talked about as a way to restore people so that they don’t burn out and can continue their altruistic work. Some in these circles critique a focus on self-care as distracting from the need for institutional support. But the overall conception at least shows an understanding of the two types of care as having a symbiotic relationship: Care for the self so that you can show up for others.

[Read: Focus on the things that matter]

What’s more, caring for others is a form of self-care. Research shows that doing things for other people leads to greater well-being than trying to make yourself happy or indulging yourself. This is not to say there is no place for self-soothing or solitude, or for buying yourself a little treat. But it is to challenge the cultural message that turtling up alone is the most appropriate response to difficult feelings.

Under an administration for which (to paraphrase my colleague Adam Serwer) cruelty, not care, is the point, it falls to people to care for one another on scales small and large. This task is made harder not just by the cultural pressure for Americans to rely only on themselves but also by the slow, steady atrophying of the muscles of togetherness. “American individualism resists more adult virtues, such as care and generativity, let alone wisdom,” the authors of Habits of the Heart wrote. The inverse, I hope, is true too: that care and generativity—working to make contributions to a collective future—are the path to resisting hyper-individualism and isolation.

Even if turning inward is a big-picture trend, it is, of course, not the only development happening. As isolating as the pandemic lockdown was, those years saw the rise of mutual-aid groups determined to care for the vulnerable whether the government did or not. During the first Trump administration, mass protests broke out; people fought for women’s rights and an end to racist police brutality. People are always showing up for one another in quiet, everyday ways too. Building networks of support and commitment could provide some small buffer against the effects of a self-serving president-elect’s policies while keeping people from drifting further apart.

Americans’ skills of connection and care are not lost. But they are rusty. And all of us will need those skills if we are to find a way to turn toward one another instead of inward. I’m not even talking about overcoming political polarization or reaching out to build bridges with strangers who voted differently than you did. Those are tasks that people won’t be equipped to tackle if they’re struggling to show up for the loved ones already in their life. For now, it is enough of a challenge to attempt to reverse the isolationist inertia of decades. It is enough of a challenge to resist what has become a cultural tendency to withdraw, while also processing the stress of an election that has left many people exhausted and deeply afraid for the future. How do we proceed over the next four years? Not alone. How do we proceed over the next week, hour, minute? Not alone.

​​When you buy a book using a link on this page, we receive a commission. Thank you for supporting The Atlantic.


