Anonymous wrote:The great news is that you don't have to make mom friends. There's no reason to join these mom groups or make friends with the mothers of your children's friends. None.
Anonymous wrote:The great news is that you don't have to make mom friends. There's no reason to join these mom groups or make friends with the mothers of your children's friends. None.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm in a new area where the majority of moms are SAHM and I’m struggling to connect with them.
I only had this issue when I was briefly a SAHM in this area and all the mom groups recommended were very, very WASPy and pretty close to UMC. I hooked up with Mocha Moms after a month and it was such a breathe of fresh air.
Anonymous wrote:I'm in a new area where the majority of moms are SAHM and I’m struggling to connect with them.
Anonymous wrote:I'm in the same boat, I'm a lot older than a lot of the moms of my kids' friends, and just have different experiences and interests as a result. I confess to not trying too hard at it either because I know I can always fall back on my work community.
Anonymous wrote:I notice people like you. If they seem otherwise cool, I generally try to draw them out and pull them into the group. If they can't do it, I might try to hang out one on one, to see if that makes them more comfortable, but if after that they can't get comfortable with the group, I give up.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Same here OP. I have no advice. I run huge meetings and do well at work, but I freeze and choke on the playground. In my neighborhood for 4 years and not a single mom friend - I’m starting to worry my kids will be left out of everything.
See, I’m the total opposite. I feel like I’m socially awkward everywhere *except* with the moms and dads at a playgroup, and if I tried to run a huge meeting at work I would crash and burn. For some reason I feel comfortable getting sociable and chatty with the other moms, and always try to be friendly and inclusive because I know how much it sucks to be that person on the periphery not knowing what to say.
I do live in an area that is slightly more laidback, so I will add the caveat that I’m not dealing with icy, detached “strivers”, just normal people.
Anonymous wrote:Yes. It is awful. So I found other people to hang out with. Mom group felt very similar to high school. Connected because of motherhood but beyond that not much. Anxieties about looks and clothes and weight and hair added to similar stuff about food for baby and clothes and once school starts--the issues all of us face are different and there is always the braggy one or two. You know, the people on facebook whose lives look amazing. Yuck.