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Thread: Dear So and So

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  1. #1
    Join Date
    Sep 2006
    Location
    Oslo, Norway
    Posts
    4,066
    I was thinking about this topic this weekend, because I was arranging a birthday party for a family member who is a self-professed hermit... It was a bit of challenge, not least because she makes very little effort to keep in touch with people herself and has few friends. Long story, lots of denial going on. Anyway. I can be quite an introvert myself but I recognize my own need for social contact so I make an effort to socialize regularly even when I don't always feel like it. (Wow, sitting quietly at my kitchen table and suddenly the garden filled up with birds. I guess someone noticed the cat wasn't around :-))
    My point was that I think everybody, no matter how social or introverted or extroverted, needs to belong to a group somehow. I think maybe the need to belong is stronger than the need for close friends. You can see close friends quite seldom, but on an everyday basis we need people who recognize us and hopefully like us, but simply having some kind of place in a group has value in itself.
    Just a random thought.
    Winter riding is much less about badassery and much more about bundle-uppery. - malkin

    1995 Kona Cinder Cone commuterFrankenbike/Selle Italia SLR Lady Gel Flow
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  2. #2
    Join Date
    Jul 2003
    Location
    Traveling Nomad
    Posts
    6,763
    Quote Originally Posted by lph View Post
    My point was that I think everybody, no matter how social or introverted or extroverted, needs to belong to a group somehow.
    Then I am in trouble. Now that I am retired, I no longer belong to any sort of "group". I have individual friends scattered all over, some out of the US, but no social group, no work group, no clubs, etc. And since we are traveling full-time, it would be very hard to become part of any group.

    Then again, other than a work group, I have never been a "group person". Never joined a sorority, never really had a group of friends; rather, individual friends, only a few of whom knew each other. I've just always been more of an individual or (usually) part of a couple. I had a boyfriend all the way through high school and college (different ones), and married youngish (24), and have been married to the same man for 31 years. Other than our extended families, which I guess you could say are a form of group, we just aren't in any groups.

    I think social relationships (friendships, family, etc) are important, but groups, not necessarily. Not for we odd birds, anyway!
    Emily

    2011 Jamis Dakar XC "Toto" - Selle Italia Ldy Gel Flow
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  3. #3
    Join Date
    Dec 2005
    Location
    New Jersey
    Posts
    1,940
    Quote Originally Posted by emily_in_nc View Post
    Then I am in trouble. Now that I am retired, I no longer belong to any sort of "group". I have individual friends scattered all over, some out of the US, but no social group, no work group, no clubs, etc. And since we are traveling full-time, it would be very hard to become part of any group.

    Then again, other than a work group, I have never been a "group person". Never joined a sorority, never really had a group of friends; rather, individual friends, only a few of whom knew each other. I've just always been more of an individual or (usually) part of a couple. I had a boyfriend all the way through high school and college (different ones), and married youngish (24), and have been married to the same man for 31 years. Other than our extended families, which I guess you could say are a form of group, we just aren't in any groups.

    I think social relationships (friendships, family, etc) are important, but groups, not necessarily. Not for we odd birds, anyway!
    Emily,
    You and I need to form a group. You just described my life exactly.

    I am currently on the outs with a "group" at work ( teachers) because the social politics got to be too much during a stressful year and I just said enough. I feel like I am the one in high school again and I pissed off the popular kids. When do we get to be done with this stuff?

  4. #4
    Join Date
    Feb 2005
    Location
    Concord, MA
    Posts
    13,394
    Teachers are the worst, when it comes to this stuff at work. It's a hazard, I'd say of being a female dominated profession. The mean girls rule.
    However, I'd say that while I was part of a group in my last teaching job, it was based on work stuff. And, in middle schools, you work on a team, and that bond can be very strong. What got to me was teachers constantly complaining about their husbands and how stressed they were from their kids. Once in awhile I would pipe in and say, "My husband does not do that." I stopped socializing with work people long ago.
    I am very social and have had several groups through out my life. But I have found the principle of "friendly, not friends," (which I used to teach my students, so they could tolerate working with others) needs to be applied at work. One of the reasons I like working in my clinic is that I don't have to socialize with anyone. I meet with my supervisor 1X a week and I casually talk to other therapists. But, I could come in and shut my door and never talk to anyone, if I wanted to. The other therapists are nice and we actually have stuff in common, but I am not going to pursue friendships there.
    I am still pretty upset about our friends moving to Amherst. I get very bored without social plans and our other friends are more the just go out to dinner types. Over the years, our commonalities have diminished. I had a huge group of friends as a kid, a group of 5 close friends in HS, and tons of acquaintances, before I moved. I was active in student government and spent my childhood roaming the streets of my neighborhood with a huge group of kids, on my bike. While I do spend the majority of time with my DH, sometimes that gets on my nerves and makes me feel isolated. I even feel antsy at night, because after teaching for so long, I still am not used to not having tons of work to do when I get home. Last night, I said I was bored, and DH told me I was nuts! I'd say one of the only downsides of moving back to MA was that too many people here just hang out with their families, because a lot of them never moved away. Always obligations with parents, siblings, extended families. In AZ my friends were our family, and everyone was in the same boat.
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  5. #5
    Join Date
    Sep 2013
    Location
    Montreal, QC
    Posts
    764
    I have very little time to "socialize" and I don't miss any of it. Used to when in my 20s but now in my 50s, I prefer to do stuff on my own ground/schedule. I turn down most work events (unless at lunch and even then!) as I have no interest to use my evening time for them. I'm very happy to work with them and have fun, but my time after work is mine. We used to be so busy going from one friend to the next that we ended up rushing to get our stuff done. So little by little, those friends stopped sending us invites and we lost contact. I don't miss it. At all.

