Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes, this is common. Lots of mom friends are situational, based on the school or the activity. Same with neighborhood friends. It doesn't mean you can't create deep, long-lasting friendships with people you meet through your kids, but it's rare.
This. Often a move, change of schools or change of activity is an endpoint. Sorry, OP. Hope the moms at the new studio are nice.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sadly it is normal in my experience. I made many mom friends over the years and even when I believed our relationship would survive long-term even if our kids went in different directions, it never did. First there were the baby playgroups, then the preschool parents, then the parents on countless teams. I really tried but by MS reality set in that the other parents are friends for that season of life. It’s made me very hesitant to invest socially beyond pleasantries anymore.
Yes I've learned not to invest too much into friendships here because it's such a transitional area (DMV)
Anonymous wrote:Maybe you woke up on the wrong side of the track
Anonymous wrote:Sadly it is normal in my experience. I made many mom friends over the years and even when I believed our relationship would survive long-term even if our kids went in different directions, it never did. First there were the baby playgroups, then the preschool parents, then the parents on countless teams. I really tried but by MS reality set in that the other parents are friends for that season of life. It’s made me very hesitant to invest socially beyond pleasantries anymore.
Anonymous wrote:Sadly it is normal in my experience. I made many mom friends over the years and even when I believed our relationship would survive long-term even if our kids went in different directions, it never did. First there were the baby playgroups, then the preschool parents, then the parents on countless teams. I really tried but by MS reality set in that the other parents are friends for that season of life. It’s made me very hesitant to invest socially beyond pleasantries anymore.
Anonymous wrote:Sadly it is normal in my experience. I made many mom friends over the years and even when I believed our relationship would survive long-term even if our kids went in different directions, it never did. First there were the baby playgroups, then the preschool parents, then the parents on countless teams. I really tried but by MS reality set in that the other parents are friends for that season of life. It’s made me very hesitant to invest socially beyond pleasantries anymore.
Anonymous wrote:Yes, this is common. Lots of mom friends are situational, based on the school or the activity. Same with neighborhood friends. It doesn't mean you can't create deep, long-lasting friendships with people you meet through your kids, but it's rare.