The Purple Stand on New York's Streets: How One Grandma Healed a City by Listening
Key Takeaways
- •New York's Grandma Stand was founded by Mike Matthews, inspired by a phone call with his 96-year-old grandma Eileen, and has now expanded to multiple cities
- •The U.S. Surgeon General declared loneliness an epidemic in 2023; 870,000 people die from loneliness annually, and 80% of Gen Z have experienced loneliness
- •fMRI research confirms 'being heard' activates the brain's reward center, lowers stress hormones, and constitutes measurable neural repair
On the streets of New York, there's a purple stand. It doesn't sell anything, doesn't advertise, doesn't charge a fee. It offers only one service: a grandma who's willing to listen to you.
The stand has a sign with a weekly conversation prompt: "What made you happy this week?" or "Who do you need to forgive?" You can line up, sit down, and chat with a stranger grandma. You can talk about the question on the sign, or about anything at all. No script, no time limit, no advice. Just listening.
The project is called Grandma Stand. It might be the quietest presence on New York's streets, and also the most powerful.
A phone call that started it all
In 2012, a colleague of Mike Matthews came to him to vent about a painful breakup. There was only so much Matthews could do, but he thought of someone: his grandmother Eileen, who lived in Seattle and was 96 at the time.
He gave his colleague Eileen's phone number. After that call, his colleague's mood noticeably improved. Matthews realized: Eileen's power wasn't in the advice she gave — it was in her willingness to listen.
But Eileen lived in Seattle and couldn't come to New York. So Matthews did something: he set up a purple stand on the streets of New York (purple was Eileen's favorite color) and had Eileen chat with passing strangers via video call.
Eileen did this for six years. From 2012 to 2018, she spoke to thousands of New Yorkers from that purple stand. In 2018, Eileen passed away at the age of 102.
2024: The purple stand returns
In 2024, Matthews relaunched Grandma Stand. This time, it's no longer just one grandma. He recruited over ten volunteer grandmas who appear at different locations in New York each week. The stand's location is announced on social media 24 hours in advance, and then you'll see a quiet line forming in front of a purple stand.
ABC7 and Good Morning America both did feature stories. TimeOut NYC called it New York's gentlest street presence. The stand has expanded to Omaha and Denver, with plans for Boston, Berlin, Paris, and London in the works.
A photo of Eileen hangs on the stand. Every conversation is a tribute to her.
870,000 people die from loneliness
Grandma Stand's return is no coincidence. In 2023, U.S. Surgeon General Vivek Murthy officially declared loneliness an "epidemic."
The data is staggering. According to the Surgeon General's report, loneliness has a health impact equivalent to smoking 15 cigarettes a day. Approximately 871,000 deaths per year are linked to loneliness, which works out to about 100 people per hour. Loneliness increases the risk of heart disease by 29%, stroke by 32%, and dementia in the elderly by 50%.
Harvard's 2024 survey found that 21% of American adults feel lonely, 30% experience loneliness at least once a week, and 10% feel lonely every day.
And Gen Z is the loneliest of all generations. Data cited by Newsweek shows that 80% of Gen Z experienced loneliness in the past year. 67% reported the highest level of loneliness classification, far exceeding the 45% among baby boomers.
What you didn't know: Being listened to activates the brain's reward center
Grandma Stand's power isn't just psychological comfort. Neuroscience research proves that "being listened to" is a physiological experience that can be measured by the brain.
An fMRI brain imaging study published by the National Center for Biotechnology Information (NCBI) found that when a person perceives they are being actively listened to, the ventral striatum in the brain is activated. That's the brain's reward center — the same area that activates when you eat delicious food or hear music you love.
At the same time, the right anterior insula is also activated, which is the region responsible for positive emotional reappraisal. In simple terms: when you are genuinely listened to, your brain isn't just "feeling a bit better." It's undergoing a real, machine-detectable neural repair process.
Listening also lowers cortisol (the stress hormone) levels, improves emotional regulation, and reduces anxiety. This isn't chicken soup for the soul. This is neuroscience.
Why grandmas
Matthews could have put anyone in that stand. Therapists, social workers, trained volunteers. But he chose grandmas.
The reason is simple: grandmas don't try to solve your problems. They won't say "you should do this" or "have you considered doing that." They say "and then what?" and "how did that make you feel?"
In an age when everyone is rushing to give advice, the scarcest thing isn't answers. It's someone who doesn't judge, isn't in a hurry to respond, and won't change the subject while you're still talking. Grandma Stand proves with a purple stand that healing doesn't require professional credentials. It just needs someone willing to let you finish what you have to say.
Every week, on some corner in New York, a purple stand appears. A grandma sits there, waiting for you to walk up. You don't need an appointment, you don't need to pay, you don't need to have prepared what to say. You just need to sit down. And she'll listen.
FAQ
▶What service does the purple stand on the streets of New York provide?
Just one service: a grandma willing to listen to you—no advice given, just listening.
▶How serious is the loneliness problem among Gen Z?
80% of Gen Z has experienced loneliness, and the US Surgeon General has declared loneliness an epidemic.
▶Why does 'being listened to' have healing effects?
fMRI studies confirm that 'being heard' activates the brain's reward center—listening itself is a scientifically backed healing act.
參考資料
ABC7 New York — Grandma Stand NYC
U.S. Surgeon General — Loneliness Advisory 2023
Newsweek — Gen Z Loneliness Crisis
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