Anonymous wrote:Making and keeping friends can be very hard. There’s also a fair amount of luck involved in finding your people at the right place and time. Don’t beat yourself up, it’s not your fault
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Me. Contributing factors:
- Studied abroad junior year and when I came back for senior year struggled to find housing off campus (and living on campus as an upperclassman would have been considered weird) and wound up living with a friend who had already graduated, not that close to campus. She was busy with work and we didn't socialize that much, but it also meant I was a bit far from other friends for socializing, and it kind of torpedoed those friendships. We stayed friends but then did not stay in touch after graduation.
- Moved to a part of the country where not a lot of alums from my undergrad go. Had one friend from undergrad who moved here at the same time and we have definitely stayed friends, but I went to grad school and her career/personal life went in a different direction from mine, so I wouldn't say we're close at all. For instance I didn't invite her to my (admittedly small) wedding and it wasn't weird at all.
- I think I'm a bit of a loner in general? I have more grad school friends than undergrad friends, but even in that category I'd only include one classmate who I'd say is still a good friend 10+ years later.
But it was fine because I wound up making a really great group of friends in my late 20s, post grad school, who remain my closest friends. And I met my spouse through that group. So failing to create close connections in undergrad was not the end of the world. I mostly only think of it when I'm hanging out with my good friends and one of them mentions one of the THEIR college friends, or getting together with college pals, and I remember "oh yeah, I don't really do that." Oh well. I have a good life otherwise! And my degree still works for getting me jobs and stuff. So it all worked out.
Curious, how did this happen for you? Making friends in your late 20s as an adult in a new city is notoriously difficult.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Very similar for me. UVA, mid-90s. I had the same group of housemates throughout, and we were friendly enough, but not like other groups of close friends I’ve clicked with at other times throughout my life, and I don’t talk to anyone from college anymore. I tried other outlets, but I found the social scene really rough.
OP here. Same here. I didn't go to UVA but I attended a somewhat similar school.
Anonymous wrote:I made a couple close friends. But I didn't have that great group of friends you're still friends with years later. I was lonely a lot and on the fringes of other groups, plus I had one good friend I roomed with junior and senior year which helped.
For me I think it was that I spent too much time with a boyfriend my first year. But I also just wasn't very adept at making friends? And I did not really mesh with anyone on my freshman hall - there was a big clique I wasted too much time trying to be a part of. I should have realized sooner they didn't want to include me and branched out more.
Anonymous wrote:Me. Contributing factors:
- Studied abroad junior year and when I came back for senior year struggled to find housing off campus (and living on campus as an upperclassman would have been considered weird) and wound up living with a friend who had already graduated, not that close to campus. She was busy with work and we didn't socialize that much, but it also meant I was a bit far from other friends for socializing, and it kind of torpedoed those friendships. We stayed friends but then did not stay in touch after graduation.
- Moved to a part of the country where not a lot of alums from my undergrad go. Had one friend from undergrad who moved here at the same time and we have definitely stayed friends, but I went to grad school and her career/personal life went in a different direction from mine, so I wouldn't say we're close at all. For instance I didn't invite her to my (admittedly small) wedding and it wasn't weird at all.
- I think I'm a bit of a loner in general? I have more grad school friends than undergrad friends, but even in that category I'd only include one classmate who I'd say is still a good friend 10+ years later.
But it was fine because I wound up making a really great group of friends in my late 20s, post grad school, who remain my closest friends. And I met my spouse through that group. So failing to create close connections in undergrad was not the end of the world. I mostly only think of it when I'm hanging out with my good friends and one of them mentions one of the THEIR college friends, or getting together with college pals, and I remember "oh yeah, I don't really do that." Oh well. I have a good life otherwise! And my degree still works for getting me jobs and stuff. So it all worked out.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I made a couple close friends. But I didn't have that great group of friends you're still friends with years later. I was lonely a lot and on the fringes of other groups, plus I had one good friend I roomed with junior and senior year which helped.
For me I think it was that I spent too much time with a boyfriend my first year. But I also just wasn't very adept at making friends? And I did not really mesh with anyone on my freshman hall - there was a big clique I wasted too much time trying to be a part of. I should have realized sooner they didn't want to include me and branched out more.
OP here. That was exactly my situation. My freshman hall had one big clique, and I tried very hard freshman year to fit into the big group of girls who were all friends with each other on my floor. I should've realized sooner that they were not interested in being friends with me, but for some reason I thought that being nice to them would have them "invite" me into their friend group.
And yes, same experience here with being lonely very frequently, not having a great group of friends who you're still friends with after graduation, and being on the fringes of other social circles.
Sometimes I wonder if I'm on the spectrum, but I got a neuropsych eval in grad school and the answer was no.
I’m sorry to hear that, OP. My DD is autistic. The advice they give over and over again is to find friends through an activity you enjoy. If you are looking for friends, this is the way to go about it.