Anonymous wrote:Honestly the twenty-something who always talks about traveling and how she's lived abroad isn't particularly interesting either, so don't worry you've lost too much ground.
Anonymous wrote:If you want to be interesting, be interested.
This whole post sounds like you're worried about providing charming stories about yourself at your next soiree, not actually having a conversation with someone. Don't ask about their hobbies just as a bridge to your own. Don't take up weird hobbies so you have something about yourself to mention. Don't be the female equivalent of the guy who grows a Snidely Whiplash moustache so people will ask him about it. Just talk to people. Make connections. News, pop culture, sports, neighborhood goings-on, their most recent travel - there's always plenty to talk about. The topic of conversation doesn't have to be you.
Anonymous wrote:According to your post, your job, hobbies, and children are all boring. I think you should just embrace it and not worry about trying to be entertaining. Go ahead and talk about your real life, people might appreciate your honesty. If you make a big effort to be entertaining, it can come across as fake.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anyone have tips on how to stay an interesting person to know, rather than slipping into becoming a mom who only talks about the kid(s)?
I have 1 daughter, toddler age. Sometimes it's hard for me to find stuff to talk about with people that isn't kid-related. I think it's mostly covid - travel and overseas living was a huge part of my life and identity before and i often talked about that. I also had a bigger group of friends before and had larger gatherings, which make it easier to let others lead the conversation.
Once I'm sucked into parenting conversations with other parents about kid minutiae, it feels rude to change the subject. There's always work, but I work in a field people don't find intriguing and I don't want to fall into the workaholic DC stereotype. I am a younger mom (late 20s) and most of my same age friends don't have kids. So I'm very eager to keep an identity separate from motherhood. I have many hobbies, but I don't want to bore people with those, either.
I guess I'm sensitive to this because I'd like to fancy myself a modern, dynamic woman who's still sexy and interesting, and my own mom was very absorbed in motherhood in a way that turned me off the idea at first.
Tips?
My mom sees herself as a modern dynamic woman who never had to let becoming a mother define her and subsequently had very littler interest in being a mom. I am now a SAHM whose primary focus is my kids happiness and don't really care if that defines me.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anyone have tips on how to stay an interesting person to know, rather than slipping into becoming a mom who only talks about the kid(s)?
I have 1 daughter, toddler age. Sometimes it's hard for me to find stuff to talk about with people that isn't kid-related. I think it's mostly covid - travel and overseas living was a huge part of my life and identity before and i often talked about that. I also had a bigger group of friends before and had larger gatherings, which make it easier to let others lead the conversation.
Once I'm sucked into parenting conversations with other parents about kid minutiae, it feels rude to change the subject. There's always work, but I work in a field people don't find intriguing and I don't want to fall into the workaholic DC stereotype. I am a younger mom (late 20s) and most of my same age friends don't have kids. So I'm very eager to keep an identity separate from motherhood. I have many hobbies, but I don't want to bore people with those, either.
I guess I'm sensitive to this because I'd like to fancy myself a modern, dynamic woman who's still sexy and interesting, and my own mom was very absorbed in motherhood in a way that turned me off the idea at first.
Tips?
My tip would be to work on your issues around this. Kierkegaard used to say that he would much rather talk with an old woman retelling family gossip at a party than anyone who considered themselves to be remarkably interesting, and I think there's something to that.
Many women in this day and age struggle with the shift of identity that comes with motherhood, regardless of whether they work or stay at home. But you don't have to be having great adventures out in the world to be interesting. Interesting is about how interested you are in others and in life.
Signed, mom who used to travel all over in remote areas and doesn't feel less interesting now
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anyone have tips on how to stay an interesting person to know, rather than slipping into becoming a mom who only talks about the kid(s)?
I have 1 daughter, toddler age. Sometimes it's hard for me to find stuff to talk about with people that isn't kid-related. I think it's mostly covid - travel and overseas living was a huge part of my life and identity before and i often talked about that. I also had a bigger group of friends before and had larger gatherings, which make it easier to let others lead the conversation.
Once I'm sucked into parenting conversations with other parents about kid minutiae, it feels rude to change the subject. There's always work, but I work in a field people don't find intriguing and I don't want to fall into the workaholic DC stereotype. I am a younger mom (late 20s) and most of my same age friends don't have kids. So I'm very eager to keep an identity separate from motherhood. I have many hobbies, but I don't want to bore people with those, either.
I guess I'm sensitive to this because I'd like to fancy myself a modern, dynamic woman who's still sexy and interesting, and my own mom was very absorbed in motherhood in a way that turned me off the idea at first.
Tips?
My tip would be to work on your issues around this. Kierkegaard used to say that he would much rather talk with an old woman retelling family gossip at a party than anyone who considered themselves to be remarkably interesting, and I think there's something to that.
Many women in this day and age struggle with the shift of identity that comes with motherhood, regardless of whether they work or stay at home. But you don't have to be having great adventures out in the world to be interesting. Interesting is about how interested you are in others and in life.
Signed, mom who used to travel all over in remote areas and doesn't feel less interesting now
Anonymous wrote:Anyone have tips on how to stay an interesting person to know, rather than slipping into becoming a mom who only talks about the kid(s)?
I have 1 daughter, toddler age. Sometimes it's hard for me to find stuff to talk about with people that isn't kid-related. I think it's mostly covid - travel and overseas living was a huge part of my life and identity before and i often talked about that. I also had a bigger group of friends before and had larger gatherings, which make it easier to let others lead the conversation.
Once I'm sucked into parenting conversations with other parents about kid minutiae, it feels rude to change the subject. There's always work, but I work in a field people don't find intriguing and I don't want to fall into the workaholic DC stereotype. I am a younger mom (late 20s) and most of my same age friends don't have kids. So I'm very eager to keep an identity separate from motherhood. I have many hobbies, but I don't want to bore people with those, either.
I guess I'm sensitive to this because I'd like to fancy myself a modern, dynamic woman who's still sexy and interesting, and my own mom was very absorbed in motherhood in a way that turned me off the idea at first.
Tips?
Anonymous wrote:Anyone have tips on how to stay an interesting person to know, rather than slipping into becoming a mom who only talks about the kid(s)?
I have 1 daughter, toddler age. Sometimes it's hard for me to find stuff to talk about with people that isn't kid-related. I think it's mostly covid - travel and overseas living was a huge part of my life and identity before and i often talked about that. I also had a bigger group of friends before and had larger gatherings, which make it easier to let others lead the conversation.
Once I'm sucked into parenting conversations with other parents about kid minutiae, it feels rude to change the subject. There's always work, but I work in a field people don't find intriguing and I don't want to fall into the workaholic DC stereotype. I am a younger mom (late 20s) and most of my same age friends don't have kids. So I'm very eager to keep an identity separate from motherhood. I have many hobbies, but I don't want to bore people with those, either.
I guess I'm sensitive to this because I'd like to fancy myself a modern, dynamic woman who's still sexy and interesting, and my own mom was very absorbed in motherhood in a way that turned me off the idea at first.
Tips?