When offices shut down in 2020, remote work was framed as a temporary fix. Nearly six years later, hybrid and remote work are no longer emergency measures but the default for millions of professionals
worldwide.
What is now becoming clear is that hybrid work has reshaped more than schedules and commutes. It may be quietly altering how people interact, disagree, collaborate, and even tolerate everyday social friction at work. For many professionals, particularly younger ones, the problem is no longer burnout alone; it is social atrophy.
Across surveys, interviews, and psychological studies published towards the end of 2025, a recurring theme has emerged: people are finding it harder to “be around” others at work. Small talk feels exhausting; meetings feel intrusive; conflict feels unbearable; presence itself feels unnatural. This is not social anxiety in the clinical sense, but something subtler — a loss of social muscle memory.
What Loneliness At Work Means
In November 2025, a large-scale global workplace survey by Gallup found that 26% of hybrid workers and 29% of fully remote workers reported feeling “frequently lonely,” compared to 19% of fully in-office employees. Among workers aged 22 to 30, the figure rose to nearly one in three. The data showed that loneliness levels had plateaued at high levels rather than declining as pandemic effects faded.
An India-focused December 2025 report by the Indian Institute of Human Settlements and a private HR analytics firm found that urban professionals working hybrid schedules reported significantly lower “informal social confidence” than peers who worked mostly on-site. Respondents described discomfort with spontaneous conversations, hesitation in voicing disagreement, and a preference for asynchronous communication even when colleagues were physically present.
Mental health helplines and corporate counselling services in India have also reported a shift in work-related anxiety. Counsellors say fewer callers cite workload alone. Instead, many report stress around team interactions, office days, networking events, and “being seen.”
Hybrid Work And The Disappearance Of Social Apprenticeship
One of the most under-discussed impacts of hybrid work is what psychologists call “social apprenticeship”. Before the pandemic, early-career employees learned how to behave at work not through formal training but through proximity. They observed how seniors disagreed, how meetings unfolded, how humour was used, how tension was resolved, and how relationships formed over time.
For a large cohort of Gen Z professionals in India, that apprenticeship never happened. Many entered the workforce between 2020 and 2023 through laptops, Slack channels, and video calls. Their professional identities were formed in isolation, without the low-stakes, everyday interactions that slowly build social competence.
Workplace psychologists interviewed in late 2025 say this gap is now visible. Young professionals are often technically competent but socially tentative. They may avoid asking questions in person, misread tone in meetings, or feel overwhelmed by group dynamics that older colleagues take for granted.
This does not mean younger workers are “worse” at socialising. It means they were trained for a different environment — one that rewarded clarity over nuance and efficiency over rapport.
Why Return-To-Office Pushback Is Not Just About Flexibility
Throughout December 2025, companies across sectors quietly began tightening return-to-office expectations for 2026. The language used was familiar: culture, collaboration, innovation. But employee resistance, particularly among younger staff, has been intense and often misunderstood.
While return-to-office debates are usually framed around productivity or work-life balance, many experts argue that resistance is rooted in something deeper. For workers who have spent years interacting primarily through screens, the office represents a sudden demand for sustained social engagement, something they no longer feel equipped for.
Several HR leaders have admitted anonymously that attendance compliance is not the biggest challenge. The real issue, they say, is social disengagement inside the office. Employees show up physically but avoid interactions, keep headphones on, skip informal gatherings, and prefer messaging colleagues sitting a few desks away.
This creates a paradox. Offices are reopening to rebuild collaboration, but many workers lack the social stamina to use those spaces as intended.
Understanding The Neuroscience Of Social Muscle Memory
Research published in late 2025 in behavioural psychology journals offers a useful lens to understand what is happening. Social skills rely on repetition. They are governed by neural pathways that strengthen with use and weaken with disuse.
Extended periods of reduced social interaction can make the brain more sensitive to social stress. Studies using functional MRI scans have shown that socially isolated individuals display heightened activity in threat-detection regions of the brain during interpersonal interactions. In simple terms, the brain begins to treat normal social situations as demanding or risky.
Hybrid work did not eliminate social interaction, but it changed its form. Video calls are structured, time-bound, and goal-oriented. They lack the unpredictability of physical presence — the side glances, interruptions, awkward silences, and unplanned conversations that train social resilience.
Over time, many professionals adapted by minimising exposure to these variables. The result is efficiency, but also fragility.
India’s Urban Workforce And The Loneliness Paradox
India presents a unique version of this phenomenon. Cities like Bengaluru and Gurugram are densely populated, yet many professionals report intense isolation. The paradox of being surrounded by people but feeling socially disconnected is becoming increasingly common.
Late-2025 urban studies show that hybrid workers in metros spend significantly less time in non-work social interactions on weekdays compared to pre-pandemic levels. Commutes that once forced shared experiences are shorter or absent. Office friendships that once formed through proximity now require effort and intent.
Cultural factors complicate this further. In workplaces, informal hierarchies and unspoken norms play a big role in collaboration. Learning these norms traditionally required observation and immersion. Hybrid work has flattened communication but stripped it of context, making misunderstandings more likely.
Who Is Most Affected by This Shift
Not all workers experience this equally. Data from November 2025 highlights that early-career professionals, solo remote employees, and knowledge workers in roles with minimal client interaction report the highest levels of social fatigue.
Employees who live alone, especially those who migrated to cities during or after the pandemic, appear particularly vulnerable. Without family networks or long-standing social circles, work often becomes the primary site of interaction. When that interaction is reduced or mediated by screens, loneliness intensifies.
Conversely, workers with established offline communities or hybrid schedules that include consistent team days report better social adjustment. The issue is not remote work per se, but the absence of sustained, meaningful human contact.
Is This A Temporary Phase Or A Lasting Change?
Experts are divided on whether this social rewiring is reversible. Some believe that social skills will rebound with exposure, much like physical fitness returns after inactivity. Others argue that hybrid work has permanently altered expectations, making many professionals less tolerant of social friction.
There is evidence for both views. Longitudinal studies tracking workers over two years suggest that regular, predictable in-person interaction can rebuild confidence and ease. At the same time, surveys show that many employees now actively prefer reduced social demands at work, even if it limits career growth.
This suggests that the workplace of the future may need to accommodate different social thresholds rather than assuming a single norm.
What Employers Are Beginning To Acknowledge
By the end of 2025, a subtle shift was visible in how some organisations frame return-to-office policies. Instead of mandating presence alone, a few companies are experimenting with structured social re-entry: smaller team days, facilitated discussions, and clearer norms around interaction.
Organisational psychologists say this approach recognises an uncomfortable truth. The problem is not laziness or entitlement, but adaptation. Workers adapted successfully to an isolating environment. Re-adapting will take time, support, and empathy.
Ignoring these risks deeper disengagement, quiet quitting, and a workforce that is present but disconnected.
Rethinking Work As A Social System
For decades, work was understood primarily as a place of productivity. The COVID-19 pandemic revealed that it is also a social system — one that teaches people how to relate, negotiate, and belong. Hybrid work did not destroy this system, but it disrupted its transmission.
As the new year begins, hybrid work has been firmly embedded, and offices have cautiously been reactivated. But the challenge is how people learn to be with one another again.
The loneliness desk is not a physical object. It is the quiet space many workers occupy — logged in, functional, but socially distant. Recognising it may be the first step towards redesigning work not just for efficiency, but for human connection.