    Sure I have a friend here and there for a lunch or dinner but that limits the interaction. I have more than enough of my job, house, motorhome, hubby and my 6 pets to keep me busy. No time to whine and get bored. hihi I don't have enough in a week to do all I want to get done.

    I'm sure we are far from being alone in that situation.
    Helene
    Riding a 2014 Specialized Amira LS4 Expert - aka The Zebra!
    2015 Specialized Crux e5 - aka Bora Bora bike

  6. #6
    Join Date
    Nov 2007
    Location
    Western Canada-prairies, mountain & ocean
    Posts
    6,984
    I guess most of my life I'm like Emily_nc. I sorta tried to belong in a group in high school but got bored or never fitted in completely in a group all the time. I even had a very close friend for over 15 yrs. of my life ...she was popular and hung out with group of "in" friends whom I related well with all but never "belonged". So she and I were pals on our own.

    I just seem to collect a few very good friends who I keep for past few decades, across Canada and socialize individually when I see them. I'm fine with socializing superficially with others, but after awhile just like go off..cycling on my own.

    If I didn't have the 1 very good local friend, I'd probably dislike the city where I live a lot more. I work for the municipality and for certain, working within govn't, I learned much more quickly about the city in a more intimate way and about local stuff.
    Last edited by shootingstar; 06-08-2016 at 04:17 AM.
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  7. #7
    Join Date
    Feb 2005
    Location
    Concord, MA
    Posts
    13,394
    Wow, I can't imagine not socializing with friends. I guess I am at a point in my life that I don't have that many obligations. No kids at home, someone else cleans my house, and while I do have a bit of work from my job to do at home, it's intermittent. I'd venture to say that DH and I have been out, mostly with friends, just about every Saturday night of our marriage. Once in awhile we have a weekend of nothing, except riding alone, but that feels lonely to me. Don't get me wrong, I am not partying every night of the week, after work, I almost never go out after work. I think most of my life has been sooooo busy, I feel at a loss when there's nothing planned. At one point, I was teaching full time, had 2 young kids, taught religious school on Sundays, and also taught 3-7 classes a week at the gym. I also was on the board at the JCC. So, that is the normal for me. When I taught, I was on tons of committees and did a lot of work on curriculum and grants. It just seems like I have way too much time now; I have been pondering going up to working 4 days a week instead of 3, but I think i might regret that.
    2015 Trek Silque SSL
    Specialized Oura

    2011 Guru Praemio
    Specialized Oura
    2017 Specialized Ariel Sport

  8. #8
    Join Date
    Sep 2013
    Location
    Montreal, QC
    Posts
    764
    Also we get up at 4:15 a.m. for work. So normally, by 9-9:15pm we're in bed. So that leaves little time to go out or get stuff done as we get home at around 5 p.m. I don't have anyone to mow my grass, clean the house, do my laundry, walk the dogs, etc. So my downtime is used for all of this. Just last night we had to rush home to mow the grass/weed eater before another rain pour came down. We finished at 7 p.m. (in the rain), had a quick bite, took care of pets and then first thing I knew, I was already in bed. Time goes by way too fast. During the week, I have no time for cycling (even less socializing). If I do, it has to be on the trainer at home so I can throw a toy to a dog at same time. At least, doing my gym at home, frees a bit some time for them. And it does not bother me at all as they are a huge part of our lives.

    I cannot wait to retire in 2-4 years, sell this home and get something way smaller and less time consuming. Unfortunately, by the time we are retired, probably 3 of the 6 pets (if not more) will be dead (old age and sick). I'm sure I will find that I too, have too much time on my hands.
    Helene
    Riding a 2014 Specialized Amira LS4 Expert - aka The Zebra!
    2015 Specialized Crux e5 - aka Bora Bora bike

 

 

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