The isn't a single number. It’s a personal and societal gauge of how the threshold of one’s home transforms from a place of rest into a boundary of constraint.
We began tracking this index unconsciously during the pandemic. Suddenly, billions of people experienced the same metric. Zoom calls became data points. Grocery delivery slots became economic indicators. The number of days without touching soil or seeing a new face became the truest measure of our time. homebound index
It rises with chronic illness, agoraphobia, a broken hip, a lack of transport, a neighborhood made dangerous by neglect. When the index hits 0.8, the front door becomes a museum artifact—beautiful to remember, impossible to exit. The isn't a single number
We have metrics for everything else: the Dow Jones for economic health, the UV index for atmospheric danger, the Gini coefficient for inequality. But what measures the slow gravity of staying put? Suddenly, billions of people experienced the same metric
No judgment. Just observation. That is the first step to lowering it.
It’s the rainy Sunday in pajamas, the writer on a deadline, the parent recovering from a week of chaos. Here, home is a harbor. The index reads 0.2—voluntary, temporary, restorative.