Anonymous wrote:Can anyone explain the type of person that you meet and they are very friendly and invite you to events but then make a comment about their life or their kids almost as a way to feel out if you will act the same as them and if you remark anything that is your own behavior or thought that doesn't exactly match up and then they ice you out? I've met several of these women and it is so strange. We've just met. Why would you think I'd think exactly like you?
One example. We were walking our babies around the block for our first meet up per her invite and the mom remarked that she didn't care if her baby grew up to be sporty or not. I honestly replied that I loved sports and would love if my child grew up to be sporty but of course would follow my child's lead. The mom iced me out for years, is one of the most competitive people I know, and her kid grew up to only do sports. He's a jerk to other kids in sports too putting down kids even when playing pickup.
How was I supposed to know that her lead was something I was supposed to reciprocate in order to be invited into her world of friendship? So many tests. People are so weird this way.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Umar Haque writes that friendship is a liability in a disintegrating society. Friends have needs. No one has the time to invest in other people. The US is an every man for himself society. DC is even worse in this respect. Why do you think Truman advised getting a dog if you wanted a friend in DC.
Some of us make the time. Same as how people make time to work out. Or cook food from scratch. Or walk their dogs. Etc.
Friendships take work, so if you aren't willing to put in the time then you probably shouldn't expect to reap the results. I get up at 5:30 am so I can walk and talk to my best friend, who is a school teacher who lives about 4 hours away from me because that's the only time we can both commit to given our work schedules, family commitments, etc. Don't invest time in other people if you don't want to, but don't say that no one does. I have plenty of friends who do.
Anonymous wrote:Can anyone explain the type of person that you meet and they are very friendly and invite you to events but then make a comment about their life or their kids almost as a way to feel out if you will act the same as them and if you remark anything that is your own behavior or thought that doesn't exactly match up and then they ice you out? I've met several of these women and it is so strange. We've just met. Why would you think I'd think exactly like you?
One example. We were walking our babies around the block for our first meet up per her invite and the mom remarked that she didn't care if her baby grew up to be sporty or not. I honestly replied that I loved sports and would love if my child grew up to be sporty but of course would follow my child's lead. The mom iced me out for years, is one of the most competitive people I know, and her kid grew up to only do sports. He's a jerk to other kids in sports too putting down kids even when playing pickup.
How was I supposed to know that her lead was something I was supposed to reciprocate in order to be invited into her world of friendship? So many tests. People are so weird this way.
Anonymous wrote:Umar Haque writes that friendship is a liability in a disintegrating society. Friends have needs. No one has the time to invest in other people. The US is an every man for himself society. DC is even worse in this respect. Why do you think Truman advised getting a dog if you wanted a friend in DC.
Anonymous wrote:I think there are many of us in this same boat, especially in this area. Either you are a social climber or you are not and if you are not, you will struggle here. There's too many rules here and one simple "mistake" will oust you.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anyone else?
My high school friends are scattered and a few have splintered off with time, which is normal, I suppose. Ditto college. We mainly communicate via memes or some text threads.
The adult friends I made in my 20s all are now busy with families, me included; seems there's never a great time to meet up, and some have moved.
I love my neighborhood and have cultivated some solid friendships there, originally through my kids, but the guesswork sucks. I don't want to come off as too aggressive or needy, so I limit invites or texts. I thought I clicked with one person -- but several hangouts later, they basically ghosted and stopped reciprocating, our text thread went dormant, and...poof.
Anyone else in this boat? I just feel low-level stressed and somewhat lonely as a middle-aged mom.
It gets worse once your kids leave school.
Anonymous wrote:Anyone else?
My high school friends are scattered and a few have splintered off with time, which is normal, I suppose. Ditto college. We mainly communicate via memes or some text threads.
The adult friends I made in my 20s all are now busy with families, me included; seems there's never a great time to meet up, and some have moved.
I love my neighborhood and have cultivated some solid friendships there, originally through my kids, but the guesswork sucks. I don't want to come off as too aggressive or needy, so I limit invites or texts. I thought I clicked with one person -- but several hangouts later, they basically ghosted and stopped reciprocating, our text thread went dormant, and...poof.
Anyone else in this boat? I just feel low-level stressed and somewhat lonely as a middle-aged mom.