“Our generation is lonelier so we’re friendship matchmakers”

Claire Thomson / BBC News Scotland:

Last year, Juliette Sartori decided she wanted to expand her social circle, so she went on a coffee date with three people she had never met before.

β€œIt went really well,” she said.

“We ended up speaking for two hours and I still speak to them today. We all keep in touch.”

Her friendship blind date was part of Dinner with a Stranger, the society Juliette and her flatmates started “on a whim” for fellow Glasgow University students who want to meet new people.

Juliette, 21, had moved to Scotland from the US to study business and management and said it was harder to instantly connect with others as she found people “had a wall up” and were closed off.

With students so plugged in and digital that they spend less time interacting with each other face-to-face, she didn’t have many opportunities to increase her circle of friends.

And so Dinner with a Stranger was born.

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