No gf, no friends, it’s hard to meet new people. Tinder and other apps don’t work. Idk even if I travel somewhere I’m alone

41 points

Join a club or organization or volunteer somewhere. It has to be in person and you have to go even if at first you aren’t comfortable.

All the friends people make at school are happy accidents of proximity and chance. Same with coworker friends. You have to make some luck for yourself, put yourself in situations where you will regularly see the same people and get to know them through what you are doing.

Also, don’t focus on romance, focus on friendship. Romance will come naturally - not forced.

I know this does not come easy for most people in your situation. It feels stupid and awkward but chance and circumstances play a huge role in making friends.

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5 points

Good advice, but from personal experience, romance does not come naturally.

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16 points

I know that it’s not true for some people, but many people want love more than they want friends, and their constant seeking love cause otherwise simple friendships to get awkward and fizzle out.

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2 points

Maybe, but to those who romance would appear naturally when in a friends group, they would not be in this position in the first place.

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-1 points

Exactly, you don’t gain anything forcing yourself like that

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2 points

Where do I find clubs? Been searching for an answer ever since the library in my city didn’t even have a bulletin board

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1 point

Have you tried Meetup? I found some interesting board game groups there.

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1 point

I found 1 (one) online d&d session, from Istanbul where I don’t live

İt’s not great, Facebook’s even worse

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2 points
*

Rural US will be a shitshow for it.

There should be one in most places people congregate for fun: rock gyms, state parks/NF orgs, community centers, sewing/hobby stores, sorts leagues, idk… Can’t hurt to literally call around. It’s super awkward but “hi i have an interest in this and want to know how i can get involved” usually has two possible answers: “Idk”, or “OH YEAH! Check out these resources!”

You can also try community colleges and sometimes universities. Clubs may be open to the public.

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3 points

I’m sick of hearing this dumb advice tbh

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4 points

What’s dumb about it?

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3 points

Many can’t do it. Plus is not a guaranteed solution

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2 points

The biggest is living in a sparsely populated area without good (or at times, any) transportation options. Add in money and solitary-or-niche hobbies for good measure.

There is also probably a point to be made about not having previous luck with friends in school, or romance not once ever coming naturally.

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7 points

Are there hobbygroups in your area? Keep the focus on the shared hobby and get to meet people through said mutual interest, don’t focus on being there to make friends. Since the former leads to better relationships.

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1 point

Only some gym, and 2-3 restaurants. It’s a small town in middle of Europe. I have to drive about 100km to university by train every weekend because I study part-time.

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7 points

But you are going to university. That is a HUGE opportunity to make connections. See if there are any clubs or activities you could be a part of. Try to give some things a try, even if you’re only sort of sure whether you will like it. Make small talk with your peers! It doesn’t take much to get friendships going when you have regular proximity to people and find some that share your interests.

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3 points

Yes sometimes I try to talk with someone, sometimes it’s enforced by teachers when do we have to finish group work. Meeting people in university is ok but I still feel like my age is a hindrance. I’m 27yo when my groupmates are all in their early 20s. I feel old to them, especially when it comes to women. I have a few people I talk to when I’m at university, but still, I only talk to them at university.

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1 point

Same, but I don’t even study and my temporary place of work is full of people I don’t like. So I understand how fucked that situation is.

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1 point

I found university quite social, but that varies from campus to campus. That said, after your part time classes, hang back at the university and see if there are any social goings-on. You’ll get more bang for your 100km trip.

If you’re able to, anyway.

Can’t offer much on small town stuff, that’s outside my experience

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21 points

It’s not just loneliness, my friend. It’s a brutal cycle. A prophecy foretold, one that you’ll probably have to get up and break with some difficult to find laughter and energy in a social setting. This doesn’t necessarily mean go to places. Find a Discord group, for instance.

Hell, I started Jiu Jitsu 1. Because I need to lose weight and 2. Because I’d like to be around people at least some of the time when I’m not working.

