I came across this term recently, Radical Individualism, in my small group. At first, it was a phrase that felt foreign, like a sociological idea I’d never really thought about before. But the more I sat with it, the more I realized how deeply familiar it actually was. Because, in truth, it’s become the very air we breathe in modern society.
For much of my life, I wore independence like a badge of honor. I prided myself on being able to do everything on my own, convincing myself that needing others was weakness. I thought self-reliance meant strength. And while there is value in resilience, in determination, I’ve come to see how this mindset can also become destructive, both to ourselves and to the world around us.
Society celebrates the lone achiever, the “self-made” success story, the person who “needs no one.” We are told over and over that freedom is found in doing it all ourselves, carving our own path, and putting ourselves first. But if that’s true, then why are we living in one of the loneliest generations in history? Why are depression, anxiety, and suicide rates higher than ever before, especially in the very places where people have more material wealth, comfort, and opportunity than almost any other time in human history?
I think it comes down to radical individualism.

So what is it? Radical individualism is the belief that the highest good is personal autonomy, that the most important thing in life is the self: my rights, my choices, my freedom, my success, my happiness. It’s the airbrushed motto of our time: “Do you. Look out for number one. Live your truth.” It tells us that the self is ultimate, and that community, tradition, or collective responsibility come second, if at all.
We see it every day.
We see it in the way people are glued to their phones while sitting in a café surrounded by strangers they never acknowledge.
We see it in the endless pursuit of “financial freedom,” as if reaching a certain salary could somehow fulfil us.
We see it in the curated lives plastered across social media, the new car, the kitchen renovation, the big house, the promotion, the holiday abroad, all framed as proof of success, proof of worth. And always, it’s done “for ourselves.”
But radical individualism comes at a cost. It breeds discontent because there’s never enough, enough money, enough recognition, enough “likes.” Even when we get what we thought we wanted, the joy is fleeting. And so the cycle continues: striving, achieving, upgrading, isolating.
Research has shown people who tie their self-worth or happiness to financial success often end up more anxious, stressed, and dissatisfied, because the very thing they are chasing becomes the thing that enslaves them. And I can feel the weight of that truth, because I’ve seen it all around me, and at times within myself.
It also deepens economic inequality. We celebrate the entrepreneur who “made it on their own,” but rarely stop to consider the privileges that made their journey possible, the country they were born in, education, family wealth, networks, or systemic advantages that not everyone has.
Social media tells us that anyone can hustle their way to success, but the reality is far more complex. Radical individualism not only overlooks inequality, it disguises it. It tells the struggling single mother working two jobs that if she just tried harder, she could have the life of the influencer she sees online. It tells the young man in a developing nation that his lack of opportunity is his fault, not the result of global structures stacked against him.
But perhaps the most devastating consequence of radical individualism is loneliness.
We are lonely, even when we are not alone. Surrounded by people, but disconnected from them. We scroll instead of speak. We text instead of call. We fill every moment with noise and distraction, yet starve for real connection. We’ve forgotten what true community looks like, what it means to share life deeply, to carry one another’s burdens, to be seen and known not for what we achieve but simply for who we are.
And I know I’m guilty of this too. I get busy, distracted, consumed with my own responsibilities and worries. Before I know it, months have passed without calling friends back home. Even here on the ship, where I live alongside friends in close quarters, I can go a week without slowing down enough to really check in with them, to ask how they are, really are.
But I don’t think we were ever meant to live this way.
From the very beginning, God said, “It is not good for man to be alone.” We were created for community, for family, for friendship, for shared life. And when I look at the life of Jesus, I see this truth lived out in every step He took.
Jesus did not live as a radical individualist. He didn’t isolate Himself in pursuit of self-fulfilment or personal achievement. Instead, He lived in community. He chose disciples to walk alongside Him. He ate with people. He wept with people. He celebrated weddings, visited homes, taught in groups, healed in crowds. His ministry was built not on independence but on interdependence. Even as the Son of God, He modelled dependence, on the Father, on the Spirit, and on the relationships He cultivated around Him.
And this isn’t just a “Christian” truth. Even if you set faith aside for a moment, human history, psychology, and science all point to the same reality, we aren’t built to live only for ourselves. From the earliest days of humanity, survival depended on community. Tribes hunted together, shared resources, cared for one another’s children, and protected the vulnerable. Connection was not optional, it was life.
Even now, research consistently shows that people who are embedded in strong communities live longer, healthier, more fulfilled lives. Loneliness, on the other hand, has been linked to higher rates of depression, anxiety, heart disease, and even early death. We are literally wired, biologically, emotionally, socially, for connection, for reciprocity, for love.
And yet, in our modern culture, we’re encouraged to chase independence at all costs. To make our lives about “me” my goals, my family, my success, my comfort, my future. But deep down, most of us know that the things that make life truly meaningful are not the promotions or possessions, but the relationships. It’s the moments of laughter around a table, the shoulder offered in grief, the friend who answers the phone at 2 a.m., the neighbour who shows up when you’re sick.
But it’s not just about living in community, it’s about how we show up in it. True community isn’t simply being surrounded by people, it’s choosing to live in a way that is selfless, generous, and outward-focused. It’s not just asking, “What do I need?” but also, “What does my neighbor need? What can I give? How can I lighten someone else’s load?”
Our culture trains us to measure everything by personal gain, but the deepest meaning is found in giving ourselves away. Whether it’s sacrificing time to sit with someone in pain, sharing resources even when we don’t have much, or simply paying attention to someone who feels invisible, these are the moments that matter. These are the actions that create bonds strong enough to weather hardship. When we stop living only for ourselves and begin to think of others first, we don’t just build stronger communities, we become more whole ourselves.
So what does community mean today? It means slowing down. It means putting down the phone and looking someone in the eyes. It means choosing to call the friend you’ve been meaning to for months. It means showing up at a neighbor’s door with food. It means creating space at your table, even when life is messy and you feel like you have nothing to give. It means asking for help when you need it, and offering help when someone else does.
For me, it also means being intentional, reminding myself, sometimes daily, that I don’t want to be consumed by individualism. I don’t want to drift into a life where everything revolves around me, my goals, my needs, my comfort. I want to live in a way that reflects the community of Jesus: open, generous, sacrificial, and loving. A life that notices others. A life that doesn’t just say people matter, but shows it.
But if I’m being really honest, I know I fall short of this. A lot. I get busy, distracted, caught up in my own head. Too often, I choose convenience over community. I push aside that nudge to call a friend because I’m tired. I walk past opportunities to stop and listen because I’m in a rush. I tell myself I’ll “make time later,” but later doesn’t always come. Even on the ship, where I live surrounded by people I care about, I can go a week without really checking in, without slowing down enough to ask how someone is really doing.
And I don’t like admitting that. Because it reveals a gap between the life I want to live and the life I’m actually living. But naming it matters. It’s part of holding myself accountable, of choosing not to settle for good intentions but leaning toward change.
I know I need to grow in this. I want to be someone who reaches out more often, who makes space for others even when it’s inconvenient, who resists the pull to turn inward when life gets overwhelming. I want to do better at slowing down, at being present, at choosing people over productivity. Because deep down, I know that’s where the real beauty of life is found, in the moments we choose to step outside of ourselves and give.
Because at the end of the day, it’s not the new car, the promotion, or the financial freedom that will matter. It’s the people we walked alongside. The lives we touched. The love we gave and received.
We weren’t meant to live alone.
We were meant to live together.
And when we do, we discover that true joy, true fulfillment, and true freedom are found not in individualism, but in love.
