Just got reminded of how friendless and socially isolated I am when I saw my sister's post on Facebook that she'd met up for coffee with a friend from work who I'd never heard of.
My sister (with learning difficulties) is still better at making friends than me but it's probably because she's pregnant. Like drinking alcohol, being pregnant is another societal norm your peers admire and you become interesting. I guess when the baby is born half the town will be queuing up outside her door to visit and see the baby. Babies score popularity points to women, whether you have autism or learning difficulties or not. Have a baby and then you'll automatically get friends, female friends your own age.
My aunt says my sister "has no friends" to support her during pregnancy and is rather lonely, but I believe none of that. One of her other friends (a friend she knew from school) is a midwife nurse so often gives her helpful tips on late pregnancy, birth, and caring for a newborn. Also she met up with a couple of girls last week whom she knew from her old job who she stays in touch with, and then this morning a girl her age from where she works now. She has more friends than me.
I can't imagine how, because she's quite noticeably not very good with initiating conversation and doesn't have a very variated tone or expression of emotion, and lacks understanding of general knowledge. I thought all these were contributors to how to get friends attracted to you but apparently not. I don't know what she has that I don't. My social skills aren't that bad.
Maybe she has more emotional confidence than me. She does seem to get people's contact numbers and hardly gets rejected on Facebook (unlike me), and always likes and comments on everyone's updates all the time. I do too but not all the time, as I don't want to appear excessive, as I've been told it can annoy or scare people off if you seem too keen.
But being treated differently doesn't help. The average person has over 200 friends on Facebook, that include old school friends, friends of friends, and friends of people you only met like once. For me, people like that reject my friend requests or even block me, leaving me with only having 150 friends on my Facebook (and I've been on Facebook since 2011 and have met loads of people in my life since then), and most of my Facebook friends are just family and extended family, and some people at work and maybe a very few people I don't know very well but were polite enough to add me on Facebook. With most people I know, like 80% of their friends in their friends lists are made up of people they barely know. They said so themselves.
Someone said it's because I have rats as my cover photo which might turn people off. Sorry I don't have pictures of babies and children of my own. I'm ashamed of not being a mum as it is, without being treated differently because of it.
If it wasn't for my rats, husband and family, I would commit suicide.
My sister (with learning difficulties) is still better at making friends than me but it's probably because she's pregnant. Like drinking alcohol, being pregnant is another societal norm your peers admire and you become interesting. I guess when the baby is born half the town will be queuing up outside her door to visit and see the baby. Babies score popularity points to women, whether you have autism or learning difficulties or not. Have a baby and then you'll automatically get friends, female friends your own age.
My aunt says my sister "has no friends" to support her during pregnancy and is rather lonely, but I believe none of that. One of her other friends (a friend she knew from school) is a midwife nurse so often gives her helpful tips on late pregnancy, birth, and caring for a newborn. Also she met up with a couple of girls last week whom she knew from her old job who she stays in touch with, and then this morning a girl her age from where she works now. She has more friends than me.
I can't imagine how, because she's quite noticeably not very good with initiating conversation and doesn't have a very variated tone or expression of emotion, and lacks understanding of general knowledge. I thought all these were contributors to how to get friends attracted to you but apparently not. I don't know what she has that I don't. My social skills aren't that bad.
Maybe she has more emotional confidence than me. She does seem to get people's contact numbers and hardly gets rejected on Facebook (unlike me), and always likes and comments on everyone's updates all the time. I do too but not all the time, as I don't want to appear excessive, as I've been told it can annoy or scare people off if you seem too keen.
But being treated differently doesn't help. The average person has over 200 friends on Facebook, that include old school friends, friends of friends, and friends of people you only met like once. For me, people like that reject my friend requests or even block me, leaving me with only having 150 friends on my Facebook (and I've been on Facebook since 2011 and have met loads of people in my life since then), and most of my Facebook friends are just family and extended family, and some people at work and maybe a very few people I don't know very well but were polite enough to add me on Facebook. With most people I know, like 80% of their friends in their friends lists are made up of people they barely know. They said so themselves.
Someone said it's because I have rats as my cover photo which might turn people off. Sorry I don't have pictures of babies and children of my own. I'm ashamed of not being a mum as it is, without being treated differently because of it.
If it wasn't for my rats, husband and family, I would commit suicide.