You see, it's no problem at all for me to chat with people if I'm in my comfort zone. The people are all known, I have history with them. Conversation comes easy because it's based on familiarity. With strangers, it's a whole other ballgame. But the way Brian sees it, he gets to hear all of the crazy, weird, amazing, heart-breaking stories of new people who have so much to give. And I love this about him.
I'm sure you see the problem in this arrangement with me and Brian. He has lots of friends. My friends are his friends. Now, yes, I do have a few solid, deep friendships that grew out of painstaking time in which we built our friendship organically, almost layer by layer. And that's great, but two of these friends live 5,000 miles away, and the other one can't simply sustain all of my needs for friends. I need my own friends. More friends. Casual friends, funny friends, active friends, lunch friends, dinner friends, drinking friends, shopping friends, girlfriends.
What I realized today is that I haven't done a damn thing - not ONE - to create this in the year and a half that I've lived here (anything that may have resembled time with potential friends was an invitation to me that I gladly accepted). And that's just pathetic. So what follows is my plan, or at least my notes related to making a plan, to do the one thing that freaks me out above all else. I'm going to make friends with people.
Who
Sheily is my best friend in the Bay Area. She's a doll - sweet, smart, beautiful. We are very similar in many ways (not necessarily in the ways I just mentioned), but we're different enough to keep each other on our toes, hold each other accountable. We met and grew our friendship at work. It was not instant. It took approximately nine months before we realized how compatible we were as friends and how much we really needed each other to survive at work. But this friendship was cultivated after many work weeks of hours in the same cube, meeting after meeting, and the fortuitous simultaneous promotion to the management team. Certainly, this was the perfect petri dish for creating a friendship. But c'mon. How rare is this? And can I really wait for these circumstances every single time before I make a single friend? (Incidentally, this is the exact method in which my other two best friends - DeAnna and Jen - came to be when I lived in Florida. Just shows how limited my repertoire is in forging relationships with people.)So I need to look outside of my Petri dish, and here is what I see on the landscape:
- Isabelle: The girlfriend of one of Brian's best friends. She's real, she's sweet, and she'll tell anyone the painful truth about her opinions, no matter what. She's great. My fear/hesitation: she's made it known that should she and Evan break up, she couldn't be friends with me (here's an example of her honesty at work). So maybe I'm waiting to see whether their relationship will last? Oh yeah - they've been together for over a year. Duh.
- Wanda: The ex-girlfriend of one of Brian's best friends. Yes, the same Evan. But Wanda and Evan have remained great friends, and she is the coolest, most genuine woman who is not afraid to do things in life, despite how it may look to others. Case in point - she's living with her gay friend with whom she hopes to conceive and raise a child (conceive not through sexual contact, but through his brother's sperm FedEx'd once a month during ovulation that she personally injects with a turkey baster). Who wouldn't want a friend as resourceful and determined as that??
- Jenny: Another work friend, but super cool, super driven (she's freaking amazing), and young. Given that we're never really working on the same projects or around each other much at work, it's been hard to foster the relationship. She's also ridiculously busy and travels a lot. But when we do hang out, we always lament that we should do it more. We just haven't quite figured out how to make that happen.
- Andrea: A former work friend who left the company to pursue another career. I was new when she left, so we didn't have much time in the ol' Petri dish. Hence, I haven't kept in touch. BUT, she surfs, snowboards, and is generally quite active. And I'm always pissy about the fact that I "just can't find any women who like to do the activities I do." Another Duh.
How
I've got to get past this idea that the only environment in which I can find friends is work. I also have this silly rule in my head that, should Brian make plans with his friends, I can't call someone up to make plans because it will be obvious that they are second choice (behind Brian) and that the only reason I'm calling is because I'm desperate to find something else to do. Now really. Isn't this the stupidest thing you've ever heard? I know. However, one of the things I can do is make plans with friends before Brian makes his plans so that they are my first choice. And Brian would be all too happy to hang out with his buddies or even spend time alone. (Did I happen to mention that he's very secure/healthy in both his ability, no - need, to be alone and his social life with his many, many friends?)Here are the ways in which I need to reach out:
- Plan a girl's poker night: I get so pissed when the guys hold their poker night on Fridays because it means either a) I sit alone on a Friday night (the most sacred of nights for going to restaurants and drinking a bit too much wine to unwind from the week) or b) I actually have to reach out to make my own plans. So why the hell can't I plan my own poker night for the girls?? And if I invite the other abandoned girlfriends, in addition to my own friends (or potential friends), I just might meet new people!
- Hold that housewarming party: We've lived in our apartment for six months, and I still haven't gotten around to planning our housewarming. But what a great opportunity to entertain, forge new bonds, and maybe even meet some new people.
- Form a financial group: A book club feels too stuffy and too cliche. But, I've been in the mode of trying to get control over my finances after a year of ignoring them. It would be great to hold a monthly meeting for women interested in topics related to saving, investing, and budgeting (truth be told, I got this idea from my 60-something ex-mother-in-law, but I actually think it would be great for 20- and 30-somethings too). I've found that learning small tips about how others do things make a huge difference. And while the initial group of women will be folks I know, I can see it easily leading to new group members - friends of these friends.
- Pick up the phone and call: Make plans for Saturday lunch, a surfing session, a mid-week dinner, a shopping day. Anything will do. But I need to initiate "friend dates" with individual women for some good 1:1 time to really get to know people.
The themes here are: entertain more; form groups of women for common causes that provide an interesting reason to hang out; hang out more with individuals.
2 comments:
First, can I just say I'm honored to be on the potential non-work friend list!!
I've struggled with this exact thing over and over. I assume that if I don't want to go out to bars I should stay home alone with some chocolate dove eggs and sex and the city dvds. Wrong! I love how you've listed all kinds of friends: dinner, coffee, walking, talking, etc! I love the idea of killing two (or more) birds with one friend stone: talking while walking, hanging out and managing money, eating and catching up. We're all busy and this way there's no excuse!
I've also been toying with the idea of setting a goal for myself since I too tend to be a "reactive" friend - only going out when others ask me. My new goal is called "2x2": to initiate plans with at least two friends twice a week. I'll let you know how it goes!
I've been struggling with the opposite almost (kind of silly). I value meaningful relationships, but find that in my group of so-called friends in the city, most of the relationships are pretty superficial and I find a really hard finding people like you (Jules and Jenny) that I can truly connect with. Not that I want a million people like that, but something more like a family outside of my normal family. Does that make sense? Just a small group of people I know that I can always rely on.
Not sure what to do about this, any thoughts?
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