Getting into the Social Game

Once we’re out of college, it gets really hard to make friends. At one point you just needed to like the same TV show as the girl sitting next to you in your English Novel class, but now it requires a lot more.

There are other challenges. People are more flaky now, full of the fear of “missing out” on something else better that might come along. Doesn’t that make you feel awesome about yourself?

I am no expert, but I will share my tries at the social scene after moving to a new city, and the pitfalls to avoid.

  1. The Meetup Group

My first attempt at socialization was joining Meetups that seemed to be everything I wasn’t getting out of my previous “city” (calling Tyler, a place where everything closes at 9 and The Place people go is the ice cream drive through. No, I’m not kidding)

Image result for andy's custard tyler

See? Not kidding.

The group will remain anonymous, but touted themselves as a group of professionals, which turned out to mean they all work professional jobs. They were nice, funny, and friendly. I met my now boyfriend at my first meeting, though that was not at all what I was looking for. I’m not complaining! We met at a hotel bar downtown and while awkward at first, with me questioning inwardly why I had ever shown up, it was soon engaging and very fun. We extended the evening into a dinner, and I was pleasantly surprised.

Fast forward a few months, the evenings I spent with the Meetup were fun, but I was feeling like the men leading the group were just trying to meet girls. They didn’t seem to know I was seeing someone in the group, and I didn’t want to blurt it out unnaturally. They also drank copiously, and giving myself a two drink minimum when I went out with them wasn’t working once everyone started buying shot rounds and shoving them in my hand.

After one too many Saturday mornings spent laying down and trying not to move and induce intense nausea, I found myself ignoring Meetups involving alcohol. Which is unfortunately, the focus of each of their meetings. I might have to find a new Meetup, but they do work! And I have my amazing boyfriend, who spent this morning fixing my garbage disposal.

Lesson learned-Don’t take on more than you can handle just to fit in. Do what makes you happy, and find people interested in doing the same things.

2. Form your own group

Because sticking with the large Meetup concentrated on getting wasted every weekend wasn’t fitting my style, I decided to try to include select people from the Meetup who seemed cool, in weekend hangouts and excursions. There are so many things to do in Austin, between concerts, sightseeing, restaurants, and the things to do outdoors, you have a lot of options. Go on a Google search for things to do in your city, and ask some of the local cool people (who might be hanging out in your nearest Starbucks in work out clothes while also typing up their dissertation on Communist literature) on some of the hole in the wall hangouts.

The first one went very well. I invited a girl to come along with my ex and I to hike the Greenbelt. We picked her up early in the morning to beat the heat, grabbed some ice coffee (none for me, I’m weird and therefore suffered greatly in the hot temperature of the day) and headed for Scottish Woods Trail to park the car and head off. My ex and friend brought their dogs, and this slowed us down a bit, but we still enjoyed it. It was a nice workout, and we saw some beautiful falls and hills. My friend raved about the hike, saying we needed to make this a weekly thing, because it was fun and she needed to get into shape.

My friend after this weekend offered to go to my first orchestra performance, and to our hike on Saturday morning, and blew both off, asking to hike Sunday instead. When she didn’t even respond to my text, I figured that was it.

Lessons learned-1. People show you how much they care. Don’t try to make it happen if they aren’t willing to put in the work. 2. Making friends is hard work. It’s okay I don’t have a super close girlfriend in my city right now, because I have my sister. I won’t stop trying though.

3. Work

That lady you work with who always seems pissed off and almost never has a conversation with you and is always in her own world? Maybe she’s itching to be your next friend! Maybe not. Only one way to tell.

I attempted to get a group of people in my work out for a teacher night out.  I sent out a text a week ahead to gauge interest and invite everyone, saying to invite anyone else whose number I didn’t have.

I stayed late at work in order to attend, since I don’t live in the town I work in. I worked with some students past 6:20, which is an abominably late amount of time to stay after work. I showed up at the restaurant, got a big booth, and waited.

When the clock passed 7:00, I suspected everyone was forgetting about it, so I sent a few texts out, one to the group, and one to a few individual people who said for sure they wanted to come. I bought two margaritas because it was still happy hour, and ate most of the chips.

Margaritas for me.JPG

That moment when everyone bails on you and you get to drink alone.

Twenty minutes later, and two angels in disguise showed up as my coworkers, and I was no longer the weird person sitting at a booth with tons of silverware, under the false impression she has people coming. I drink to you, people who showed up!

Lesson learned-Try not to count too much on people. Before you go out of your way to get something together, make sure people are more than slightly interested. Always have a backup plan.

