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Psychology says it's normal for our social circles to shrink in our 60s and 70s — it's exactly what a healthy nervous system does when the time horizon ahead gets shorter, quietly narrowing attention to the relationships that still feel like home, and the friends who fell away were almost never the ones doing the loving in the first place

This narrowing isn't loss—it's refinement. It's after decades of data collection, finally understanding what it needs to feel safe and seen.

Lifestyle

This narrowing isn't loss—it's refinement. It's after decades of data collection, finally understanding what it needs to feel safe and seen.

Most people think shrinking social circles in our 60s and 70s represent some kind of defeat. We picture lonely seniors abandoned by fair-weather friends, sitting in empty rooms wondering where everyone went.

But here's what actually often happens: your nervous system gets smarter about where to invest its limited energy.

After decades of spreading yourself thin across dozens of relationships, your brain starts doing the math differently. Time becomes tangible. Energy becomes precious. And suddenly, spending three hours at a networking event feels like throwing money into a fire.

The biology of becoming selective

Experts call this socioemotional selectivity theory, but I prefer to think of it as your brain finally getting its priorities straight.

Basically as we get older, something shifts in how we process social information. The part of your nervous system that used to light up for every potential connection starts conserving its enthusiasm for relationships that actually feed you.

I noticed it first at industry events. Where I once worked the entire room, collecting business cards like poker chips, I found myself gravitating toward the same three people. My body would literally feel heavier when approaching certain conversations. What I initially mistook for antisocial behavior was actually my nervous system trying to protect me from energy vampires.

The research backs this up. A longitudinal study following 235 male Harvard University students over 71 years found that their emotional support networks decreased by approximately 50% between the ages of 30 and 90. 

But here's the kicker—research also suggests that older adults often feel more satisfied with their friendships than younger people do, even though their social circles tend to be smaller.

Your brain rewires itself to prioritize depth over breadth. It's not that you become incapable of making new friends—you just become incredibly selective about who gets past the gates.

Why the friends who fall away were never really friends

After selling my restaurant, I conducted an accidental experiment in relationship physics. Without the gravitational pull of my business holding people in orbit, I got to see which relationships had their own momentum and which were just along for the ride.

The results were brutal and liberating. The supplier who called me "brother" for fifteen years? Haven't heard from him since the sale closed. The regular who claimed I made the best dishes in the city? He found a new favorite within weeks. The staff member I mentored for a decade, whose wedding I attended, whose kids called me uncle? Radio silence.

But here's what I learned: these weren't betrayals. They were clarifications. These relationships existed within a specific context, and when that context disappeared, so did the relationships. It's like discovering that what you thought was a friendship was actually just a really pleasant business arrangement.

The friends who remained were the ones who knew me before I had anything to offer them professionally. The couple who helped me move during my divorce, when I was too down to pack properly and just threw things in garbage bags. The friend who told me my second marriage was heading toward the same cliff as my first, risking our friendship to save my relationship. These people weren't attracted to what I could do for them—they were attracted to who I was, mess and all.

The unexpected freedom of a smaller circle

There's a weightlessness that comes with releasing relationships that were never quite right. It's like finally admitting those jeans from ten years ago are never going to fit again and clearing the closet space for clothes you actually wear.

With fewer relationships to maintain, the ones that remain get the attention they deserve. Instead of remembering fifty birthdays badly, I remember five properly. Instead of surface-level check-ins with twenty people, I have real conversations with three. My friend group could now fit in a Honda Civic, but the conversations we have could fill a library.

The pandemic accelerated this process for many of us. Stripped of casual interactions and forced proximity, we discovered which relationships could survive on intention alone. The friends who reached out during lockdown weren't always the ones I expected. Some of my "closest" friends disappeared entirely, while others I'd considered peripheral became central.

What healthy narrowing looks like

This isn't about becoming a hermit or cutting people off in some dramatic purge. It's a gradual, almost unconscious process of energy redistribution. You stop initiating plans with people who drain you. You decline invitations that feel like obligations. You let text threads die natural deaths instead of resuscitating them out of guilt.

The relationships that remain tend to share certain qualities. They're reciprocal—both people initiate contact, both people show up during crises, both people celebrate successes without making it competitive. They're also forgiving. These friends have seen you at your worst and decided you're worth keeping around anyway.

My remaining circle includes surprising members. My ex-wife, who knows exactly why our marriage failed and likes me anyway. A former competitor who became an ally after we both left the industry. A neighbor who started as someone I waved to and became someone I trust with my spare key and my fears.

These relationships have elasticity. We can go months without talking and pick up mid-conversation. We can disagree without it becoming a referendum on the friendship. We can be boring around each other without feeling like we're failing some entertainment standard.

Final words

The friends who fall away as we age were almost never the ones doing the loving in the first place. They were doing something else—networking, habit, proximity, mutual convenience. The ones who remain are the ones who were always going to remain, who saw through whatever performance you were putting on and decided to stick around for the real show.

This narrowing isn't loss—it's refinement. It's your nervous system, after decades of data collection, finally understanding what it needs to feel safe and seen. And if that means your social circle could fit around a small table, maybe that's exactly the size it was always supposed to be.

Gerry Marcos

Gerry Marcos is a food writer and retired restaurateur based in Vancouver, Canada. He spent more than thirty years running restaurants, starting with a small Greek-inspired diner that his parents helped him open after culinary school, and eventually operating three establishments across British Columbia. He closed his last restaurant in his late fifties, not from burnout but from a growing desire to think and write about food rather than produce it under pressure every night.

At VegOut, Gerry writes about food traditions, immigrant food stories, and the cultural memory embedded in how communities eat. His Greek-Canadian heritage gives him a perspective on food that is rooted in family, ritual, and the way recipes carry history across generations. He came to plant-based eating gradually, finding that many of the Mediterranean dishes he grew up with were already built around vegetables, legumes, and grains.

Gerry lives with his wife Maria in a house with a kitchen he designed himself and a garden that produces more tomatoes than two people can reasonably eat. He believes the best food writing makes you homesick for a place you have never been.

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