Anonymous wrote:I left a job in December around the one year mark. It was a poor fit (position was not as advertised) and despite making an effort to attend in-person events I failed to make any connections at the company/would go days without talking to anyone. Despite this, people seemed surprised when I left. I kept it extremely high level, just said I was grateful for my time but had found a great role elsewhere, and did not share where I was going or what I’d be doing.
When I left, one colleague (who I’d maybe spoken to twice) messaged me and said we should definitely stay in touch and get together in the future. I said sure, fine, and assumed she was just saying this to be nice and would never follow up. Since then, former colleague has persistently reached out trying to arrange lunch.
I’m at a loss as to why this person is so set on getting together as we hardly knew one another when we did work together. I can brush this off, right?
Yes, you can brush it off.
However ... you are reminding me of me a few years ago. A woman I new only a tiny bit through work, who had left our job, reached out and wanted to go to dinner. I was really weirded out by it and kept asking my DH "What on earth does she want?" I finally had dinner with her. She didn't appear to want anything, or to talk to me about anything in particular. I left that dinner puzzled and never saw her again.
I realize now ... she was just trying to become friends. And I'm very saddened that I didn't meet her where she was with that. We could have been friends. I don't know; it feels sad to me how puzzled (or even suspicious) I was.