ChatterBank0 min ago
Friendships- Why bother?
I attend the cinema and theatre on my own since my divorce and only see my two long standing friends about half a dozen times a year each.
Last nights chat has got me thinking my daughter believes I'm odd, so I thought I'd check up.
How many friends is a thirty five year old mother of two expected to have?
Answers
No best answer has yet been selected by Drusilla. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.I know a lot of people who have lots of superficial friends - who then tittle tattle and b!tch behind each others back.
I have 2 or 3 very close friends who I would trust with my life.I, like you Drusilla was not the type to go to the school gates half an hour before the kids came out to have a gossip.(I worked full time anyway but on the odd day I was off)
I am not someone who can readily open up due to a lack of trust so I am quite happy with the true friends I keep up with given we all have our own lives to lead.
Just do what you are comfortable with Drusilla.
I think people should have as many friends as they like ie 1 or 100.I too rarely socialise and have many casual friends but none that are close and am perfectly happy.
I am quite shy by nature and am , therefore,quite standoff-ish and this is often mis-interpreted(as many shy people are).
...by the way Im 36 & married with 2 children so Im not a lonely old maaaaan !
Thank you for your answers. I'm glad I don't seem quite as odd to the over 10's.
I have to be honest and admit I don't talk to the mum's outside school because many of them seem overly interested in children's activities and not people I can have an adult conversation with. I really cannot 'do' chit-chat about this, that and nothing in particular. I suspect they think I'm a snob! Maybe, I am?
Also, my parents, because they didn't have a good social life of their own, and becuase I was an only child, built their lives around me. And this is a very big responsibility to grow up with.
I can understand completely your view that if you don't want a lot of friends, then there's no reason why should you have them. But I think that casual socialisation may make life a little easier on your daughter, particularly if she is already getting uneasy about your lifestyle.
I think Altos is right: you've chosen not to socialise, but your children may find, if they haven't been shown by your example how socialising works, that they don't quite know how to do it; so they too may end up with fewer friends - but perhaps not, like you, from choice.
Socialising isn't just the same as having friends; it's more about casual chatting, showing an interest in others, having the confidence to speak in passing even when you're not close to someone. From my own experience (similar to Altos's) I'd say these are social skills you'd normally learn from your parents; lack of them is hard to make up in later life. Perhaps your daughter intuits this?
I'm going to take on board some of the comments I have read here.
Fortunately, both my daughters take after their Dad, who is a sociable and gregarious person. Your kind comments have made me aware just how much I hung onto his coat tails and followed his lead. However, I do accept it might help my daughters social development if I made a little more effort with general chit chat.
Thank you all.