Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Veteran mom here. My oldest is 10.
Even my closest mom friends we don’t make plans so frequently.
I have 3 kids. I have childless friends, old coworkers, kid school friends, moms club, neighborhood kids, sports, etc.
Just wait. If they like you, you will meet again.
Thanks. I’m a first time mom.
Little guy is only 4 months.
Any other tips you’ve got ?
Social ones I mean?
With my overthinking income
Off like a klutz at times
Try to find more local friends. Join moms club and meetup. Go to library baby story time.
Making mom friends is kind of like dating. Not everyone is going to be into you.
I have 2 elementary and a preschooler now. I have to juggle my kids’ friendships with mine.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:WHY ARE
YOU WRITING LIKE
THIS IS A
HAIKU?!
STOP
IT!
Certain post grad fields use 1 sentence paragraphs at times. Thus, the "haiku" writers might view your lengthy paragraphs as several unrelated ideas mushed together like a stream of consciousness.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:“I don’t get it. One of them “loved” my text but the other didn’t reply. ”
It would not dawn on me that I would need to reply to your “that was fun; hope we can do it again sometime” post necessarily.
Most grown-ups know how to use their words and maintain a dialogue by the time they're hosting pkaydates. Or so I thought?
Here's part of the problem. Your note was not the start of or part of a dialogue. Your comment was a "thank you for inviting me" which didn't ordinarily warrant a response. Sounds like you had a healthy dialogue during the playdate; where it was appropriate to maintain the dialogue. After the playdate via text? No.
If you think that your text was the start of a dialogue, then you are one of those people with whom messages never end. If you say "thank you" and they say "You're welcome" do you automatically have to say something else? Are there comments that someone would make to you that you don't feel warrants a response? I hate these text message chains that never end. Sometimes to make the end, I just will not respond. I already spend more time than I should on my phone for things I can't avoid (work messages, messages where I'm the organizer of something, and direct questions) and my kids are often asking me to put down the phone. I sure as heck don't need or want to have text chains that won't end.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The more I think about this the more I am getting pissed off. The other moms could at least practice basic manners and send a quick response of acknowledgement. Whatever happened to being polite?
OP here: I don’t get it. One of them “loved” my text but the other didn’t reply.
I’m not too worried just went out with two different groups this week and we plan to
meet again. The women I’m referencing in my post, I will see again since we’re in a
support group, that’s how we met. Our husbands are in the medical field and all three
of them will be moving once training is done.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:WHY ARE
YOU WRITING LIKE
THIS IS A
HAIKU?!
STOP
IT!
Certain post grad fields use 1 sentence paragraphs at times. Thus, the "haiku" writers might view your lengthy paragraphs as several unrelated ideas mushed together like a stream of consciousness.
Anonymous wrote:The more I think about this the more I am getting pissed off. The other moms could at least practice basic manners and send a quick response of acknowledgement. Whatever happened to being polite?
Anonymous wrote:WHY ARE
YOU WRITING LIKE
THIS IS A
HAIKU?!
STOP
IT!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:“I don’t get it. One of them “loved” my text but the other didn’t reply. ”
It would not dawn on me that I would need to reply to your “that was fun; hope we can do it again sometime” post necessarily.
Most grown-ups know how to use their words and maintain a dialogue by the time they're hosting pkaydates. Or so I thought?
Anonymous wrote:“I don’t get it. One of them “loved” my text but the other didn’t reply. ”
It would not dawn on me that I would need to reply to your “that was fun; hope we can do it again sometime” post necessarily.