In difficult times, humanity has always relied on certain ancient survival technologies.
Gathering around a fire.
Storytelling.
Sharing meals.
And the sacred institution known as the group chat.
You know the one. The chat with the insane name. The thread that lights up your phone at odd hours. The place where someone drops a meme about the latest political absurdity, another friend posts a hilarious photo of her dog wearing a sweater, and someone else confesses she is barely holding it together today. All thoughts and feelings are welcome here. There’s the friend that posts constantly and the one that may not respond for days (ahem, Gwen and Casey). There are voice notes, half-finished thoughts, screenshots of news headlines, recipes, pep talks, and the occasional please tell me I’m not the only one feeling this way. The right chat will hype you up, calm you down, and truly make you feel seen.
I’m in three equally unhinged chats. Quarters and The Glitter Gremlins and The Mobility Mafia (no, I will not be explaining, because iykyk).
At first glance, it might seem trivial, just idle chatter in the digital ether. But neuroscience would suggest that these little digital circles are actually helping keep our nervous systems regulated.
Human beings evolved to survive in small social groups. For tens of thousands of years, the primary signal of safety for our brains was simple. We needed to know that we are not alone. When we hear a familiar voice, see a friendly face, or receive reassurance from someone we trust, our nervous system shifts. Our fascia softens, our hormones settle, and our brain’s threat detectors quiet down. Science calls this co-regulation, or the process by which one regulated nervous system helps stabilize another.
I’m not saying girl group chats will miraculously solve fascism, but I am saying that a few weirdly named groups of unhinged women are your best shot at staying halfway sane rn.
@lizadaye, via Instagram
And it turns out that digital communication activates similar pathways of connection. A supportive message, a shared laugh, or a quick you’re one of my favorite people can release small doses of oxytocin, the hormone associated with bonding and trust. Oxytocin does more than make us feel warm and fuzzy. It actively dampens the body’s stress response. It tells the amygdala, the brain’s internal alarm system, that we are safe enough to relax.
Which means that when your friend texts, “Girl, I read that news too and I’m furious,” or “Hey, you feeling better today?,” something biological happens inside your body. Your nervous system feels supported. That matters deeply during turbulent cultural moments like the one we are living through. Political instability, social conflict, and constant media exposure create chronic stress signals in the brain. The mind interprets uncertainty as potential danger. Over time, that can lead to fatigue, irritability, and emotional overwhelm.
A group chat becomes a kind of collective nervous system because the load is shared.
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Someone brings humor when everyone else is spiraling.
Someone brings wisdom when things feel confusing.
Someone brings outrage when silence would feel like surrender.
Someone brings tenderness when any member of the group is hurting.
Women have historically survived hard times through coöperative social networks, where information, child care, emotional support, and practical help flowed freely. Modern technology has simply recreated that ancient structure in glowing rectangles in our pockets. With the added benefit of funny dog memes!
Our group chat is a digital village, a place where our brain remembers that my people are still here. And that memory is powerful medicine. It allows us to stay engaged with the world without collapsing under its weight. It lets us process anger, grief, and confusion in a container of trust rather than alone in the echo chamber of our own thoughts. And it allows joy, hope, and whimsy to sneak back in.
Because even in the midst of serious conversations about politics or culture, the girl group chat will inevitably contain something fabulously ridiculous. We will shit talk your ex, post a reel of a cat who befriended a lizard, and share our new favorite music or restaurant or jeans. We will book trips and make plans IRL, then plan our outfits and playlists and cocktails accordingly.
A good group chat is both a coping mechanism and a quiet form of resilience. It is where we remember how to be human together in abnormal times. And right now, it feels like one of the most important survival strategies I have.

