Older adults
Friendship in your sixties, seventies, and eighties looks very different from friendship in your thirties. The changes are real, and understanding them honestly can help you navigate what is actually a new chapter in social life.
Research consistently shows that friendship networks shrink from midlife onward. This is not a failure — it is partly intentional. Older adults tend to become more selective, prioritising close, meaningful relationships over wider social networks. The convoy model of social relations describes how people carry a core group of close relationships through life, with others joining and leaving over time.
The challenge arises when loss — through bereavement, relocation, or illness — removes key members of that core group faster than new relationships can form. The network shrinks not by choice but by circumstance, and the intentional part of the process can no longer keep up.
The positive aspect of this shift is that many older adults have a clearer sense of who they value and why. Superficial friendships matter less; honest, warm connection matters more. The challenge is that maintaining even a smaller network of meaningful relationships requires effort, and health or mobility issues can make that effort difficult.
Finding flexible, low-effort ways to maintain social contact — that do not require travel, scheduling, or navigating complex social environments — becomes increasingly important as the decades advance.
Mindfuse is an anonymous voice call app connecting real people for honest conversation. No travel, no scheduling, no social pressure — just a call when you want one. First conversation free, then €4 a month. iOS and Android.
Mindfuse connects real people for anonymous, warm voice conversations. Whenever and wherever works for you.
One free conversation · €4/month · iOS and Android