Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:do you live in a neighborhood? start a wine night for your neighbors. invite all the ladies for a couple hours. open a couple bottles of wine and set out an appetizer or two. see if others want to continue the wine night once a month.
this happened in our neighborhood a couple years ago, and all the neighbors, most of which knew none of the other neighbors got to know each other. i now have a few close friends through that method.
i would totally come to this. OP, where do you live?
Anonymous wrote:do you live in a neighborhood? start a wine night for your neighbors. invite all the ladies for a couple hours. open a couple bottles of wine and set out an appetizer or two. see if others want to continue the wine night once a month.
this happened in our neighborhood a couple years ago, and all the neighbors, most of which knew none of the other neighbors got to know each other. i now have a few close friends through that method.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think one secret is to recognize that many people already have established friend groups and/or are exhausted. While they might not reach out for new relationships, some might be open to developing friendships, particularly if you are willing to repeatedly take the initiative. So, who are you viewing as “your people”? What proximity interests might you have in common? Are you willing to be the one to nudge things along — and back off appropriately, also repeatedly, so that your desire for friendships doesn’t become another demand on someone’s hectic schedule? Is there something you would be interested in joining as a first step? A reading group, an exercise class, a volunteer organization, a workshop? Those are all things that can lead to next steps and beyond— as long as you’re willing to make the effort, recognizing that others might not be as eager for this as you are.
But how do people already have established friend groups? That's what mystifies me. I have not had this since college 20 years out.
People start with neighbors, co-workers, fellow members of religious groups, alumni activities and community organizations. The nice thing about college is that almost everyone is new and eager to make friends. I tend to try new things — going to the gym, swimming, joining a book group, whatever. It starts with chatting during the activities, then texting, going for coffee afterwards — then doing things after the activities becomes part of the routine. Then we’ll do something a step beyond that. Again, accept the fact that you will have to make the effort, and be patient, especially since with the pandemic, even people with time and interest might not want to hang out in a coffee shop.
In my case, I have friends and small friendships from multiple periods of my life that we’ve made the effort to maintain.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think one secret is to recognize that many people already have established friend groups and/or are exhausted. While they might not reach out for new relationships, some might be open to developing friendships, particularly if you are willing to repeatedly take the initiative. So, who are you viewing as “your people”? What proximity interests might you have in common? Are you willing to be the one to nudge things along — and back off appropriately, also repeatedly, so that your desire for friendships doesn’t become another demand on someone’s hectic schedule? Is there something you would be interested in joining as a first step? A reading group, an exercise class, a volunteer organization, a workshop? Those are all things that can lead to next steps and beyond— as long as you’re willing to make the effort, recognizing that others might not be as eager for this as you are.
But how do people already have established friend groups? That's what mystifies me. I have not had this since college 20 years out.
Anonymous wrote:I think one secret is to recognize that many people already have established friend groups and/or are exhausted. While they might not reach out for new relationships, some might be open to developing friendships, particularly if you are willing to repeatedly take the initiative. So, who are you viewing as “your people”? What proximity interests might you have in common? Are you willing to be the one to nudge things along — and back off appropriately, also repeatedly, so that your desire for friendships doesn’t become another demand on someone’s hectic schedule? Is there something you would be interested in joining as a first step? A reading group, an exercise class, a volunteer organization, a workshop? Those are all things that can lead to next steps and beyond— as long as you’re willing to make the effort, recognizing that others might not be as eager for this as you are.
Anonymous wrote:I'm serious.
I'm lonely.
I almost want to move towns because I can't find my people, but my kids are in school already.
What is the secret?
Initially open your mind to "not your people". Grandmas have daughters/sons, kids have aunts/uncles, singles have neighbors, childless have coworkers, etc.Anonymous wrote:I'm serious.
I'm lonely.
I almost want to move towns because I can't find my people, but my kids are in school already.
What is the secret?