Right? I don't want people anywhere near me when someone I love dies. What a nightmare. I lived that with my mother's funeral. Spare me your condolences. And my funeral? Who cares?
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It's you and people like you that we're trying to avoid. |
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Maybe if you drop the SHOULD, you'll find that you WANT to in some cases.
If I'm more intentional about things, they're more enjoyable. But, I'd never fully give up socializing. --introvert |
DP. Right now I'm battling a mother like this. She could have written the OP. I find myself pulling away because she needs friends and/or therapy to cope with life. Not rely on kids. I have my own issues -- and friends and therapist. I will not burden my kids. |
This is my fear. Lots of scare-media about loneliness being the health equivalent of two packs of cigarettes a day or whatever. |
Being married or having a child is very, very different from attending social events with acquaintances, colleagues, and neighbors. They are in some ways the opposite. When I am at work functions or school functions where I have to make polite small talk and put on a certain mask (where I appear pleasantly neutral no matter what is actually going on in my life), I often crave being at home or with my close friends with whom I don't have to wear that mask and can simply be myself. With my family, in particular, I can sit in comfortable silence or share feelings that are bigger or more complicated than would be appropriate to express at a neighborhood barbecue or a PTO meeting. But also with friends there is a much broader range I can express. And they also are more expressive and open with me, they don't just limit themselves to their blandest and most publicly acceptable selves. As I get older, I enjoy solitude and those very authentic interactions with people close to me. Generic and polite small talk with near strangers? I'm over it. I've done it for decades. I would like to retire from it. |
No one is suggesting being lonely or existing without any human interaction at all. We're talking about no longer engaging in obligatory socializing and just spending time with the people we really care about, including ourselves. This used to be a fairly normal thing for people to do, especially as they got older. Contemporary expectations for socializing are really intense by historical standards. |
This is my life. I’m an introvert but a teacher so my social battery gets run down at work. I stopped attending social events that felt empty or draining, and now I do social things 2-3 times a month, plus a twice weekly social fitness class. The rest of my free time I spend enjoying my own company and recharging, and I’m much happier than when my calendar was full. Everyone has priorities, and you can figure out your own and live by them. |
But she doesn't sound like the OP at all because the OP sounds happy to be alone and your mom does not. Maybe your mom needs pets, plants, and books (or whatever her version of this is, different people feel fulfilled by different things, maybe her things are art or exercise or travel or something). The point of the OP is that she is fulfilled by the things she has chosen to fill her life with, and is not in need of the attention or listening ear or whatever your mom is looking for when she's pestering you. |
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Yes, this scenario sounds like heaven to me.
Or 2020. (Covid!!) Ha!! Socializing tends to be very exhausting - - even moreso the older we get. I think there is nothing wrong w/retiring the way that you want to. I say go for it & do not look back. Life is too short to live for others more than yourself. 👍🏽 |
This is not true unless you were on a homestead. Read Bowling Alone. This whole thread is indicative of the mental health crisis in the US: a positive feedback loop of dysfunction. |
Mom is the normal one. |
OP says her social network consists of DH and DD. A child is not a social network. My mother is VERY happy being alone. She just wants to use her kids as her sole social network. |
This is a crazy take. People lived in small villages or in tribes to work together against what might kill them. Our introversion is normal for our species. We are social creatures. It’s fine to want little to no interaction, but don’t rewrite history to justify it! |
| This is very lonely! |