Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For those of you turning down invitations to go out at night, consider that if you keep saying no people will stop inviting you. Consider whether you want to maintain the friendship. If you do, try to say yes sometimes. Also keep in mind that as your kids enter elementary they will start having activities that make getting together on weekends very difficult. If you want to see certain friends a Thursday night dinner may be your only option.
I can’t relate at all to people who don’t ever want to go out. This board seems to skew toward homebody/introvert types. I am not out partying every night but a couple times per month is a great way to stay connected with friends. And I have to laugh at the posters saying it’s not fair to their husband to leave them alone with a couple kids. What do you think single parents or military spouses do? Some parents make bedtime out to be some crazy complicated process that requires two people. It really doesn’t when it comes down to it. You are making it that way.
NP. LOL, thanks for the advice.
Here’s something for you to consider: Just because I’m turning down invites *from you* doesn’t mean I’m turning down all the invites. It also doesn’t mean that I’m not inviting other friends to do things. Do you get it? You’re the one I’m willing to see every now and then for a coffee.
I’m not the one who organizes the dinners. I get invited to them and I try to say yes when I can so I can stay connected to those friends. No need to make it about me. I’m not the OP and I don’t have friends who tell me no because I am basically my other friends are more the organizing types. But I see that the moms who say no all the time stop getting included because after a while everyone just expects them to say no.
And no I don’t place my friends in a hierarchy like you describe. That is weird.
I mean...great for you. Why do you assume that the moms who stop getting invited give a flip?
There are tons of posts on DCUM about being lonely, having no friends, asking how to make friends as adults...seems a lot of people DO want friends and WOULD care about not being invited out anymore. But to have a friend you need to be a friend. You can't ignore someone for two (three, four) years, then turn around and be like, "now I'm ready to be friends again!"
…who said I would? I keep in touch and go out with high-priority friends. You are B Team. Take the hint.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Honestly OP, you sound super condescending and a little selfish and immature calling your friends “tethered” to their routines and wanting to know what’s “sacred” about time with their kids. Maybe they don’t like you.
I think you were so miffed by the post that you missed the part where the OP stated that friends do want to meet up during the day, which is when most people work.
It's not a question of liking or not liking; it's a question of being able to exercise flexibility to meet people where they are.
Anonymous wrote:I think the hurt or questioning stems from an "I'm busier than you" dynamic -- people who fall off the face of the earth due to being "so busy!" or overwhelmed, and then resurface expecting friendships to just pick right back up. It doesn't work that way. To have friendships, you have to sustain them and that means sometimes making the effort: to skip bedtime and let your kid cry or your husband figure it out or whatever.
If you have no interest in maintaining friendships, that's a different story.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Weekend nights are for meeting up with friends in my house. After a tough workweek, I welcome
the chance to decompress.
A lot of the disagreement here seems to center around how people like to decompress. For some it’s wine and dinner with friends, for others its a book in bed with a cup of tea, for some its sitting on the couch with DH and watching a movie. I think people do have to recognize that what is relaxing and a break for some people is not relaxing for others. And I say this as an extrovert who does like to unwind with friends but understands that some friends like to have less busy social lives and need time to themselves.
How did introverts maintain friendships?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Weekend nights are for meeting up with friends in my house. After a tough workweek, I welcome
the chance to decompress.
A lot of the disagreement here seems to center around how people like to decompress. For some it’s wine and dinner with friends, for others its a book in bed with a cup of tea, for some its sitting on the couch with DH and watching a movie. I think people do have to recognize that what is relaxing and a break for some people is not relaxing for others. And I say this as an extrovert who does like to unwind with friends but understands that some friends like to have less busy social lives and need time to themselves.
How did introverts maintain friendships?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Weekend nights are for meeting up with friends in my house. After a tough workweek, I welcome
the chance to decompress.