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13 points
*

I also recommend martial arts, especially for socially awkward people, lessons are very directed so you don’t have to worry about what to do with your hands. There’s a style for everyone, artistic, traditional, competitive, self-defense etc…

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2 points

I read this like you started Jiu Jitsu 1 because you needed to lose weight and Jiu Jitsu 2 (the sequel) to meet people.

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1 point

Probably was just an update of 1

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3 points

Tbh, every Jiu Jitsu class feels like a sequel. Arm Lock 2: The JJ Electric Boogaloo - Tap or Die.

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1 point
Deleted by creator
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12 points

Find a hobby you enjoy, even if it isn’t a social hobby. Get involved in that. Get involved in the community around it, whether that’s local or online. Start talking to people, find other common interests. Branch off into those interests with small groups from your hobby, or new groups entirely.

I don’t know you, so this isn’t a judgement of you or your situation, but people don’t like one-dimensional people. Find a variety of things you enjoy doing just for yourself that isn’t just video games or YouTube or tv, and then find spaces where people talk about those things. Start going to a gym or taking fitness classes, or join a hobby painting group, or a TCG/board game group, or a book club, or a jogging/biking group, or a crochet circle. Volunteer at local food banks or animal shelters.

Meeting a variety of people and having different, interesting things to talk to them about will help you make friends. Making friends will help you meet potential partners and practice communication skills to make the relationship work. It isn’t always easy or fast, but everything I’ve found a partner it was after I told myself “you know what, I’m don’t waiting for friends and companionship to fall in my lap. I’m going to go out and make it happen, or at least have fun on my own if I can’t find others to have fun with”.

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3 points

Yeah I have only a very generic hobbies like games, books, rock and travelling when I have money to do it. But it’s usually a cheap journey by bus with sleeping in cheap hostel etc. Without any luxuries as insert girls on tinder and expect such trips from men. I’m study finance part-time and work also, I have limited time for new hobbies. Also I still have to spend some time every day for learning English cause you see as it is :)

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15 points

English language practice groups would give you a boost on learning and a potential pool of people who might be friend candidates.

I second others’ advice on friends first, not romance. Romantic relationships are friendships on super hard mode. Don’t target romantic relationships if you haven’t figured out friendships yet.

Also this:

Without any luxuries as insert girls on tinder and expect such trips from men

… makes you sound like an incel sad sack. Stop it. Literally, stop right now and don’t go down that road any further. There are few red flags that burn brighter than this sort of opinion. It will scare both potential romantic partners and friends off. If you are consuming incel/red pill media, stop before it fucks up your brain even more.

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8 points

Seconding what this guy said about the incel mindset. There is nothing less attractive than selfpity and blaming others. Everyone knows life is hard and people suck. They want to be around people who haven’t given up. It gives them more energy to keep trying.

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5 points

My first ‘real vacation’ after the 2008 housing market crash where I lost my ass I went to meet up with some people in our (old forum days) off road for total of a week off.

I spent money on gas, shared a camping site with another dude form my area -10$/night split, site was big enough for our 2 tents, plus fire pit & had a shower/shitter building at the front). I packed a lot of food but went shopping for groceries/beer.

Had a big ol time, and I had never met any of them face to face. Most of us were back the next year, and most of us still keep in touch.

You don’t need to be an expert at anything, (I am not mechanically inclined, nor had I ever off roaded much, I traded mod work for food because I cook, and when I got into trouble everyone else had the toys to get me out) just find a thing and see who is weird enough to invest their time and energy into it.

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2 points

Games, books, music, and travel are all great hobbies to find people to tall about as well, though! You just have to find ways to make them social. Sitting and playing CoD alone or with random match making aren’t great ways to meet people, but getting involved in a discord server is a better way to meet people. Better still if you can find a local, in-person group that hosts meet-ups.

But if you want to meet people amd make friends, you need to make time to meet people and form relationships with them.

