| I never cared much about being a very popular person, neither in college nor in high school. That didn't stop me from having different groups of friends that I would usually hang out with. In college that time got more and more rare, as coordination is balls-hard to do among different majors and increased chance of clashing schedules. But I still had a small group that I'd sometimes meet once a month or so. My school days are now past me, over 10 years ago. I'm now a professional software engineer that goes to work all day, go home and play video games or surf the internet at night, still manages to wake up on time. When I go to work I mean it- I have almost no interest in getting to know people outside of work. I talk to them of course, that's part of the job to work as a team. But I'm not interested in their hobbies or making small talk. If it's not work related I don't want to know about it, and I take breaks by just distracting myself on the phone. I'm usually known as a serious person at work... well good I guess, right, because that's why it's called work and not play? Well, not really as we shall see. I think the lack of interest in idle chat has worked against me in the long run. A small but insidious habit where you refuse to make new friends after graduation. Last time I was laid off, it hit me hard. My social skills are now so bad that I have no idea how to interview anymore, no guidance except for one mock interview at Triplebyte and another with a person I met in a local Slack group. I know the world isn't consciously out to get me, but holy cow it sure feels that way sometimes if you don't have a network to lean on. So how do I overcome that fear of being friendly at work? I feel distraught with my career. And the reason my career isn't going in the direction I want it to is that I am not a good enough speaker, and because I haven't built up a good network. |
Start small, if you have any hobbies go to a meetup or group for that hobby. Go do a fitness class in a gym.
Try asking a few people each day "how are you". It doesn't matter if the conversation doesn't go any further than "I'm good thanks" but just do it. It sounds like you don't like small talk but consider where that has gotten you, maybe you need to reevaluate your thoughts on human interaction, maybe you have been wrong?