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  1. #1
    Join Date
    Oct 2009
    Location
    SW Ohio
    Posts
    145
    When I spend time with my two close female friends, it is usually one-on-one time talking about life. We don't get to catch up that often, and I lived 500 miles away for 18 months, so time with them is precious and conversation includes topics sometimes uncomfortable in public places. We are all also financially under the weather, so going out and paying for dinner + drinks when we could just drink soda and eat popcorn and chat on the balcony at home seems ridiculous.
    “Hope is the thing with feathers, that perches in the soul, and sings the tune without words, and never stops at all.”
    - Emily Dickinson

  2. #2
    Join Date
    May 2008
    Location
    Little Egypt
    Posts
    1,867
    I have one close female friend that I go to dinner with every few months. We have been friends for almost 30 years. We have raised our kids together and we have been there for each other through many of life's tragedies. Her husband suffered an aneurysm 5 years ago and is paralyzed from the neck down. She is carrying a pretty hefty burden right now and it's a genuine effort to get a couple hours to herself in the evenings. We make the most of it and go somewhere nice and quiet to catch up.

    I also have a half dozen friends that I enjoy going to quilting and sewing shows with but as far as getting dressed up and going out on the town with the girls, I never did do that and certainly don't plan to start now.

    Funny you brought this subject up. I walked into the locker room at the gym this week and had to walk around a group of women getting ready for water aerobics class carrying on about their bathing suits and the fit and their hair and their nails, and on and on (I think you get the picture). It all seemed so frivilous and shallow to me. I can't explain why I felt the way I did but I told DH later that I must be getting old because I just couldn't relate to any of that. Now if they had been discussing lap times, 5k runs or bicycle components, I would've been more than interested in what they were discussing.
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  3. #3
    Join Date
    Feb 2005
    Location
    Concord, MA
    Posts
    13,394
    You know, Bike Chick, your example from the locker room makes me think that I must be confusing to people (I often have that same reaction to what you experienced). I love fashion, I like having my nails done, and I like to get dressed up, too. But... I love getting sweaty and dirty, never minded peeing in the woods, and when I was a kid, I spent a large amount of time leading the boys in my neighborhood around, playing soldier . Even though I like some traditionally feminine things, I've never been a girly-girl.
    I've often made the comment that when I am in large groups, in social settings, I usually end up talking to the men, unless there are women who are into riding, etc., there. I think some of this is because, even at this stage of my life, the women are *still* bragging about what their kids are doing. Last summer, I was getting a pedicure at one of those small little shops you see in strip malls, no fancy spa. In walks this woman who has kids the same age as mine. They weren't friends, really, but went to religious school and high school together. I tried to hide behind a magazine, but she came up to me and started in, asking if I knew that "*her son* was married, her daughter was getting her Master's at Julliard?" I squelched the strong urge to reply that my son was off interrogating Iraquis and the other one actually was happy with his B.A. and wasn't in grad school.

  4. #4
    Join Date
    May 2008
    Location
    Little Egypt
    Posts
    1,867
    I understand Crank. Some people don't have their own identitfy and use their children's (or grandchildren's) accomplishments for their own validation. Sad for them and hard to listen to! Gag!

    I, like you and I'm sure many others on here, am not a girlie girl either. I like dressing up, getting my hair and nails done, being feminine but I enjoy cycling, running and swimming too and don't mind getting sweaty, messing up my hair with a bike helmet, going without makeup or peeing in the woods. I feel bad categorizing women but what I would consider a girlie girl is what I picture when I read Shootingstar's post. That's fine for them but I have a hard time relating to them. I didn't fit into that group in high school, don't now and never will.

    I ride with the guys and last summer 2 coworkers and I would meet at the office early and get a 25 mile ride in before work 2-3 times a week. One of them told me he liked riding with me because it wasn't like riding with a chick and that I was one of the guys. I asked him what that meant and he said he couldn't put it into words but it was a compliment. FWIW, his wife is a girlie girl.

    Oh and for the record, I am a Sex and The City fan. I loved the show, watch all the reruns and have seen the movie. They are strong characters and I enjoy the humor.
    Last edited by Bike Chick; 05-15-2010 at 04:24 AM.
    __________________
    "We don't stop playing because we grow old; we grow old because we stop playing." George Bernard Shaw

    Luna Eclipse/Selle Italia Lady
    Surly Pacer/Terry Butterfly
    Quintana Roo Cd01/Koobi Stratus
    1981 Schwinn Le Tour Tourist
    Jamis Coda Femme

  5. #5
    Join Date
    Apr 2006
    Posts
    3,867
    I tried to hide behind a magazine, but she came up to me and started in, asking if I knew that "*her son* was married, her daughter was getting her Master's at Julliard?" I squelched the strong urge to reply that my son was off interrogating Iraquis and the other one actually was happy with his B.A. and wasn't in grad school.
    I don't understand why you would take it as a competitive challenge that she tells you about the success of her children. She's just catching up with you, on the most general topics she can think of. Rather than show that you are satisfied and content with what your children are doing, you chose not to share anything. That makes me think that you think your children can't compare to hers, and that's just buying into the BS that you hate so much.

    If you really don't want to participate in the Successful Child Olympics, just express your happiness for her happiness, and let it go. It's not a challenge or a threat to me when other people are successful. If they feel they've won something over on me because my kids don't "measure up" in their eyes, that's their problem, not mine.

