DP. I never really clicked with my college friends. Made some really great, close friends in my 30s, but honestly, it took having little kids to do this. Being in the trenches with people in the same life stage and knowing your sanity depends on making an effort socially forms close bonds. |
Likely typo “new mom” |
I haven't talked to my college friends in 10+ years what are you even talking about. All of the good friends I have now are from my post-college years. |
| How old are your kids? For me, by the time my kid entered school, there was tons of forced socialization with other school moms, and then I got close with a couple of my kids buddies moms. It's pretty organic in that you keep seeing the buddies moms and end up chatting here and there, exchange numbers, friend on FB, etc. |
| So, if your kids aren't in school yet, ENJOY your last few years of introversion without forced socialization. it will all hit you at once |
What an odd and overly dramatic statement to make. |
That means if you went to college in California and moved to the east coast you will only have long distance friends? I think the toughest part for you is working at home. Start by talking to your local people. The people who work in the market, coffee shop, etc. It will get you started in being comfortable starting up a conversation. You’ll also see how many people enjoy talking to you. Also learn how some people are just miserable and how to avoid them. Good luck. |
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If you have a kid or a dog, it's easier, but it's not impossible otherwise. Agree with the others who say you need to join something--can be a class, volunteering, a religious thing, meetup group, professional organization, a local government committee, or pretty much anything else. I have made a couple friends through the combination of volunteering + riding the metro home...something about having something in common, plus a chance to chat one on one, plus a fixed end point to the conversation so it's not awkward.
Also, especially if you don't have kids, I think it's important not to only befriend people your age. I say this as someone without kids and in my 30s...if you are only friends with women in your 30s, a lot of them will have kids, and a lot of them will not be as good friends to you once they have kids, even if you love kids and are happy to hang out with them...they will make friends with other moms, and be tired, and just not have as much time as they used to. But if you also have older and younger friends, it helps. Don't drop your friends just because they have kids...assume they are doing their best while their kids are small and you may be able to pick things back up as the kids get older. I know on a message board that's mostly moms this will not be universally-adored advice, but it's been my experience. |
Mom of young kids here and omg your second paragraph is spot on and it’s great advice to OP. |
1) Make baby 2) Make another baby 3) Too busy for friends 4) Make new friends with moms of classmates, teammates, carpool, etc. |
| Do you know the saying "to have friends you have to be friendly"? It's really true. I didn't have good examples--my parents had very few friends and weren't great friends to them. But now I try very hard to really listen to my friends, ask them questions rather than telling a similar story (which can be taken as one-upmanship), remember things they've talked about and check back in with them, invite them to events they might enjoy, take note of their likes and dislikes, that sort of thing. If they mention being sick or having a hard time I ask if I can bring them anything or be helpful. These might sound incredibly obvious but they don't come natural to me. Doing them intentionally has helped me have better friendships. Sometimes they can be hard to do because of fear of being awkward or being rejected, but hopefully you'll find people who assume the best of you and who appreciate your efforts! |