Hacker News new | ask | show | jobs
by cityofdelusion 1158 days ago
As I approach 40, I've learned that you can either loosen expectations and make new friends with those around you or be content with a dwindling friend group. Everyone changes over time and many (most?) friendships will not survive unless you are the "event organizer" of your friend group. The people who I was friends with a decade+ ago are completely different people (and so am I!), so its not too surprising that those friendships naturally diminish.

Priorities also change over a lifetime. I used to be the perpetual single person always losing friends that start a family -- now I am the person starting a family and losing what I have in common with the singles. It isn't that I don't enjoy their company; its that priorities change, family comes first, and there's hardly any time left to keep those friendships alive. Families are black-holes for free time, especially as societal expectations have evolved for what is expected of both men and women in the family.

Having been on both sides of this fence, I've had to adapt and continue making new friends. When I was single, I found new single friends that had time for hanging out, video games, bars and parties. With a family now, I make friends that are similarly time-constrained, that can do stuff like double dates or kid hangouts.

The hardest part is actually making new friends, but it is a critical skill if these sorts of things bother you. If you can make new friends, you can move anywhere. I do a lot of volunteer work which naturally leads to 1) meeting a lot of new people and 2) meeting "regulars", which has been a great source of new friendships for myself. It took me a long time to get to this point though -- I spent most of my 20s and early 30s just watching my existing friend group slowly die off, wasting time replacing it with online interactions instead of just going out and finding new friendships.

1 comments

I appreciate the perspective, and I certainly don't hold anything against the folks who have prioritized other things in their life. The difficulty I've found is often when there used to be some activity or hobby you did with someone, which then becomes harder to continue doing without them. If your usual tennis partner moves away to start a family, it's not just trying to find a new friend, it's trying to find a new friend you enjoy playing tennis with, or upending your schedule to now play less tennis, or stop playing tennis at all.