Now

I’m still in the trenches, trying to make friends in the big city, but I’ve come a long way, and hopefully, if you’re in my shoes, you will too!

What would you rather read?

I’ve waited far too close to my deadline.

I’m frantically in the process of finishing my short stories so I can edit 1-2 and decide which ones I’ll submit to universities to get into their Master’s of Fine Arts program. Which would you rather read? That tells me which one to finish first!

Thanks in advance!

Questions Millenials Ask Ourselves

What Are We Supposed to Do Now?

Everyone has that moment, when they consider what on Earth they are supposed to be doing with their life. It doesn’t matter if you’re a student, a young Millennial waiting for the next life changing moment, or in a daily grind job. I’m not sure what it is that makes us want to be continuous works in progress, but then again, no one wants to be the same forever. We want to become more fabulous!

At the same time, don’t we feel like we made a mistake by growing up?

I've made a huge mistake[i]

The Stress

It was always much easier as a child, we had no real responsibilities; we didn’t have any moments where we doubted ourselves and our choices. As a “full adult” I have money, but am limited in opportunities to spend it on something that isn’t student loans, food, insurance, or gas. I watch my bank balance and try to control the sense of panic in my chest. For me, becoming an adult means waking up at six AM every morning, driving to work and working with a diverse student population, with a variety of issues of their own. Being an adult means grading papers, and if I happen to fall asleep, having a pile silently judge me as I spend some quality time with Netflix. Being an adult means watching your friends get engaged, pregnant, and married with horrible realization coming over you as you realize you have no social life. Being an adult seems to be wondering if there was supposed to be more to this. AND THERE IS!

We’re supposed to be excited about life, we’re supposed to work on ourselves, pursue goals we have, and change as the years go by! We’re young, and if we aren’t, we’re alive at least. We only have one life to live, and we should spend it doing things that make us happy. I’m guiltier than anyone of trying to make others happy and not worrying about my dreams, trying to form them around others so that they can be fulfilled and not have to change anything for me. We’ve got to start living for ourselves, because we’re our biggest asset.

What’s Your Dream?

So what is your dream? What are your talents? What is that one thing you wished you could have pursued but never did because your parents told you to go get a degree/job that was sensible and would pay the bills? Guess what guys – life is always going to be a struggle in some way, and you might as well be doing something you love while you’re at it. I’m an English teacher at a small southern high school and love every moment of it. I went for something that I love. But that doesn’t mean it has to end there. I want to be a writer, polished and published. What do I need to do to accomplish that dream? Take stock of my talents, and look at what I have to do to become better. For me that is an MFA program in Creative Writing. For someone else it might be pursuing online Amazon publishing. Everyone has something out there for them; they just have to be brave enough to try.

What’s It Going to Take?

Maybe you aren’t talented in this area yet. That’s fine; pursue things that will benefit your future and your dreams. If you want to be a writer, read, and write; send articles to blogs, journals, and newspapers. Find an internship that would work with your day job, a way for you to learn the skills you’ll need. If you want to go back to school, join programs to pad up your graduate application, apply for scholarships, proofread and proofread your resume. Set an amount of time to be ready for your next move, whatever that might be. I know it will take me longer than a few weeks to be ready for grad school, so I’m leaving myself a year to write short stories for my portfolio, add group affiliations to my CV, and try to get articles published so that I have a publishing history to discuss.

My point being, if you know what you love, and know what would make you happy, go for it. I had been scared off by adding to my student debt, stalling off an eventual spouse and kids, moving away from my friends and close family. In the end, my family will be here when I get back, I’m too young to settle down, and if I did go my whole life avoiding something I really wanted to do because of student debt, than I need to reevaluate my priorities. As a public servant (teacher) I could get some of that forgiven. Even if I couldn’t, once again, the reality is that we only have one life, and if I never put myself out there and pursue things that make me happy, I won’t have been brave.

As Kathleen Kelly of “You’ve Got Mail” said it, “Sometimes I wonder about my life. I lead a small life – well, valuable, but small – and sometimes I wonder, do I do it because I like it, or because I haven’t been brave?[ii] If I haven’t been brave, then I’m not going to have any attachment to the person I become. I have to be strong, as I have been, and continue attempting to be strong and yet vulnerable. I will succeed, not because I have to, but because I want to.

[i] Gob Bluth. Digital image. Reddit. N.p., n.d. Web. 15 Feb. 2016.

[ii] You’ve Got Mail. Dir. Nora Ephron. Perf. Meg Ryan and Tom Hanks. Warner Brothers, 1998. Transcript.