Anonymous wrote:Pickleball
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am 48. I don't have time for friends. I barely see the friends I have. Truly, I am too busy. This is probably most working women with children.
I'm 46, work full time, and have two middle schoolers. We see our friends multiple times a week. Of course people have stuff like sports or work events but we have watched football together every weekend for the last several weeks and we often have a group dinner once a week at someone's house. Some activities involve kids, some don't. I understand being busy, but it's often a matter of what you prioritize. We love hanging out with our friends on the weekends and playing pickleball during the week when we can (our kids play time-consuming sport but we don't always take them).
Are you overweight? Do your kids not do activities?
I don’t understand how a 46 year old with two kids has time to commute, work a full time job, be present for her spouse, workout daily and socialize multiple times a week. Oh and the kid activities. This doesn’t add up.
I’m privileged in that my role is hybrid and I can fit in workouts 3x a week during lunch. Also have a husband who does his fair share. I have weekly cleaners. Still struggle to find time to socialize. After working 8+ hours, working out, getting dinner on the table, driving kids to activities I’m exhausted.
What is the point of driving yourself to exhaustion? What kind of example are you setting for your kids?
Anonymous wrote:I’d like to know why people work out during lunch. When are you eating lunch? Are you just swallowing all your food instead of chewing? Stuffing your face while staring at a screen? Skipping meals 3x a week? No wonder people have weight issues in the US.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am 48. I don't have time for friends. I barely see the friends I have. Truly, I am too busy. This is probably most working women with children.
I'm 46, work full time, and have two middle schoolers. We see our friends multiple times a week. Of course people have stuff like sports or work events but we have watched football together every weekend for the last several weeks and we often have a group dinner once a week at someone's house. Some activities involve kids, some don't. I understand being busy, but it's often a matter of what you prioritize. We love hanging out with our friends on the weekends and playing pickleball during the week when we can (our kids play time-consuming sport but we don't always take them).
Are you overweight? Do your kids not do activities?
I don’t understand how a 46 year old with two kids has time to commute, work a full time job, be present for her spouse, workout daily and socialize multiple times a week. Oh and the kid activities. This doesn’t add up.
I’m privileged in that my role is hybrid and I can fit in workouts 3x a week during lunch. Also have a husband who does his fair share. I have weekly cleaners. Still struggle to find time to socialize. After working 8+ hours, working out, getting dinner on the table, driving kids to activities I’m exhausted.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am 48. I don't have time for friends. I barely see the friends I have. Truly, I am too busy. This is probably most working women with children.
I'm 46, work full time, and have two middle schoolers. We see our friends multiple times a week. Of course people have stuff like sports or work events but we have watched football together every weekend for the last several weeks and we often have a group dinner once a week at someone's house. Some activities involve kids, some don't. I understand being busy, but it's often a matter of what you prioritize. We love hanging out with our friends on the weekends and playing pickleball during the week when we can (our kids play time-consuming sport but we don't always take them).
Are you overweight? Do your kids not do activities?
I don’t understand how a 46 year old with two kids has time to commute, work a full time job, be present for her spouse, workout daily and socialize multiple times a week. Oh and the kid activities. This doesn’t add up.
I’m privileged in that my role is hybrid and I can fit in workouts 3x a week during lunch. Also have a husband who does his fair share. I have weekly cleaners. Still struggle to find time to socialize. After working 8+ hours, working out, getting dinner on the table, driving kids to activities I’m exhausted.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am 48. I don't have time for friends. I barely see the friends I have. Truly, I am too busy. This is probably most working women with children.
I'm 46, work full time, and have two middle schoolers. We see our friends multiple times a week. Of course people have stuff like sports or work events but we have watched football together every weekend for the last several weeks and we often have a group dinner once a week at someone's house. Some activities involve kids, some don't. I understand being busy, but it's often a matter of what you prioritize. We love hanging out with our friends on the weekends and playing pickleball during the week when we can (our kids play time-consuming sport but we don't always take them).
Anonymous wrote:I am 48. I don't have time for friends. I barely see the friends I have. Truly, I am too busy. This is probably most working women with children.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Here's a newer suggestion- I have done several TimeLeft dinners and all have been great experiences, 1 led to a really good friendship.
Basically you sign up for a dinner with 5 stranger on their website and you get the details of the reservation. I think I've gone 4 times and across the board have met normal, interesting people. You take a personality quiz and get grouped that way. Most people were in a few camps- moved here for work and looking for friends, recently had a career milestone and had more time to breathe after being head down working for years, or in some sort of transitional phase like starting their own company and are feeling the loss of coworkers. All the dinners included a great mix of interesting conversations with educated, kind, open people. You all start off on the right foot all being in the same situation walking up to a dinner table of strangers and the conversation flows right away. Highly recommend!
Adding that the friendship I made has been a year long now and she's someone I probably wouldn't have connected with irl just because we have pretty different careers, she doesn't have kids, we live different lifestyles (me suburbia mom, her fancy high rise building), but we both had similar childhoods and love working out, plants, cooking, treasure hunting at vintage shops, nice coffee. We've done dinners, long walks with coffee, shopping, a concert, and we text at least weekly.
Anonymous wrote:I love the Steve/Sally story. DCUM posts don't usually improve my mood but that one did.
Anonymous wrote:I think you need to find a regular activity that you do consistently. There’s a study that shows adults need about 130 hours (something around there) together to become close friends.
If you go to a meetup just once or twice it’s unlikely anything will pan out.
But if you go to the same group every week and see some of the same people, over time they can become friends.
I hear your pain as I struggle with the same since kids are older and personal life changes among friends have led to previous friend groups scattering.