Can we... be friends
Making friends as an adult can be challenging. The leap from a good conversation at a social event to ‘want to grab a coffee one time?’ is huge. What if they think I’m romantically interested? What if they outright reject me and I look like an idiot? More often than not we choose to remain silent or, at best, we add them on social media and never interact again.
Loneliness is a huge social problem in Western society. A recent survey conducted by men’s health organisation Healthy Male found that 43% of Aussie men are lonely, with middle-aged men 3x more likely to feel high-level loneliness than men aged over 65. Social isolation impairs immune function and boosts inflammation, which can lead to a number of problems like arthritis and diabetes. You’re also 29% more likely to have a heart attack! In other words, it’s a significant problem, and we need to make it easier for people to access meaningful social connections.
We’ve found ourselves thinking about friendships recently, lamenting the ‘olden days’ where neighbours used to talk to each other and people would pop in unannounced. Many of us lamenting these days weren’t even old enough to experience them, but they feel nostalgic and warm and not like the way we do community today.
We’ve curated a few things that have helped us make friends when we’ve been lonely recently. Let us know if you try them!
1. Invite a group of strangers to your house (I know, a pretty red hot first option). Recently, one of our team members posted on her local community Facebook Group offering to host and cook for 10 fellow crafters (think knitters, sewers, stitchers). Over 100 people commented and two weeks later, the first 10 climbed the stairs and into her apartment. Not a single person bailed. No one did any craft either. They were too busy laughing! Now they gather monthly, and attend trivia and sporting games too. |
2. Slide into the DMs Okay, maybe a rogue suggestion, but if you’re the type to follow a bunch of randoms on social media, and you have a few internet ‘relationships’ where you mutually like each other’s posts, we recommend shooting them a message. |
3. Join a club There are bush dance meetups and chess clubs and board game nights and Jane Austen societies. You only need to look for them (Google it! Scour through Facebook Groups! Go to your IGA’s community notice board!). |
4. Be a plus 1 We all have that friend who is overly popular. They seem to be out every night at dinners and drinks and events and sporting games. They have an unending supply of friends to call upon for entertainment. |
5. Just ask This requires vulnerability. Admitting to someone you’d like to be their friend feels a little… shameful sometimes. We don’t want the other person to think we haven’t got any, or that there’s something wrong with us. |
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