12-23-2014, 06:12 AM
ChrisH Wrote:Friends are working, or are busy hanging out with other people. I used to have group weekends with a few close friends. That changed when they either broke up with one another, or stopped being friends with me/vice versa; or had changing work schedules or changed jobs. Still trying to organize group weekends again with a few of them though.
Try again. Scale down. Find one, or two. They're bored too. You may be avoiding and isolating. Sounds like it.
Quote:I'd go out and see the lights, but it is cold, and it is windy. And I don't want to drive.
Do you want your depression to change, or do you want to make excuses. Go see the lights, and get whoever you invite to drive.
Quote:I don't go to church, I need to find a club I feel like I belong in, and I don't really have much family - everyone lives out of state.
Look up Meetup.com. It has all sorts of groups: photography, card players, hikers, discussion, etc. People are meeting with a common interest, spanning demographics. Try it.
Quote:My neighbors that I'm close with are extremely religious and I've no idea what "stance" they might have on anything LGBT. I did find a book left on their kitchen counter about same sex marriage and God once when I was looking after their dogs. I don't remember the title, but I do remember bits of that book and…well…it has a mixed message. I figured I'd let them form their own opinion from it.
It doesn't sound like you plan on fucking your neighbors, so it seems a moot point. Exactly what are you thinking will be a problem. Are you planning on discussing politics or socializing?
Quote:Truth be told, when the school semester is going on, aside from homework at home and classes taking me out of the house (a reason why I will never do online classes at this point), I usually end up finding some little project to work on - usually an excuse to get out of the house. Usually that's photography, window shopping and scenic drives - it inspires me to create ideas with art. Unfortunately, during winter or summer breaks, I can't go anywhere without a huge argument coming from her (unless a friend comes over) - a job would help out, but with the number of applications (and repeat applications) this year, and only a few job interviews (I almost got a job at Walgreens this year)…it's hard. I usually begin looking for jobs after the start of the semester so I can get back into a routine.
It sounds like you are enabling your mom to have more sway than a man might at your age. I know she's unstable, but your leaving to go somewhere shouldn't be arbitrary. Are you giving off signals that you're a minor? Sure, a parent has say-so about what happens in the house, but about leaving it?
Quote:Most classmates that I come across and end up befriending rarely if ever try to keep in touch. It just doesn't seem to fit with community college culture, especially where I attend.
YOU have to be the initiator and make the friendship stronger. YOU have to say, "let's split a pizza, Carl, and Becky. It's probably the only 3-way we're going to see this year." :p
Quote: A little sidebar humor I have with this is the whole "college sweetheart" cliché - especially when there's a guy that's really friendly. I can never tell if someone is gay unless there's some visual clues about them, and even there that can be misleading. (And my school has cut its club program, which doesn't help). Someone told me to use those dating apps to find people and I just think that's awkward and a little demeaning (especially where apps like and including Grindr are concerned).
If you're this shy in person, the apps seem less likely to help. You simply have to get to know another student well enough. If he isn't gay, be glad for the friend.
Now get out there and try again. You've got the answer in your power to change. Good luck.