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Vintage image from 1951 thriller
(Photo: Warner Bros./Archive Photos/Getty)
Healthy Habits

The Art of Talking to Strangers

Believe it or not, talking to new people won鈥檛 kill you

Published: 
Vintage image from 1951 thriller
(Photo: Warner Bros./Archive Photos/Getty)

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Part of me has always wanted to be the kind of person who breaks the ice with a fellow airplane passenger or engages in easy banter while in line at the grocery store. When I witness that kind gregariousness in others, I feel envy; I assume their lack of inhibition means they lead more exciting lives. How many grand love affairs or tales of adventure began because someone had the nerve to say hello? Alas, more often than not, talking to someone I don鈥檛 know inspires low-level dread, and I avoid it entirely.

I鈥檓 not alone. In a 2022 study, Gillian Sandstrom, a senior lecturer in psychology at the University of Sussex, noted that people are 鈥渞emarkably pessimistic鈥 about talking to strangers, despite copious research linking frequent social interactions with happiness. According to Sandstrom, we tend to exaggerate the potential for negative consequences in such encounters, and actively avoid them. As a countermeasure, she organized a weeklong scavenger hunt and gave participants 鈥渕issions鈥 that involved initiating conversations with strangers who met certain apparently arbitrary criteria (e.g., 鈥淔ind someone who鈥檚 wearing a hat鈥). The results aligned with Sandstrom鈥檚 hypothesis: on average, these random interactions were far more pleasant than people expected them to be.

Eager to test her theory, I gave myself a week to replicate Sandstrom鈥檚 assignment, which meant speaking to around 30 people. I had no excuse not to try: I live in New York City and encounter hundreds of strangers every week. If I forced myself to talk to enough passing randos, maybe it would begin to feel more natural.

How many tales of adventure began because someone had the nerve to say hello? Alas, more often than not, talking to someone I don鈥檛 know inspires low-level dread, and I avoid it entirely.

The hardest part of starting a conversation with a stranger is finding an excuse to talk to them that didn鈥檛 verge on the creepy. One of my missions was to speak to someone who was eating. 鈥淚s that scallion cream cheese?鈥 I asked a guy on a park bench who was stuffing his face. It came out a little more aggressive than I intended, but once he realized that I wasn鈥檛 a maniac, we had a delightful conversation about the decadence of the everything bagel. When I spoke to an attractive woman on crutches for my task of engaging someone who 鈥渓ooks sad,鈥 I was paranoid she鈥檇 figure me for a pickup artist. Instead, she humored me when I told her about my knee issues.

Here鈥檚 a tip: if you can pull it off without being too cute, asking strangers about the perks of talking to strangers can be an effective strategy. I used this approach with people required to interact with the public as part of their job. Among the bartenders and hairdressers I spoke with, a common response was that chatting with customers was one of the most enjoyable aspects of their day, providing a little burst of unpredictability. A caf茅 worker with peroxide-blond hair told me that he was an expert at guessing a customer鈥檚 order based on their appearance鈥攜oga clothes? almond chai latte鈥攂ut felt a distinct joy whenever he got it wrong.

The same can be said about an impromptu exchange with someone you encounter on the street. My experiment didn鈥檛 transform me into a fearless extrovert. But it was a useful reminder that when it comes to keeping life interesting, it pays to make room for the occasional surprise.

From January/February 2023 Lead Photo: Warner Bros./Archive Photos/Getty

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