A lot of the disagreement here seems to center around how people like to decompress. For some it’s wine and dinner with friends, for others its a book in bed with a cup of tea, for some its sitting on the couch with DH and watching a movie. I think people do have to recognize that what is relaxing and a break for some people is not relaxing for others. And I say this as an extrovert who does like to unwind with friends but understands that some friends like to have less busy social lives and need time to themselves.
Anonymous wrote:Weekend nights are for meeting up with friends in my house. After a tough workweek, I welcome
the chance to decompress.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Another factor nobody mentioned is that it's not college or grad school where we all live in apartments walking distance from the same campus anymore. I live in the same town as only two of my friends, a male work friend and my husband's childhood best friend. All of my female friends are scattered from DC and the inner suburbs, to Ellicott City and Annapolis, to Waldorf, to Alexandria. It's really not worth it to drive for an hour or two for dinner or drinks with these distances, knowing you have to drive home at night and still be up in the middle of the night with a baby. We do daytime hangouts where we can spend longer together and sometimes bring kids, or we save it for special occasions.
Yep exactly, esp in the DMV. Esp when we're not already centralized downtown given WFH, it's a schlep to get to most friends in a weeknights.
We have a routine that works for us and I don't really want to shake it up unless it's for something super important.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For those of you turning down invitations to go out at night, consider that if you keep saying no people will stop inviting you. Consider whether you want to maintain the friendship. If you do, try to say yes sometimes. Also keep in mind that as your kids enter elementary they will start having activities that make getting together on weekends very difficult. If you want to see certain friends a Thursday night dinner may be your only option.
I can’t relate at all to people who don’t ever want to go out. This board seems to skew toward homebody/introvert types. I am not out partying every night but a couple times per month is a great way to stay connected with friends. And I have to laugh at the posters saying it’s not fair to their husband to leave them alone with a couple kids. What do you think single parents or military spouses do? Some parents make bedtime out to be some crazy complicated process that requires two people. It really doesn’t when it comes down to it. You are making it that way.
NP. LOL, thanks for the advice.
Here’s something for you to consider: Just because I’m turning down invites *from you* doesn’t mean I’m turning down all the invites. It also doesn’t mean that I’m not inviting other friends to do things. Do you get it? You’re the one I’m willing to see every now and then for a coffee.
I’m not the one who organizes the dinners. I get invited to them and I try to say yes when I can so I can stay connected to those friends. No need to make it about me. I’m not the OP and I don’t have friends who tell me no because I am basically my other friends are more the organizing types. But I see that the moms who say no all the time stop getting included because after a while everyone just expects them to say no.
And no I don’t place my friends in a hierarchy like you describe. That is weird.
I mean...great for you. Why do you assume that the moms who stop getting invited give a flip?
There are tons of posts on DCUM about being lonely, having no friends, asking how to make friends as adults...seems a lot of people DO want friends and WOULD care about not being invited out anymore. But to have a friend you need to be a friend. You can't ignore someone for two (three, four) years, then turn around and be like, "now I'm ready to be friends again!"
I think most people are probably looking for friends they are compatible with, not just anyone.
Well, we're talking about people that were formerly friends, before you had kids/decided you were too tired/didn't want to go out at night. So they were compatible, the only thing that changed is that some people got less fun.
Anonymous wrote:Another factor nobody mentioned is that it's not college or grad school where we all live in apartments walking distance from the same campus anymore. I live in the same town as only two of my friends, a male work friend and my husband's childhood best friend. All of my female friends are scattered from DC and the inner suburbs, to Ellicott City and Annapolis, to Waldorf, to Alexandria. It's really not worth it to drive for an hour or two for dinner or drinks with these distances, knowing you have to drive home at night and still be up in the middle of the night with a baby. We do daytime hangouts where we can spend longer together and sometimes bring kids, or we save it for special occasions.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Curious OP do you have an infant/toddler at home?
I do! My DH takes charge if i go out to meet friends.
How many kids do you have and what age?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Curious OP do you have an infant/toddler at home?
I do! My DH takes charge if i go out to meet friends.