Why Young Men Lost Their Best Friends (And Why It Matters)
Introduction: the silent epidemic
Ask a 25-year-old man how many close friends he has -- friends to whom he could confide a real difficulty, a deep doubt, an intimate pain. Not colleagues, not party acquaintances, not social media contacts. Real friends.
The answer, more and more often, is zero.
The data is striking. In the United States, the proportion of men reporting they have no close friends rose from 3% in 1990 to 15% in 2023. The Lost Boys Report identifies social isolation as one of the central factors of the current male crisis.
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Chronic loneliness is a health risk factor as powerful as smoking 15 cigarettes a day. And young men are now the most affected demographic category.
1. Alexithymia: when words are missing to express emotions
The technical term is alexithymia -- literally, "the absence of words for emotions." It is a deficit in emotional competence that results from social learning: boys learn very early that emotions are feminine territory. "Stop crying." "Be a man." "It is not that bad."
The problem is that deep friendship relies on emotional sharing. If a man is incapable of formulating his emotions, he is structurally incapable of creating deep bonds.
The result: surface-level friendships. They talk about sports, work, politics, video games. But nobody ever says: "I am doing badly," "I am afraid," "I feel alone."
2. Male socialization: built for action, not for intimacy
Activity-based friendship
Boys build friendships around shared activities: playing football, cycling, video games. Friendship is a byproduct of the activity, not an end in itself. This model works during childhood but collapses in adulthood, when the frameworks disappear.The failed transition to adulthood
After high school or university, male friendships undergo progressive collapse. Women maintain friendships through emotional sharing; men do not -- not because they do not need to, but because they were never taught how.Implicit competition
Even within male friendships, a subtle layer of competition persists. Showing weakness means risking losing position in the implicit group hierarchy.3. The role of screens: apparent connection, real isolation
Social media and online games give the illusion of social connection. But the difference between digital connection and real connection is neurological. Real human contact activates specific neural circuits (oxytocin, ventral vagal system) essential for emotional regulation and belonging. Digital interactions do not activate them the same way.
The paradox is cruel: the more a young man spends time online, the more he feels socially connected, and the more he is in reality physiologically isolated.
4. Health consequences: what loneliness does to the body
- Mortality. Chronic loneliness increases the risk of mortality by 26%. More than obesity, more than sedentary behavior.
- Immune system. Social isolation weakens the immune system and increases chronic inflammation.
- Cardiovascular health. Loneliness is associated with a 29% increased risk of cardiovascular events and 32% increased risk of stroke.
- Mental health. Isolation is the number one risk factor for male dépression. In France, three out of four suicides are male.
- Cognition. Loneliness accelerates cognitive decline and increases the risk of dementia.
5. The vicious cycle: loneliness, shame, withdrawal
This cycle is all the harder to break because the masculine norm forbids naming it.
6. The manosphere as a community substitute
The rise of the manosphere cannot be understood without taking male loneliness into account. These movements offer something society no longer provides young men: a sense of belonging.
Fighting the manosphere without offering an alternative community is doomed to failure. Young men do not need to be told why Andrew Tate is wrong. They need a place where they can be vulnerable without being judged.
7. Solutions: rebuilding connections
At the individual level
- Learn emotional vocabulary. CBT emotional psychoeducation exercises are a good starting point.
- Dare incremental vulnerability. A simple "I had a rough week" can open a crack.
- Create social rituals. A weekly lunch, a regular sports session: any recurring framework that creates regularity.
At the collective level
- Men's groups. "Men's circles" and "male discussion groups" offer a secure framework for exploring emotions and creating authentic connections.
- Intergenerational mentoring. Programs connecting younger and older men offer dual benefit.
- Normalization in media. Every film, series or podcast that shows men truly talking to each other contributes to changing the norm.
8. The urgency of rebuilding
The male loneliness epidemic is a public health problem that kills -- through suicide, cardiovascular disease, accidents, addictions. It begins with recognizing that men need others, that this need is not a weakness, and that loneliness is not a choice -- it is suffering.
Conclusion
Young men no longer have friends. Not because they are antisocial, selfish or incapable of relationships. But because they were taught to be strong rather than connected, independent rather than supported, silent rather than expressive.
The price of this learning is paid in loneliness, dépression and suicide. It is time to change the rules.
Sources:
- Centre for Social Justice, The Lost Boys Report, 2025
- The Lost Boys -- YouTube
- Cox, D. A., The State of American Friendship, Survey Center on American Life, 2021
- Holt-Lunstad, J., Social Relationships and Mortality Risk, PLOS Medicine, 2010
- Cacioppo, J. T. & Patrick, W., Loneliness: Human Nature and the Need for Social Connection, 2008
Are you feeling isolated or would you like to better understand your relational patterns? Explore our psychology resources or take our psychological tests to assess your attachment style and emotional needs.
Watch: Go Further
To deepen the concepts discussed in this article, we recommend this video:
How To Be Confident - The School of LifeThe School of Life
About the author
Gildas Garrec · CBT Psychopractitioner
Certified practitioner in cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT), author of 16 books on applied psychology and relationships. Over 900 clinical articles published across Psychologie et Sérénité.
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