• AVengefulAxolotl@lemmy.world
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      2 days ago

      You know, there are quite a few numbers between 3 and 20. Also you dont have to talk to them every single day. Just meaningful time together. Thats it.

      Or at least this worked / works for me.

      • grrgyle@slrpnk.net
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        2 days ago

        This is what I’ve observed of my partner and other more social people - they’ll reach out to people they like semi-frequently just to check in, maybe arrange a date if it works, or maybe just trade memes.

        • AVengefulAxolotl@lemmy.world
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          2 days ago

          What do you mean? When the time is right i guess?

          If you mean how often, well that depends. Weekly / bi-weekly / monthly it really just how it goes.

          Just because we dont meet up we dont just suddenly become strangers.

          • Lazhward@lemmy.world
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            2 days ago

            It was more of a joke comment about your response. OP says he doesn’t have time to spend with (more) friends and your response is to just spend more time with them.

            Although I know that’s not quite what you meant, I’m pointing it out in a deadpan way as to highlight the absurdity.

          • squaresinger@lemmy.world
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            2 days ago

            I wish I would see any of my friends monthly. I haven’t seen my best friend in like 4 months or so.

            Weekly meetups with 3+ friends, that’s something you can do before you have a wife, kids and a job.

            10 years ago, I had a really large social circle, with a group of ~15 people who met 1-4x per week. That was all fine and easy when the only commitment was university and part-time jobbing. But with a full-time job and kids, all that just disappears.

            A week only has 168h. With work, sleep and family, there’s not a lot left.

            • AVengefulAxolotl@lemmy.world
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              2 days ago

              Well i did not think about that. Im in my mid twenties and i only have a job to worry about, so what i said came from this my perspective.

              • squaresinger@lemmy.world
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                2 days ago

                Wait for it ;) It’s gonna get you like anyone else.

                Except if you stay childless and then you are the rando with too much time while everyone else you know just disappears into sleep-deprivation-induced zombie mode.

    • underscores@lemmy.zip
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      2 days ago

      They probably don’t. I feel like people’s definition of what a friend is can be very loose.

      I recognize some people I know as colleagues or acquaintances, but some people may think of them as friends were they in my shoes.

      • LousyCornMuffins@lemmy.world
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        2 days ago

        some folk i know just use friend, family, and enemy. colleague, acquaintance, and any other social relationship classification does not exist for them.

    • Witziger_Waschbaer@feddit.org
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      2 days ago

      There are several people I consider (very) close friends, that don’t live in the same city as me anymore. We message regularly, do some online gaming here and there and visit each other as often as possible. And every time we do it’s just like back when we hung out in uni every day. While we don’t have as much time as back then, the quality of friendship is the same or even grew. I think it’s about consciously making time and the effort for each other, even if it can’t be every other day or week.

      Also not having kids makes it much easier, time wise, I guess.

  • tetris11@lemmy.ml
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    3 days ago

    I make 3 new friends at every stage of my life, career, and living situation. I also lose those same 3 friends and never speak to them again if any one of those variables changes.

      • tetris11@lemmy.ml
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        3 days ago

        I’ll be your friend. But also I won’t. Call me if you want to hang, and I will make a poor excuse

        • FundMECFS@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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          3 days ago

          fair enough! I would make you an excuse as well. Because well I’m bedridden and cannot leave my bed due to disability, hence why I don’t really have close friends like I did before in this part of my life…

  • grrgyle@slrpnk.net
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    2 days ago

    I’m actively working on making a new friend and it’s some work, but I only have 1 really close friend and I’d like more. 3 would be great.

    I think for our next date I’ll take him to the graveyard so we can memento mori among the stones.

  • Whats_your_reasoning@lemmy.world
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    2 days ago

    I have a male friend (we dated in high school, it’s been 20 years since then) who went this way. I remember even as teens, he’d complain that his friends don’t get him. But they “were friends since kindergarten” and sunk cost fallacy prevented him from reaching out to new people.

    Today he’s a father and it’s even harder to make friends. I feel for him. He doesn’t talk with the friends from high school anymore, and laments the paths in life they’d chosen since. It just sucks, because I’d been encouraging him to get to know new people since the days we dated, but he didn’t practice then and has no idea what to do now.

  • TwoBeeSan@lemmy.world
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    2 days ago

    Had this. Stopped because being social with them was a hassle. Finding people you enjoy being with goes a long way.

    Don’t ever feel stuck.

    • Emi@ani.social
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      2 days ago

      How do you get adopted or befriended? I’m too anxious to talk to people and don’t go outside much.

      • Mechaguana@programming.dev
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        2 days ago

        Initiative, feel the vibes for compatibility, try to find out subtly if he/she has good friends that might be interesting and do the same thing for him/her.

