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The Reality of Adult Friendship: Here’s Why You’re Lonely & How to Make Real Friends as an Adult

2026-05-07 Education
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Mel Robbins
Mel Robbins
5.7m subscribers

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Description

Order your copy of The Let Them Theory 👉 https://melrob.co/let-them-theory 👈 The #1 Best Selling Book of 2025 🔥 Discover how much power you truly have. It all begins with two simple words. Let Them. — If you’ve ever felt like making friends as an adult feels impossible, or you’ve looked around and thought, "Where did all my friends go?" – you are not alone. Or maybe you have friends, and you want deeper connections, but you don’t know how to create it without forcing it. Friendship is hard right now. Which is why today, Mel is sitting down with Harvard-trained social scientist and bestselling author, Kasley Killam, who has spent the last 15 years researching friendship, connection, and loneliness. Have you ever wondered why the friendships that once felt close now feel distant? Why you genuinely want to see people more, but somehow always end up canceling? Or why making new friends as an adult feels so forced and exhausting when it never used to? There's a reason for all of that. And today, Kasley is giving you the answer. She is also raising the stakes on friendship and explaining why social health is the missing key to living a longer, healthier, and happier life. Kasley has conducted positive psychology research at the University of Pennsylvania and launched an award-winning initiative at Stanford that promotes empathy and kindness. And in this conversation, she’s here to clear up the confusion, cut through the excuses, and give you the tools that make connection feel doable again. You’ll also learn the 4 friendship styles - and identify which one you are - so you’ll finally understand why friendship drains you, why it feels easy for some people, and what you specifically need to create the relationships you want. In this episode, you’ll learn: -Why adult friendship feels so hard (and how to make it easier) -Why social health is a missing pillar of well-being -The Excuse vs. Need framework for connection -The Swap Strategy to feel less lonely, fast -The 5-3-1 Rule for stronger friendships -How to deepen the relationships you already have -Exactly how to make new friends as an adult -Why connection is essential - not optional No matter your age or stage of life, it’s not too late. If you’ve felt lonely, disconnected, or like building real friendship is impossible, this conversation will show you exactly what to do next, with steps that are simple, specific, and realistic. For more resources related to today’s episode, click here for the podcast episode page: https://www.melrobbins.com/episode/episode-393/ Follow The Mel Robbins Podcast on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/themelrobbinspodcast I’m just your friend. I am not a licensed therapist, and this podcast is NOT intended as a substitute for the advice of a physician, professional coach, psychotherapist, or other qualified professional. Got it? Good. I’ll see you in the next episode. In this episode: 0:00 Introduction 9:56 4 Ways to Strengthen Your Social Health (Backed by Research) 12:09 Loneliness Epidemic: How Loneliness Changes Your Brain 16:47 How Friendships Improve Physical Health & Wellbeing 19:58 Stop Cancelling Plans: How to Make Time for Friends 34:46 How to Navigate Social Anxiety 39:07 Why You Feel Lonely Even With Friends 42:02 Too Tired, Stressed, or Busy to Socialize? 47:40 How to Feel Confident Making Friends 52:02 How to Make Friends With a Full-Time Job 54:22 How to Make New Friends as an Adult 56:16 The Best Formula to Improve Your Social Life 59:40 The 4 Friendship Styles: Which One Are You? — Follow Mel: Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/melrobbins/ TikTok: http://tiktok.com/@melrobbins Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/melrobbins LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/melrobbins Website: http://melrobbins.com​ — Sign up for Mel’s newsletter: https://melrob.co/sign-up-newsletter A note from Mel to you, twice a week, sharing simple, practical ways to build the life you want. — Subscribe to Mel’s channel here: https://www.youtube.com/melrobbins​?sub_confirmation=1 — Listen to The Mel Robbins Podcast 🎧 New episodes drop every Monday & Thursday! https://melrob.co/spotify https://melrob.co/applepodcasts https://melrob.co/amazonmusic — Looking for Mel’s books on Amazon? Find them here: The Let Them Theory: https://amzn.to/3IQ21Oe The Let Them Theory Audiobook: https://amzn.to/413SObp The High 5 Habit: https://amzn.to/3fMvfPQ The 5 Second Rule: https://amzn.to/4l54fah

Top Comments (10)

@ReneeMarie-m3f 2026-05-07

I'm 65 years old I've lost 8 persons in the last 3 years Husband 40 year old Best friend Brother Cousins Aunts just lost my mother Definitely lonely Podcast working Exercise working The grief is overwhelming Im sad mad Im working it Thanks Mel

82 14 replies
@jackiekim3983 2026-05-07

I often feel drained after spending time with people, so I prefer being alone. But I’m not lonely—I genuinely enjoy my own company. Reading books, watching Netflix, and going for walks make me feel content, and I don’t feel lonely at all.

79 7 replies
@aejiongco 2026-05-07

Adult friendship is “hard” partly because modern friendships often come with emotional maintenance contracts nobody talks about. Constant texting, validation, social obligations, listening to drama, forced gatherings, and managing other people’s insecurities can feel more exhausting than fulfilling for some people. Not everyone is lonely when alone. Some people are simply peaceful, independent, selective, and mentally clearer with less social noise. Society keeps pushing the idea that more social connection automatically equals better mental health, but quality matters more than quantity. A lot of Harvard-trained social science takes human interaction and turns it into a universal prescription. Real life is more nuanced. Some people genuinely thrive with strong community. Others thrive with solitude, routine, autonomy, and a very small circle. Neither is “wrong.” Different nervous systems, different personalities, different definitions of fulfillment.

62 4 replies
@arthivikram2440 2026-05-08

I love your podcasts, but once I shifted my mindset from trying to live a certain way to simply handling things as they come, I stopped feeling lonely. What was mentally draining me wasn’t being alone — it was the pressure that I shouldn’t be alone, that I needed to have friends or constantly socialize.

49 2 replies
@chrishardtman9344 2026-05-07

I’m becoming the friend who invites others over for things like a crafting night or paint and sip (I’m an artist) or a bbq and pool day. I used to be so scared that no one would show but they do! I have to take action!

42 5 replies
@pugginspice 2026-05-07

This is fascinating, In the dead of winter this year (I live in NH) I started a weekly mahjong group with 4 ladies. Our group has grown to 8 ladies. We play for around 2.5 hours and it’s now one of my favorite things each week. We all look forward to mahjong Wednesdays. No one looks at a phone and it feels great ❤.

28 3 replies
@melanieknight6597 2026-05-07

I’m listening to the podcast and I think honestly modern society and technology has helped with the isolation issue as well as the increasing lack of social skills. Pretty much all of my friends don’t really know how to listen. I’m the listener in my group and will let my friends take their time in what they have to say.. I’ll validate their feelings and ask questions… but when I need to talk, if I talk more than a few minutes, many of them are clearly not listening or they will interrupt me or turn the conversation back to themselves. I really think listening and social skills are becoming extinct

23 2 replies
@FirstUSFinance 2026-05-07

After being around yappy sales people and customers all day sometimes the last thing I want to do is talk/share/visit with other people. Growing up as an only-child, I find great happiness in being alone sometimes; I think being content alone is actually a sign of strong mental health.

23 1 replies
@maryconnolly3039 2026-05-09

I made my New Year's resolution that if someone crosses my mind, I will send them a text or a phone call. I will reach out immediately. No matter what I'm doing and I've done that since the beginning of this year. And I will continue to live like that because it does make a difference

17 1 replies
@MichelleHennricks 2026-05-12

It gets exhausting when you are the only one to reach out though.

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