Read full article on: theatlantic.com
Commanders vs. Eagles odds, predictions: ‘TNF’ Same-Game Parlay, picks
Who would have thought that one of the NFC East’s most crucial matchups would take place between the Washington Commanders and the Philadelphia Eagles in Week 11?
9 m
nypost.com
Stream It Or Skip It: ‘Cross’ On Prime Video, Where Alex Cross Investigates A Serial Killer While Trying To Find Out Who Killed His Wife
Aldis Hodge stars as Alex Cross in a new series featuring James Patterson's signature detective in a brand new story.
9 m
nypost.com
‘The View’s Alyssa Farah Griffin Accuses Matt Gaetz Of Feeding Donald Trump A Conspiracy Claiming ‘Morning Joe’ Scarborough Was A Murderer
Griffin, who previously worked for the Trump administration, tried to stop Gaetz.
nypost.com
Jax Taylor admits to throwing furniture after catching Brittany Cartwright sending explicit photos to Julian Sensley: ‘Just saw red’
Page Six previously broke the news that Cartwright and Sensley had a "casual" physical relationship after she and Taylor separated in February.
nypost.com
Watch Live: Fed Chair Powell speaks on state of US economy
Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell is set to speak on interest rates, economic concerns and the state of the US economy at the Dallas Regional Chamber at 3pm EST.
nypost.com
Kraft Heinz ordered to face Mac & Cheese lawsuit over ‘no preservatives’ label
A federal judge said Kraft Heinz must face a proposed nationwide class action lawsuit over claims that its Kraft macaroni and cheese contains no artificial preservatives.
nypost.com
‘Survivor 47’ star Sol Yi calls Genevieve Mushaluk ‘one of the best players I’ve ever seen’
"She is a freak of nature when it comes to strategy in this game." — Sol Yi.
nypost.com
Michigan makes stunning $10.5 million NIL offer to flip No. 1 QB recruit Bryce Underwood from LSU
Some professional athletes wish they could have a piece of this NIL money.
nypost.com
'Say Nothing' draws strength from telling a focused story about the Troubles
FX's historical drama, based on Patrick Radden Keefe's award-winning nonfiction book, doesn't try to tell the whole history of the Troubles, focusing instead on a few key figures.
latimes.com
Anne Hathaway and son nearly crashed into by Knicks player OG Anunoby in courtside mishap
The "Devil Wears Prada" star shares sons Jonathan, 8, and Jack, who turns 5 this month, with her husband, Adam Shulman. The couple married in 2012.
nypost.com
Deep dives and horsing around: Here’s what a wedding looks like when you’re passionate about sports
Here’s a look at couples scoring the perfect sports-themed wedding ceremony, giddy-up getaways and advice on how to make your “I do” a hole-in-one.
nypost.com
Big Oil breaks with Trump on potential second withdrawal from Paris climate agreement
The CEO of ExxonMobil said President-elect Trump should keep the U.S. in the Paris climate agreement during his second term in the White House.
foxnews.com
Linkin Park announces 2025 ‘From Zero Tour.’ Get tickets today
The genre-bending group will rock out at the Barclays Center on July 29.
nypost.com
The latest on Teddi Mellencamp’s affair drama: looming divorce, clues of cheating, more
News recently broke that Teddi Mellencamp allegedly cheated on her estranged husband, Edwin Arroyave, with her married friend Simon Schroder.  From backlash online to exclusive details, Page Six has everything you need to know about her alleged affair. Watch the full video to learn more about the scandal.  Subscribe to our YouTube for the latest...
nypost.com
NY Times columnist slams Dems over denials about crime, migrants and inflation across US cities: ‘Shut the f–k up’
New York Times columnist Ezra Klein slammed Democrats over their stubborn denials that US cities are plagued with rising crime, saying they need to "shut the f--k up."
nypost.com
Dolly Parton just dropped a limited-edition jewelry collection with Kendra Scott
These styles might sell out faster than a 9 to 5 day.
nypost.com
Top GOP senators warn DOJ to preserve Jack Smith docs in Trump cases, citing 'past destruction' of records
Sens. Grassley and Johnson put the DOJ on notice, telling them not to get rid of any records regarding Jack Smith's investigations into Trump.
foxnews.com
Bell Gardens priest supported political candidates, apparently violating federal law: 'I won't stop'
Father Nabor Rios of the St. Gertrude the Great Catholic Church told worshipers to vote for a candidate during a Mass in late October, a violation of a longstanding federal law that prohibits religious and nonprofits from campaigning for or against a candidate.
latimes.com
Ohio House passes bill that would restrict transgender student access to school bathrooms
Transgender students may soon be prevented from using bathrooms that align with their gender identity after the Ohio state Senate sent a bill to Gov. Mike DeWine to sign.
foxnews.com
Durbin on Gaetz ethics report as Congress reacts to Trump's attorney general pick
Illinois Sen. Dick Durbin, the Senate's majority whip, is calling for the preservation of the report and any documentation pertaining to the House Ethics Committee inquiry into Florida Rep. Matt Gaetz. CBS News' Scott MacFarlane has more.
cbsnews.com
Mike Tyson says 'psychedelic breakthrough' changed his outlook on life, spurred him to fight again
Mike Tyson said that a 'psychedelic breakthrough' changed his outlook on life, and spurred him to fight again during a recent appearance on "Let's Go!"
foxnews.com
Brace for the Storm
The first year of Trump’s new administration may be as dangerous as the last of his old.
theatlantic.com
Gigi Hadid chows down on a pretzel and more star snaps
Gigi Hadid has a snack on set, Amy Schumer gets a check-up and more snaps...
