charliegirl816 wrote:I moved out of state after my divorce. The new friends I made through church were married, widowed and single. I have since moved back to the same street from my ex (we are still single) and mil. We have a good relationship, but it took time. I do not have a relationship with most of our married friends because they there his friends and I divorced him. I have joined a bible study group that is mostly married couples with kids, so I will see what friendships that may form from this group. I feel the key is finding commonality with women in general.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:"When I separated I was told that an attractive divorced woman is a threat and that I would lose married friends simply because I became a "threat." shitty but probably accurate."
Definitely the vibe I get from some of the moms at school. And frankly, I've had some of the dads give me kisses on the cheek or be a tad too friendly towards me, so they may be right.
I think soccer dads are like this with any fit, attractive woman. I'm married and get this often. It's repulsive.
Anonymous wrote:"When I separated I was told that an attractive divorced woman is a threat and that I would lose married friends simply because I became a "threat." shitty but probably accurate."
Definitely the vibe I get from some of the moms at school. And frankly, I've had some of the dads give me kisses on the cheek or be a tad too friendly towards me, so they may be right.
Anonymous wrote:Did you do the same to your single friends once you got married? Single friends often end up buying gifts for a bride, get an invite to the first baby shower, and then rarely/never hear from their married gf again.
I'm pretty fortunate, because my friends are single/married/kids/no kids/hetro to homosexual relationships. We've had statuses change within the group (single to married to divorce) and the core group is essentially the same. The only "friends" I've lost were situational gfs...the ones I met at a new moms class, for example.
I just find it interesting that you didn't have any single girlfriends.
Anonymous wrote:Did you do the same to your single friends once you got married? Single friends often end up buying gifts for a bride, get an invite to the first baby shower, and then rarely/never hear from their married gf again.
I'm pretty fortunate, because my friends are single/married/kids/no kids/hetro to homosexual relationships. We've had statuses change within the group (single to married to divorce) and the core group is essentially the same. The only "friends" I've lost were situational gfs...the ones I met at a new moms class, for example.
I just find it interesting that you didn't have any single girlfriends.
Anonymous wrote:Close friends I still see, though I definitely get invited to fewer events and activities, for whatever reason.
Newer "friends" like parents from school completely froze us both out. I definitely felt like there was a "keep away from them" mentality.
It actually has been hard to make good new friends, because the single women I meet who have time to do things generally have never been married and don't have kids. This doesn't bother me, but it seems like they feel that this is too great of a divide between us.
Anonymous wrote:I try to be a good friend but sometimes it's hard. I have a divorcing friend who seeks a lot of validation of her choice and I can't provide it. Her DC has an anxiety problem which seems to have worsened, but she thinks it doesn't need to be addressed, and she is very financially over optimistic. I know I should just listen nonjudgmentally, but it's toughard.