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25 votes
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The great rewiring: is social media really behind an epidemic of teenage mental illness?
28 votes -
The life-ruining power of routines: Habits don’t lead to personal optimisation. They lead to suffering.
32 votes -
How Iceland takes better care of its foreign criminal offenders than the rest of Europe
9 votes -
Beatriz Flamini, the woman who spent five hundred days in a cave
17 votes -
Loneliness results from an isolating society, not individual failures to pursue connection
45 votes -
Vast, desolate and magically odd – what is it about Iceland that makes musicians so desperate to record there?
3 votes -
Residents of Luleå, Sweden welcome new campaign encouraging them to say hello to each other during dark winter months
12 votes -
The bodily indignities of the space life
21 votes -
A vast northern European project is underway to combat isolation by promoting inclusion – we take a look at the results in Norway
9 votes -
In Threads’ dwindling engagement, social media’s flawed hypothesis is laid bare
17 votes -
How the richest country in the world has allowed its poor to remain poor
34 votes -
Isolation combined with an inhospitable environment can be a cause of stress on Greenland – but locals have found a way to deal with it: tuning into nature
3 votes -
IKEA has cut sick pay for unvaccinated workers, without mitigating circumstances, required to self isolate – retail giant acknowledged it was an emotive topic
23 votes -
US schoolteacher says she spent five hours in voluntary self-isolation in a plane's toilet after testing positive for Covid-19 on a flight to Iceland
8 votes -
Madhouse at the End of the Earth: A brief history of people losing their minds in Antarctica
5 votes -
Göteborg Film Festival is inviting one cinema fan to spend seven days on an isolated lighthouse island, with only movies and the sea for company
11 votes -
The Revolutionary Thoreau
2 votes -
Technology has been promising the dream of a cocooned future, and our pandemic isolation is giving us the rare opportunity to see where this road leads
12 votes -
After ten years in tech isolation, I’m now outsider to things I once had mastered
33 votes -
Hiking 100 miles alone on the Resurrection Pass Trail in Alaska
8 votes -
A man emerges from a 75-day silent retreat in Vermont
21 votes -
You are going to live in a rustic cabin in the mountains for four months. What do you bring?
This is a scenario question similar to the "You are stranded on a deserted island, what do you bring?" question. The following guidelines I offer stem from my planning and experiences, I begin my...
This is a scenario question similar to the "You are stranded on a deserted island, what do you bring?" question. The following guidelines I offer stem from my planning and experiences, I begin my 4 months shortly.
- There is no electricity, no running water, no plumbing, no cell phone service nor internet service.
- US Postal Service is available.
- It is about 45 minutes away from the nearest town and is located on United States Forest Service owned land.
- You will be sharing the cabin with several other like-minded people that you've never met before in a roommate dynamic.
- The accommodations are free through the program.
- This program runs a 9 days on, 5 days off work schedule. For the 9 days on, you will be camping along trails you are maintaining and not be at the cabin.
- Basic food storage (coolers), a solar shower, washboards and tables will be provided.
What do you bring? For functionality? To maintain comfort and/or sanity? Entertainment purposes? Keep in mind the point of this experience is to remove yourself from the grid, expose yourself to the rawness of nature and the elements. While it's tempting to say you'd bring a $10k solar/battery array, download all the things, and just host 5 day binge watching sessions with the bears, that's not the purpose. ;)
16 votes -
For those who (privately) aspire to become more reclusive
12 votes -
Why this woman chooses to live in a ghost town
6 votes -
Coronavirus isolation affects your brain — a neuroscientist explains how, and what to do about it
Social media makes it possible for us socialise far and wide. Reach out to friends online, call your parents, and learn how to practice mindfulness or meditation. Head to the backyard for a dose...
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Social media makes it possible for us socialise far and wide. Reach out to friends online, call your parents, and learn how to practice mindfulness or meditation.
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Head to the backyard for a dose of nature, or if you're in an apartment with no nature to gaze at, be sure to get to a green space for your exercise.
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To help improve your sleep, try sticking to a routine and avoid screen time for at least an hour before bed. And lay off the alcohol – it reduces the quality of your sleep.
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Just 10 minutes of exercise may improve our attention for the following two to four hours, so if you're struggling to focus, get that blood pumping.
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Give your isolation brain a boost by laying off the high-sugar or high-fat treats. Have healthy snacks on hand instead, like fruit, vegetables and nuts.
