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Nearly half of all Danish households contain exactly one person. In a country celebrated worldwide for hygge, bicycles, social cohesion, and one of the highest qualities of life on Earth, this number doesn't just surprise — it shatters the picture entirely.

In this episode of Heliox: Where Evidence Meets Empathy, we dive deep into a landmark 2026 sociological study by researcher Tulia Jack: Home Alone: Solo Living Pathways, Everyday Experiences, and Policy Implications for Sharing and Sustainability. Jack didn't just analyze census data — she visited solo dwellers in their homes, from a 27-year-old urban transplant to a 90-year-old empty nester, and asked them to trace the exact sequence of decisions, market failures, heartbreaks, and cultural conditioning that brought them to a life lived alone.

What she found upends the cultural narrative of independence. For most solo dwellers, living alone is not a triumphant choice. It's an accident. A byproduct of a broken housing market, rigid expectations of adulthood, and — most profoundly — an exhausting, invisible second shift of domestic and emotional labor that disproportionately burdens women in even the world's most gender-progressive societies.

In this episode:

••The bike lanes analogy: why we have to build the infrastructure for sharing, not just ask people to tolerate bad roommates

Reference: Why we live alone—and what it means for the climate and our sense of community

This is Heliox: Where Evidence Meets Empathy

Independent, moderated, timely, deep, gentle, clinical, global, and community conversations about things that matter.  Breathe Easy, we go deep and lightly surface the big ideas.

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Disclosure: This podcast uses AI-generated synthetic voices for a material portion of the audio content, in line with Apple Podcasts guidelines. 

We make rigorous science accessible, accurate, and unforgettable.

Produced by Michelle Bruecker and Scott Bleackley, it features reviews of emerging research and ideas from leading thinkers, curated under our creative direction with AI assistance for voice, imagery, and composition. Systemic voices and illustrative images of people are representative tools, not depictions of specific individuals.

We dive deep into peer-reviewed research, pre-prints, and major scientific works—then bring them to life through the stories of the researchers themselves. Complex ideas become clear. Obscure discoveries become conversation starters. And you walk away understanding not just what scientists discovered, but why it matters and how they got there.

Independent, moderated, timely, deep, gentle, clinical, global, and community conversations about things that matter.  Breathe Easy, we go deep and lightly surface the big ideas.

Spoken word, short and sweet, with rhythm and a catchy beat.
http://tinyurl.com/stonefolksongs