enJOY it

an archived personal and craft blog from Elise Blaha Cripe.

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It's been a big growing year. Our family is growing. The business is growing. And personally, I'm working on growing and creating some new friendships.

A lot happened in really quick succession this summer to make me realize I needed to do this.

I think it really started when I wrote this post and mentioned that our tribe is up in Northern California. And then shortly after realized that while, yes, there is a possibility we'll get back up to that area eventually, it won't be for at least seven years. Seven years. Ellerie will be almost ten. This baby I haven't even met will be starting first grade. That's a long time from now.

In early July, I met a new friend and her kiddos at the local library for storytime. We had a wonderful time but it threw off Ellerie's nap schedule and therefore it threw off my work schedule. In a moment of frustration, I said to my mom on the phone "I don't have time to have friends." And then for weeks, that phrase echoed in my head. It honestly brings tears to my eyes to type it out.

Right after that, I went to WDS. I flew up on a Friday afternoon and Paul was supposed to pick E up from daycare like he does every Monday, Wednesday and Friday afternoon. The plane landed and I turned on my phone to a text from Paul that there had been some security issue on base and he wasn't sure he'd be able to get out on time to pick up E before daycare closed. I was sitting on a jetway in Portland and had never felt so helpless. I didn't have anyone to call (our beloved baby-sitter recently moved) because we have no roots in San Diego. I hadn't even tried to put down roots. It was crushing and sad to realize. Especially surrounded by a bunch of strangers. (Thankfully, the issue cleared and Paul made it to pick-up with time to spare.)

While up in Portland, I read the book Essentialism and I realized that I can clear out all the non-essentials I want. I can minimize down to nothing. I can be more efficient in my work and life. But then what? What do I want all that time for? How to I want to re-fill all those hours that I have now "cleared?"

This all happened in the span of about two weeks. So much of it sounds crazy when I type it out. Of course, I need local friends. Of course there is value in setting down roots. How did I wait so long to start doing that? And yet, it's a process. It can be hard, for both plants and people, to set down roots, especially if it's your nature to be pretty introverted. But I'm fighting the awkward and working on connecting with other moms at the park. I think I found an exercise group I can join on Saturday mornings. I have a blog friend that is turning into a real off-line friend and that's awesome.

A few Monday's ago, we went to an adult craft night at a local studio (brilliant idea!) and made sweet little cement planters (shown above!). They didn't dry in time to paint them or anything fancy, but it was fun to learn a new technique (I'm no longer intimated by cement!) and great to just sit and talk for 2 hours (usually our kiddos are present and it's a bit harder to have full discussions). I need to do more stuff like this. I need to branch out more often.

I realize that we might never have as extensive as a tribe here as we do in Northern California. But I know for sure it's impossible if I don't work on it. And so I'm making progress. And it's wonderful.

quick edit from Wednesday morning…reading your comments while drinking my coffee and just wanted to say thanks for your sweet words and for sharing your stories. lots of love to all of you.

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This week I am joined on the podcast by Vanessa Lauria and we're chatting about developing a craft and making the transition from hobby to career. Subscribe or stream the episode here.

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87 responses to “roots and growth.”

  1. Leah Noble Avatar

    Awww this warms my heart so much!! 🙂 Thank you for sharing, dear Elise.

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  2. susan black Avatar

    I’m just diving into Essentialism now and my take is it’s not just about freeing up more time it’s about discovering or uncovering what would be essential “quality” time for you, for me … for any of us. It’s different for everyone. It sounds like “putting down roots” and “spreading outward” is an essential in your life. I am loving the book – as a creative entrepreneur I am constantly feeling overwhelmed and overtaken by the zillion non-essential tasks that keep showing up in my daily life. Love you, your blog & podcast !!

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  3. Hannah B. Avatar
    Hannah B.

    Oh man, I relate to this on so many ways that it almost hurts. Thank you for the wake up call. After so many insane years of college/grad school, and so much competition amongst friends, I basically got to the point where I felt like “I don’t like anyone except my boyfriend!” And now that we’re going through the process of studying for licensing exams, the last thing I want to do is meet up with our friends working for other firms / listen to everyone talk about their progress (especially when my progress is not going as planned…) sounds like a real quick way for me to become way too bitter and closed off, and probably a cue that I need friends who aren’t also architects 😉
    Also, my parents did what you and Paul are going through (moved from Texas to Florida, away from everyone they’d ever known, for jobs) long before my brother and I were born, and are still here. So growing up, instead of seeing cousins regularly, we saw their friends kids, and had an extended family that way. You can be a strong island as two, for sure, but having a mini tribe definitely helps 🙂
    All that rambling about myself to say that I’m happy for you! You’re being brave! 🙂

