Nadï van de Watering, 25, was contemplating another day of amusing herself, enviously watching others her age enjoying summer parties in the glorious sunshine.
It was while waiting outside her physiotherapist's in the eastern Dutch city of Nijmegen that she decided to reach out on social media in the vague hope someone in a similar headspace might reply.
I'm by myself every day. At most I get 30 mins physio. That's as far as my social life goes. Work, study, going out, sport isn't possible. After 9 years on my own I want a network! Tweet by Nadï van de Watering@nadivdw 31 July 2019
Her courage was rewarded with an avalanche of responses and the hashtag "maatjegezocht" was born. It translates as "seeking a pal".
There are no figures for the scale of social isolation in the Netherlands. Loneliness is a subject rarely discussed in a country often considered emotionally insular.
But her tweet has generated more than a million messages - an indication of how many other young Dutch people may be desperate to escape their solitude.
How the helpline began
Youth worker Jolanda van Gerwe spotted the likes and shares and vowed to build on the momentum Nadï van de Watering's tweet had generated.
Her group, Join Us, set up a hotline for people aged between 12 and 30.
Calls to the hotline will act as alerts and link young people looking for friends in the neighbourhood. The data will be used to highlight the scale of youth loneliness and petition councils to do more to assist young people in cultivating their social circles.
"We give lonely young people a place to be heard and put them in touch with youth clubs specialising in kids who are lonely," Ms Van Gerwe tells the BBC.
"But they need more than just a club, they need advice and guidance to escape their lonely lives. They need help in three ways - connections, social skills, and to stop having a negative bias about themselves and the world."
The idea has already attracted the support of the Dutch government, earning the praise of Public Health Minister Hugo de Jonge who encouraged people to use the hotline.
What is loneliness?
Up to 10% of young people are considered "chronically lonely", according to global statistics.
"Young people see loneliness as a taboo," says Gerine Lodder from Tilburg University, one of the few Dutch academics conducting scientific research into youth loneliness.
She cites a TV poll suggesting 60% of those who feel lonely say they will never talk about it.
Social status and popularity are very important in this age group. You're growing up, forming your identity. If you admit you're lonely you're admitting you're a social failure
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