6 votes -
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No wonder coronavirus isolation is so tiring. All those extra, tiny decisions are taxing our brains.
10 votes -
In Iran, isolated musicians perform from rooftops
6 votes -
Virtual sex parties offer escape from isolation — if organizers can find a home
6 votes -
Iceland's forestry service has come up with a novel way to overcome the sense of isolation many people suffer because of Covid-19 – hug the trees
6 votes -
A home for all COVID-19 related Mental Health Resources - #IsolatedNOTAlone
5 votes -
Perception of space
3 votes -
San Francisco Bay Area doctors see flatter curve after two weeks of social isolation
10 votes -
With the UK on coronavirus lockdown, some young people have been forced to isolate alongside parents who don't accept their sexuality
12 votes -
What are some good party games that can be easily played via video chat?
My in-laws are wanting to do a distance game night soon where we meet up and play some party games together while on video chat from our separate locations. I think it's a wonderful idea, but I'm...
My in-laws are wanting to do a distance game night soon where we meet up and play some party games together while on video chat from our separate locations. I think it's a wonderful idea, but I'm also not sure what games we can play? Anyone have any ideas for some good, casual fun (think stuff like Pictionary/Charades) to be had via video chat, and how we can best set things up? Are there any good tools/websites that will help us out?
Also feel free to make suggestions that aren't necessarily applicable to my situation but still work for the question as a whole (e.g. a D&D campaign). I want this to be a resource for everyone, not just me.
16 votes -
Preliminary evidence suggests Bay Area shelter-in-place order is flattening the curve
11 votes -
A plea from doctors in Italy: To avoid Covid-19 disaster, treat more patients at home
6 votes -
All of New Zealand to go into a minimum four week self-isolation & lockdown period, to begin in 48 hours. All non-essential work and travel suspended
19 votes -
What it’s like to isolate with your girlfriend and her other boyfriend
17 votes -
An astronaut's guide to self-isolation
4 votes -
Don't even think about socially isolating from coronavirus in a vacation home – this was the message from Norway's government this weekend
8 votes -
itch.io: Self-isolation on a budget
10 votes -
What novel things can people do from home?
With the need for social distancing and self-isolation and #Stay(ing)TheFuckHome becoming near global realities, it is looking like many of us, and nearly everyone we know, will be spending large...
With the need for social distancing and self-isolation and #Stay(ing)TheFuckHome becoming near global realities, it is looking like many of us, and nearly everyone we know, will be spending large amounts of time staying in. I like this guide (thanks again, @aphoenix!), which ends with "Treat quarantine as an opportunity to do some of those things you never usually have time for."
Certainly we all have things in our life like that, but I also think it would be neat to try to brainstorm a list of things people can do for new experiences -- things they might not think to do or know are available to them. Everybody knows we can catch up on Netflix and our unread pile of books, but what else is out there? What can I do when I need a change of pace? What novel things can people do from home/online that don't require them to go out for resources/supplies?
18 votes -
Work From Home (WFH) Thread - March 16th, 2020
I suspect many of you are, like me, working from home today and in the near future. I thought that it might be nice to have a single thread where we can chat about WFH and our day to day lives...
I suspect many of you are, like me, working from home today and in the near future. I thought that it might be nice to have a single thread where we can chat about WFH and our day to day lives while self-isolating in order to feel a bit less isolated. If people think this kind of thing is a good idea, perhaps this can be a daily (or weekly o_o) thread.
Feel free to talk about:
- Day to day life at home
- What's on your agenda for work
- Your thoughts on self-isolating and quarantine.
- Casual talk that you might normally have with coworkers .
- Anything else! (Though of course, the rest of the site still exists)
I personally tend to get more work done while working from home as there are less interruptions in the form of meetings and informal breaks. So in a weird way I'm looking forward to this time in order to get quite a bit done. Still, it's hard not to get cabin fever.
How are you all doing?
19 votes -
Anyone arriving in Australia from overseas will to be forced to self-isolate for fourteen days
9 votes -
Everyone travelling to New Zealand from overseas to self-isolate
10 votes -
The invisible city: How a homeless man built a life underground
10 votes -
Splendid isolation: How I stopped time by sitting in a forest for twenty-four hours
5 votes -
In Norilsk, Russia's most isolated major city, the arrival of high-speed internet gave residents a new window onto the world
9 votes -
Making friends with a stranger changed my life
8 votes