nypost.com
Daniel Penny trial resumes as fellow Marine vet explains chokehold training on witness stand
A Marine veteran and martial arts instructor who served alongside New York City subway chokehold suspect Daniel Penny takes the witness stand.
foxnews.com
Tropical Storm Sara tracker: Map and projected storm path
Sara is the 18th named storm of the hurricane season.
washingtonpost.com
One of L.A's best birding hot spots is on a military base in the desert
Piute Ponds is the largest freshwater marsh in L.A. County and, thanks to its location, attracts an estimated 300 bird species to its grounds on Edwards Air Force Base.
latimes.com
Parenting Under Trump 2.0
Plus: how to manage election grief.
slate.com
Steve McQueen reveals prostate cancer diagnosis, paused filming ‘Blitz’ for treatment
Steve McQueen learned he had cancer just before he was set to start filming "Blitz."
nypost.com
Kendall Jenner ditches blond hair in favor of brunette bob
The model is no stranger to a dramatic beauty transformation, this time she changed the cut and color at the same time.
nypost.com
Amid revolutionary changes, UCLA extends athletic director Martin Jarmond's contract
Despite some criticism from UCLA fans over football coaching the past few years, athletic director Martin Jarmond's contract was extended.
latimes.com
The Trump Cabinet Is a Clown Car So Far. Thank God.
It could be worse. Really!
slate.com
Tropical Storm Sara to blast Central America with life-threatening flooding, mudslides
According to COPECO, residents living along the banks of rivers and in other low-lying areas have been told to take preventive measures. Precautions are also being taken for vessels in ports while work on land continues to secure roofs and clear drains and ditches to try and prevent urban flooding.
nypost.com
Diversity will suffer with five-day office mandates, research suggests
Researchers say RTO mandates could hurt women and underrepresented workers, who are more likely to avoid companies that don’t offer flexibility.
washingtonpost.com
Travis Kelce blushes over how ‘very happy’ he is dating Taylor Swift
It looks like Travis Kelce is “enchanted” by Taylor Swift. The NFL star gushed about how ‘very happy’ he is dating the singer in a new episode of his “New Heights” podcast.  Watch the full video to learn more about this subtle look into their relationship.  Subscribe to our YouTube for the latest on all your...
nypost.com
Selena Gomez ‘felt stunted’ by child stardom: ‘It was a very difficult time’
"I try my hardest to stay positive about everything and focus on things like this that really make me happy," she said of her new movie, "Emilia Pérez."
nypost.com
Is this a ‘glow’ up? Neon hair trend hits Brazil 
This glow-in-the-dark hair art is no joke. From The Joker to Eminem to Cheetos mascot Chester Cheetah, pop culture’s wildest personalities, real and fictional, are gracing the scalps of Brazilians. It’s the brainchild of artist Jonas Lima Pereria, 26, aka Dog Crazy, who combines decals with ultraviolet hair dye to bring the characters to life.
nypost.com
What's next for Congress after Trump's Gaetz nomination, other team picks?
Many of President-elect Donald Trump's team picks for his second term in the White House will have to go through the Senate confirmation process. Also, an expected House ethics inquiry into Florida Rep. Matt Gaetz, Trump's pick for attorney general, could affect how Congress acts during his confirmation process. CBS News' Caitlin Huey-Burns reports.
cbsnews.com
Bipartisan calls grow to release House ethics report on AG nominee Matt Gaetz amid sexual misconduct allegations 
Senators from both parties demanded Thursday to see a potentially damning House Ethics Committee report on far-right former Rep. Matt Gaetz before deciding whether to confirm him as attorney general.
nypost.com
Get your home holiday-ready with the help of these 11 cleaning essentials
'Tis the season for cleaning – here are 11 essentials to help get your home holiday-ready.
foxnews.com
FBI arrests Houston man for alleged ISIS ties, terror plot on US soil
The FBI field office in Houston arrested a man charged with providing material support to ISIS and planning a terrorist attack on American soil.
foxnews.com
My favorite rabbit vibrator is $77 off ahead of Black Friday
My bedside drawer's MVP is on major sale right now.
nypost.com
Plane crashes upside in Sherman Oaks. Passengers exit unharmed
The pilot and passenger of the Cessna aircraft got out before firefighters arrived and declined to be taken to a hospital.
latimes.com
What does today’s ‘village’ to raise a child look like?
Today’s parents are reinventing what it means to rely on their “village” when it comes to raising a child, new research finds.
nypost.com
Shop Best Buy’s Black Friday sale: Save hundreds on TVs, headphones, laptops
The *best buys*, obviously.
nypost.com
Florida AG files lawsuit against FEMA over alleged political discrimination against Trump supporters
Florida Attorney General Ashley Moody is suing current and former FEMA officials after allegations that the agency ignored storm victims who supported President-elect Trump.
foxnews.com
Jimmy Kimmel Calls Trump Out For Having A “Gracious” Meeting With President Biden After Accusing Him Of Being “Evil” During The Election
Kimmel also joked that their conversation in the White House sounded like "two guys talking about their bowel movements."
nypost.com
‘Red One’ review: Chris Evans and The Rock kill Christmas with 0-star, $250 million turd
If you see it, yule regret it. 
nypost.com
Does debt consolidation or debt forgiveness make more sense with bad credit?
Finding the right solution to your high-rate credit card debt can be tough if your credit is less than ideal.
cbsnews.com