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  4. Amanda Avatar

    Oh Elise, it simultaneously breaks my heart and makes me happy to read this post. As an expat teacher at an international school in Beijing, I know how hard putting down roots—and maintaining them!—is. And then, just when I’ve made friends, and I feel like those roots are growing, people move away. That’s the life of an international teacher, I suppose. It’s wonderful having friends in Canada, the US, Germany, Hong Kong, etc., but I want to have friends HERE.
    Thank you for sharing such personal thoughts! xo

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  5. Cindy McDannold Avatar
    Cindy McDannold

    Living with inconsistencies and learning to adjust to others is one of the greatest parts of life. What you and you family can learn from others is necessary to widen your understanding. We are blessed that we can benefit by both the positive AND the negative. Ellerie and new baby girl will bloom with the new experiences and mama will be able to find a part of herself to share with new found friends. We always have enough time to be happy.

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  6. lisa valinsky Avatar

    Elise, thank you for your honesty in this post. I imagine it may have been hard to share this with us, but it strikes a chord with many of us.
    My husband and I just moved back to our home state of Connecticut, and are due with a baby in six weeks. While, yes, it’s great that we’re back “home”, so to speak, we’re still an hour and a half away from family and friends. Up until just yesterday, I kept thinking about how I’d like to go “home” nearly every weekend. But with a newborn and a dog, this just isn’t a practical idea. Instead, I need to make friends right here. In our new home.

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  7. Amy T Schubert Avatar

    Love you, Elise 🙂
    I recently moved because of a big life crisis/overhaul and I realized that ALL my friends are internet friends right now. I literally know no one that lives in the same town as me.
    You have an international tribe all over the internet! I’m currently in Virginia Beach, but you should know you are always invited to come hang out whereever I live.
    xo

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  8. Cindy McDannold Avatar
    Cindy McDannold

    Hannah, I have lived in a close relationship with my family all of my life. Sometimes I think that it is just to easy to stay in that kind of lifestyle. We tend to shut others out because of the closeness we have. Learning to adjust to others is a wonderful experience even it there are times where readjusting is required. Your parents saw the value of “connecting” and gave you a special gift. Thanks for sharing.

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  9. mandie Avatar

    Oh girl, I’ve lived on opposite sides of the country from my people for over 9 years now, and while I thought I was lonely before, having my own kiddo made is glaringly obvious that I NEED to get my own people here, too, because we honestly don’t have plans of ever moving back to my home town. I especially feel it when I know that my daughter’s only cousins are at least 2 plane rides away and it breaks me. So, I started going to MOPS earlier this year and it’s been SO good for both of us. I make the effort to text my friends, maybe too often, to see if they want to meet up at the zoo, at the children’s museum, wherever- to keep those connections strong. We need to find the people that love us and us them and will love each other’s kids- we need to make our family here, and now that we have a #2 on the way, it’s never been more evident to me. 🙂

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  10. Jenny Avatar
    Jenny

    Elise, you can’t imagine what this post means to me! Somehow it feels good to know I am not the only one having a hard time with putting down roots. I am pretty much in the very situation like you are (except the kiddos…) I moved in with my boyfriend, who is also military, who lived in another city than I was at that time. This was a year ago, we still have seven years to go here before we can move to our dream city. I am working with some fun people but I have never met them outside work. Now I have been on sick leave for three months and I am so bored and in desparte need to talk to someone besides my boyfriend (who is absolutely fantastic but an introvert like I am btw). I have to admit I have no idea how to make friends. How do you get people to like you? Do you just walk up to strangers and go “let’s be friends”? loooool

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  11. Leah Buckley Avatar

    I can so relate to this. Making friends is so hard. Having kids makes it a little easier—always something to make conversation about with other mamas!—but it’s usually takes work and effort no matter what. I struggle with this a lot. It is awesome that you are reaching out and making an effort. It takes courage! Thank you for sharing.

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  12. StacyK Avatar
    StacyK

    Thank you for this post. We left NJ, where our tribe lives, and relocated to CA for work about 5 years ago. We never put down roots, because we always felt it was temporary. We connected with colleagues, who we sometimes hung out with outside of work, but never a true friendship connection. Perhaps because some of the them didn’t have any kids, and the ones that did are natives to CA, so their tribe is local, and really had no need to let anyone new in their lives on that level. We got tired of the cost of living in the Bay area, the lack of true friendships and no family that we decide to relocate to NC, where my sister and her family lives. We feel really good to be back on the same time zone as our family, and close to a family member. