How many people would you call at 3 AM? The question lands differently now. In the decade of building careers, raising families, and maintaining appearances, something essential has slipped away. Quiet loneliness has become a familiar companion. This isn't about lacking friends. It's about the shift from weekly hangouts to scheduled coffee dates. From sharing dreams to sharing logistics. The connections that once felt effortless now require negotiation. And somewhere in transition, the question emerges: who actually sees you? The book explores how social health changes across adulthood. Not with panic or self-improvement pressure, but with honest observation. What happens when the friend who always understood becomes a stranger. When family obligations replace chosen community. When the silence after a hard day feels like a verdict. Mapping connection means understanding what you actually need versus what you've been told to want. It means recognizing that some friendships end not because of conflict, but because of drift. And that rebuilding doesn't require a party—just someone who notices when you're quiet. No prescriptions. No 30-day challenges. Just a companion for those who sense something is missing and are brave enough to name it.