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3 points

I’m going to add some additional advice as far as the “incel mindset”: Get off tinder.

Tinder isn’t meant for making lasting relationships, no matter what the marketing team claims. From it’s inception it has been used almost exclusively for people to hook up. Casual sex. There are couples that got started through Tinder, but those are rarer.

Sites and services like Tinder turn dating into a “meat market”. Really sit and think for a moment about just how little you learn of a person from their Tinder profile. It’s almost all superficial and appearance based.

Why would someone spend even a few seconds on “Average McBigNose” when they can swipe a few times and be looking at “Chad McThunderCock”, spending time on “Julia BigForehead” when they’re potentially moments away from “Anorexia FCups”. It boils down aspects of everyone involved to an almost entirely appearance based first impression. That’s not fair or healthy for self esteem.

If you feel you need to use dating sites, try using some that have more fuller profiles, big long personality quizes, and that don’t have an entire design philosophy and UI built around knee-jerk reactions of yes or no.


Additionally, a lot of things depend on how you portray or frame it. Try to give as much as possible a positive spin, even internally. Fake it if you need to.

You don’t just travel cheaply.

You enjoy travelling, but you try to do it frugally (frugal is effectively the socially acceptable version of cheap) so you can save money for other things. Avoiding expensive travel arrangements keeps you closer to the ground and allows you to more naturally and honestly experience the places you go, really immerse yourself in the places.

Traveling by bus takes longer, but it gives you more time to think deeply about the people and places around you, time to read, time to recharge. When you get to your destination your mind is clear and ready to focus on the experience without much mental baggage from work or home.

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2 points

Games have game nights! Books have book clubs! Rock (music?) has concerts and shows! Traveling has so, so many people!

From there, opportunity is really what you make it. Insert yourself into conversations you overhear that you’re interested in; it’s as simple as making a joke while smiling and laughing and you’ve got a new group of friends. Sometimes this is only for the day, but sometimes it’s for life!

Being alone comes in two forms. You can be alone and recede into yourself, closing yourself off from others. Or you can be alone while navigating interactions with people. The intention you should try to hold is one where you are existing in the world to observe and be observed!

When you observe, you are also observed. As I said, all it takes is making an initial passing conversation – you are at a rock show and someone says something you agree with. Look at them and smile and agree. Before you know it, you are talking with a group of people.

This happens every day, it happened to me just the other night. My flight was cancelled and the person behind me was in the same situation. We joke and commiserate for an hour as we wait. Sometimes this becomes a friendship, sometimes you go your separate ways, all it takes is expressing how fun it was and that the friendship should continue.

In terms of romance, friends of friends. It’s possible to meet online, but others have explained very well how fickle that can be. It is not reliable. Friends. Of. Friends. It is possible to meet in public, but it is not reliable because, like you, everyone has intentions for the day, and sometimes that does not include interaction with strangers. And remember, your family are friends too. Do you have siblings or parents or grandparents? Surely they know people your age, have a dinner party. Do you work? Coworkers are always interesting, of course we don’t often want to think about or continue to interact with coworkers outside of work but you can always express how you’re looking to do something after work or over the weekend and invite them, and invite them to also invite their friends.

Rarely is opportunity created unless we go out of our way to create one. This is why so many people suggest hobbies, as it’s the bare minimum way to go out of your way to create an opportunity. This is also why people don’t like hobbies as a suggestion, because in the grand scheme of things, the only “solution” is to break out of a comfort zone that you have and to do something that you may not always want to do. Discomfort is growth and how you grow is up to you, based on how you react to the opportunities that do arise.

Unfortunately in life, we must sometimes face discomfort before finding comfort. If all you ever want to do is stay in your room and play games, you aren’t really giving yourself any opportunity to face discomfort and grow. At that point you have to reconcile with yourself.

I hope you find this helpful!

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Well we can be all lonely, here, TOGETHER! 🤗

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14 points

🥲

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