    Karen
    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
    insidious ungovernable cardboard

  6. #6
    Join Date
    Apr 2006
    Posts
    3,867
    Back on topic, I don't have a large group of women friends, but I'd love to have one. My closest friends live in other cities, so when we get together it's usually with the whole family, or if it's just me doing the traveling, sitting in the kitchen having tea. I don't have anyone my age to ride with or hang out with nearby. Not that age is so important, but it does follow with a "stage of life" and it helps to be friends with someone you can relate to in similar circumstances. Helps to coordinate schedules, too. I just haven't found the right group of friends nearby, yet.

    I have trouble with large groups of middle-aged women in skanky shirts dressed to the nines and being loud and getting drunk in public, too. It just seems so out of control, and at that age there is a whole lot more to lose when things get like they did when I was younger. I'll bet they wouldn't act that way in front of their kids or their mama, so why would they do it in public?

    Karen
    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
    insidious ungovernable cardboard

  7. #7
    Join Date
    Nov 2009
    Location
    Canada
    Posts
    69
    Karen

    Thanks for that. I'm sometimes like a bull in a china shop in conversations. I get excited and happy over little things really quickly. So I love to share things that make me happy. Which might include my kids or my dh's successes. Or my own. When I share, I want to share the "happy". I'm not comparing or making any comment on the other person. Read it at face value.

    I find it hard to be sensitive that another person is not in a place to be able to join in my happy. Means I have to squish my happy. This makes me anxious that I for some reason have different social rules and for some reason it's not ok to be rejoicing in lifes little joys. I just want to share the feeling.

    For this reason, I tend to stick with a few close friends. I don't "get" the social rules of larger groups of women.

    Very gently, crankin, your interogation comment might be difficult to hear from our community members who are connected to the military.

  8. #8
    Join Date
    Nov 2007
    Location
    Western Canada-prairies, mountain & ocean
    Posts
    6,984
    Quote Originally Posted by Bike Chick View Post
    I feel bad categorizing women but what I would consider a girlie girl is what I picture when I read Shootingstar's post. That's fine for them but I have a hard time relating to them. I didn't fit into that group in high school, don't now and never will.
    My original post was simply similar in sentiment..I appreciate fashion, etc. but have a hard time relating to a great deal of shallow talk. Maybe it is the type of conversation amongst people who see other often. I dunno.

    But when I see close friends which isn't that often, time is valuable and precious.

    Guess some people have different definitions of fun..I just go for a bike ride. That's my "silliness".

    I did occasionally watch Sex in the City episodes. I saw the last movie on tv. I watched it partially out of curiosity for the FASHION and archetypical silliness. But would I participate in some vampy girls' night out, dressed to the nines? I'm not sure what I would wear... would I have to wear a black strapless dress to overcome my conservative image??? (I do have such a dress by the way..worn for attending a wedding with shawl... $50.00 brand-new. Yup, I'm a cheap chickie. ) One thing for certain, such a gathering would be too much effort for me.

    Be the anti-fashion: a skort for us all.
    Last edited by shootingstar; 05-15-2010 at 05:47 AM.
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    遙知馬力日久見人心 Over a long distance, you learn about the strength of your horse; over a long period of time, you get to know what’s in a person’s heart.

  9. #9
    Join Date
    Sep 2008
    Posts
    2,545
    First, disclaimer: I truly am not anti-female. I'm just stating what happens when I socialize with groups of women.

    I don't relate much to the fashion and dressing-up part of this discussion because the oppression that I feel can happen with any group of women. It wouldn't matter what the group norms were -- some woman would be trying to force them on me, and that would be the problem. It could be Manolo Blahnik or it could be Pearl Izumi -- the effect on me would be the same.

    With many women, I feel like the rule is "look like me and be like me to validate me" and even more annoying, they seem to assume that I need the same validation.

    I could be perfectly happy getting dressed up and going out with a group of women if they paid attention to me as a distinct individual and responded well if I did the same for them. Some of my closest friends have been girly girls -- but they know that I'm not, and that is fine.

    There's also the "you're not fat" conversation. When my SO wanted to lose weight, I noticed that in discussions with other males this was simply a problem to be solved. If I said the same thing to a group of women, there would be a chorus of voices seeking to reassure me that I'm okay -- "you're not fat!" The same logic applies to other issues -- if I want to paint a wall or retile a bathroom, there's a rush to assure me that "it looks okay! don't worry about it!" I hate this kind of thing: if you are my friend, you know what's important to me and you support my efforts to get/do what I want.
    Last edited by PamNY; 05-15-2010 at 07:33 AM.

  10. #10
    Join Date
    Dec 2007
    Posts
    1,333
    I had a pretty transient childhood where I went to 8 different schools by the time I graduated, so I am astounded when people still hang out with their friends from elementary school.

    I've either moved away, or they have or circumstances changed in their lives (married, busy with kids), that I've had a huge hemorrhage of female friends over the past decade that I'm pretty much down to no good female friends that I hang out with on any regular basis. I do have a few very dear female friends but they're scattered around the world.

    I also find it extremely difficult to make new friends with females my age (late 30's). They all seem to be content with their circle of friends that they don't seem to want to expand. Or just plain simply everyone's too busy living their lives that we don't "hang out" anymore.

 

 

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