Social anxiety and loneliness
Phone call anxiety is more common than most people admit, and its consequences are more significant than they appear. Avoiding calls means missed appointments, delayed responses, unanswered voicemails that accumulate, friendships that fade because you never call back. The dread before a call, the replaying of it afterward, the relief that comes from a missed call — these are real experiences that constrain ordinary life in ways that can quietly produce isolation.
Phone calls lack the visual cues of in-person conversation — there is no facial expression, no body language, no way to signal that you need a moment. They are also unstructured in a way that text is not — the conversation goes wherever it goes, at a pace you cannot control. For people with social anxiety, that combination of unpredictability and performance pressure can make calls feel genuinely threatening rather than just slightly annoying.
Ironically, voice conversation without video — anonymous, with a stranger who has no expectations — is often much easier. The anonymity changes the stakes. There is no identity to protect, no relationship to maintain, no prior context.
Low-stakes voice conversation — with no judgment, no identity on the line, no need to perform. The practice of being in a voice conversation without the social weight of a known relationship. Mindfuse connects you with real people by voice, anonymously, at any hour. First conversation free.
Real strangers, anonymous voice. No performance, no profile, no algorithm.
One free conversation · €4/month · iOS and Android