يحاول ذهب - حر

The Loneliness Bug Biting India's Working Young

September 09, 2025

|

The New Indian Express Dharmapuri

Young workers in a new city who embrace a busy work-and-party lifestyle lack the comfort and support of genuine friends. It's warping expectations in a consequential way

- HARISH BIJOOR

The seed of this column was planted exactly 14 months ago. I was delivering the inaugural keynote address at an offsite in Udaipur for an IT firm of repute. There were 350 people in the audience from the key client-facing realm of bleeding-edge work. My hour-long address was followed by a question-answer session. At the end of 20 minutes of Q&A, I decided to reverse the format and said I would give questions to the audience that anyone could answer. I got to ask just one question, though—as about 40 people wanted to answer that one first question. The answers shook me up a bit. It has been the subject of my probe in corporate organizations over the last year, and it is the subject of my column today.

The question, then: "What is the biggest regret of your working life to date as an employee and a human being, in that order?" Surprisingly, the answers were all more or less the same, all pointing to a cluster of thoughts that led one to the narrow alley of loneliness. Loneliness seems to be the biggest corporate disease around. The working person is today more lonely than ever. While some realize it, others don't.

Everyone, however, is making some kind of effort to fill in this vacuum. The working man and woman are lonely. The younger ones seem more prone to this "disease" than the older ones. The married ones who started a family rather young seem to have escaped, while those still single and looking to form relationships seem to be on a different boat altogether. This is a massive ship of the lonely that's lurking.

المزيد من القصص من The New Indian Express Dharmapuri

The New Indian Express Dharmapuri

Moscow says will abide by Indian laws

SC: Don't want to pass order which may hurt Russia ties

time to read

1 min

November 02, 2025

The New Indian Express Dharmapuri

Connect Before You Correct

Facts rarely change minds; warmth does. Connection disarms defensiveness, turning resistance into willingness to learn

time to read

4 mins

November 02, 2025

The New Indian Express Dharmapuri

Share of women still low in global peace ops

A quarter century after the UN Security Council first linked gender equality to peace and security, women still make up less than one in ten soldiers and fewer than one in three civilian staff in multilateral peace operations.

time to read

2 mins

November 02, 2025

The New Indian Express Dharmapuri

The New Indian Express Dharmapuri

So You Think You are an Empath?

In this epoch of information overload, we watch a thousand crises unfold every day, where the sacred mixes with the profane at top speed, where the latest war updates are followed in quick succession by clips on how to wear a mekhela chador the proper way, how to make naan on an overturned tawa, what Ji Chang Wook said at the Gucci launch. This is popcorn for the brain, a topic I have addressed in an earlier column; we ingest everything, gulp it down, then move quickly on to the next snippet. Who really has the time to linger?

time to read

2 mins

November 02, 2025

The New Indian Express Dharmapuri

... Cong targets ‘corruption’ in civic bodies

GUJARAT Congress has launched a scathing attack on the BJP government, alleging massive corruption across municipalities.

time to read

1 min

November 02, 2025

The New Indian Express Dharmapuri

THE LONG GAME OF BELONGING IN A CITY

WHO does the city really belong to? Those who are born there, those who made it their home, those who migrate there to work and build a life, or those who work for it?

time to read

3 mins

November 02, 2025

The New Indian Express Dharmapuri

S’pore submits Zubeen’s autopsy, toxicology reports

THE Assam Police have received crucial postmortem and toxicology reports of music icon Zubeen Garg from Singapore authorities.

time to read

1 min

November 02, 2025

The New Indian Express Dharmapuri

More or Less

AS SPACES SHRINK AND ECO-AWARENESS RISES, URBAN INDIANS ARE EMBRACING MINIMALIST DESIGN

time to read

3 mins

November 02, 2025

The New Indian Express Dharmapuri

Behind Closed Doors

Inside India's growing constellation of private supper clubs, cultural circles, and members-only societies

time to read

2 mins

November 02, 2025

The New Indian Express Dharmapuri

The New Indian Express Dharmapuri

'We can't Live Under a Threat'

Rebecca Ferguson speaks with Hilary Morgan about her latest film, A House of Dynamite, and why it is important to have conversations about nuclear powers

time to read

3 mins

November 02, 2025

Listen

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size