Anonymous wrote:Definitely move on from her. She either doesn't like you or is just not a social person.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DH and I are have an active social life, and I'm pretty sure we have weekends booked with plans, travel, and holiday stuff through the new year. If someone reached out to me and I wanted to see them, I would tell them just that and suggest we get together during the week or set a plan for a weekend in early 2026. If I were not that into them, I wouldn't offer an alternative and might be cagey about putting a date on the calendar at any time.
Exactly this. I do tend to think OP's thinking is on-point...if the friend wanted to get together she would offer some alternative dates. If for no other reason than what it signals. It's a bit socially inept of you all not to understand how it sounds and what it signals when you just say you're booked the next three months, period the end. Friendships take a little effort.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am often that person. It means what it means. My kids are both in intense sports; I work 60hrs/week. I am a single parent. Our time is FULLY booked. If I do have free time, I want to zone out solo.
So you accept that you won’t have friends.
Anonymous wrote:DH and I are have an active social life, and I'm pretty sure we have weekends booked with plans, travel, and holiday stuff through the new year. If someone reached out to me and I wanted to see them, I would tell them just that and suggest we get together during the week or set a plan for a weekend in early 2026. If I were not that into them, I wouldn't offer an alternative and might be cagey about putting a date on the calendar at any time.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:That is a total blow off, right?
Friends are trying to get together and one friend basically said she is never available. Can’t offer one date for the rest of 2025. She has 3 kids as do I. We all have 2-3 kids.
Option 1: She doesn’t want to hang out with you.
Option 2: She has stuff going on that she doesn’t want to discuss with you. Possibly one of her kids has special needs that she is busy with.
Either way, not really your friend.
I have a special needs child who takes up huge amounts of time and attention. Just because I’m busy doesn’t mean I’m “not really your friend.” That’s incredibly offensive.
Anonymous wrote:I would take them at their word but also not take it personally. They have prioritized things other than getting together with you. It is what it is.
This is a major reason we have worked hard to cultivate and maintain a roster of family friends with kids. So on any given weekend, we can reach out to 2 or 3 and usually at least one will be up for a hang out, playdate, or group outing. And most of our friends have also cultivated other friends, so if we ever can't make an invite, it's okay and nothing hinges on our presence. So I'm never offended when people say they can't make it, and I also never feel guilty when we can't make it.
Anonymous wrote:That often is us. It is not that we hate you or even dislike you. It does mean we really are fully booked at present -- and at least for the next few months.
We work OOH. We juggle children, school runs, afterschool commitments, church commitments (and we sometimes cannot manage to get to church if someone at home is sick), have meals ready on time, laundry done, basic housekeeping, and keeping groceries and such stocked.