Three separate stories of coping with loneliness are presented. In the first, Bill, a voice-over artist, rarely needs to leave his home as he does almost all his work in the recording studio in his home. His wife recently left him, and he is trying to reach out to his estranged daughter who hasn't been returning his telephone calls. One of the other people he tries to reach out to if only because he's there is Omar, the regular delivery man for the courier company from who he gets his scripts. In the second, elderly Eleanor, a widow, not only mourns the death of her husband two years ago, but also her new lack of independence as her driver's license has not been renewed due to her macular degeneration. The symbol of that independence is her beloved and immaculately maintained 1966 Thunderbird. She turns to her divorced next door neighbor Gary to help her run errands. As they spend more time together, they find that they need the other to deal with the lack of intimacy in their respective lives. They have to figure out what that intimacy will look like as he is almost young enough to be her grandson. In the third, sports fanatic Gordon has just discovered the many facets and thus joys of the Internet. He meets Debbie on an online dating site. As their relationship progresses quickly, he has to decide what their immediate future will look like with unexpected news from her.