        People are awkward, they all feel nervous to a certain degree. Be forgiving with yourself and others, but don’t bite more than you can chew.

        Really it’s about saying to hell with privacy and not thinking about intruding in other ppl lives: most of the time they actually like it if it was a cool interaction at least!

        If you really are nervous, try starting with saying randomly hi to strangers that aren’t in a hurry maybe add a platitude, ask the time by “accidentally” forgetting your phone, bum a cigarette off the cool guy, comment on the weather for old people. Give a compliment! Enjoy living, and don’t mind if you ever get a bad interaction, sometimes you randomly encounter someone at their lowest point or at their worst because of a personal problem, hangryness, or they just talk rudely by habit.

        And if you want to meet specific people with specific interest: where do they hang out? Online? Offline? Then you proceed with a friendly hello or smile.

  • solsangraal@lemmy.zip
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    3 days ago

    i mean i’m well over 40 and haven’t seen anything to demonstrate that life is better with more than 3 friends

    • TexasDrunk@lemmy.world
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      3 days ago

      I need 4, but that’s because one of my hobbies is being in a 5 piece band. I need the other 4 people to carry my untalented ass and I can’t be in a band with folks I’m not friends with. They like me because due to my obsession with being on time and prepared we get called back for gigs and booking agents (or sound guys, honestly) recommend us as local openers for large acts because we never let them down.

  • I’m very grateful to have 7 buddies that I grew up with and still hang out occasionally. I’ve known 2 for about 50 years and the rest since HS nearly 40 years. I’m having brewskis with one of my BFFs (also my son’s Godfather) after work tonight.

  • four@lemmy.zip
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    3 days ago

    That’s true, although I lost contact with those friends so now I’m stuck at 0 :c

  • VinnyDaCat@lemmy.world
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    2 days ago

    Socializing is exhausting. I usually have a couple of people besides my girlfriend that I chat with, and it’s more than enough for me.

    I understand that socializing is an important aspect of life. I’m certain there’s all sorts of papers detailing the benefits of it, but I do also think it’s important to learn to be comfortable spending time by yourself.

  • exasperation@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    3 days ago

    I’m baffled by some of the responses in this thread. Yes, it’s harder to make friends in one’s 20’s than in the teens, and harder to make friends in one’s 30’s than in one’s 20’s.

    But to act like it’s inevitable, or even desirable, to not make new friendships after the age of 20 seems like overstating things.

    The people you grow up with and befriend at a young age share those similar roots. That will always be valuable in friendships.

    And the people you befriend later in life, through your hobbies, your career, your neighborhood, your mutual relationships also share those commonalities, and that will bring something valuable to those relationships, too. One of the most things I love about meeting, dating, and marrying my wife is that it mingled our two worlds of friends, and a lot of the friends I met through her in my 30’s are now some of my best friends today.

    I rely on local friends for things that require geographical closeness. I rely on fellow parents for parenting support (including favors, advice, even jokes/rants). I am close with former and current colleagues, and we talk shop, careers, people we know, and sometimes refer each other to job opportunities or other work.

    There is a certain richness that comes from multiple social relationships evolving and developing over time, including repeat acquaintances, superficial friendships, all the way to very close or very intimate friendships. We’re all just walking through life in different stages, and each stage has different needs and opportunities to rely on and provide support to your social network.

        • exasperation@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          I think of it more as a set of skills that needs to be maintained, and is easier to do when regularly engaged.

          There was a comment recently that I really liked, here, by @[email protected] :

          I think people do not recognize the immense value of weak interpersonal bonds, like going to the same corner store all the time. But they are the glue that holds society together. It’s not the deep friendships, you can only have a few of those. It’s those people you are acquainted with, and look forward to seeing, people you wave to, all those little connections add up.

          The little weak bonds help keep you grounded so that you can tighten and bolster the deeper and more meaningful bonds. I’m a better friend to my closest friends in large part because I have the experience and lessons learned from past situations with friendship: how to be supportive when a friend is going through a death in the family, a divorce, a period of unemployment, how to celebrate with a friend getting married, having new kids, etc. Each little situation presents an opportunity to be a good friend (and gives better information about what you can expect from your good friends), and just basically sharpens those social bonds and your ability to navigate them in a way that enriches your own life and your friends’ lives.

          So it’s not a finite amount of juice. It’s a muscle that can be made stronger, and I’d argue is worth actively making stronger.

  • wischi@programming.dev
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    3 days ago

    3? Are you nuts? I have two and see them maybe twice a year in person. Most friends require way too much time and I’m glad my friends are low maintenance and don’t get annoyed when I ghost them for weeks.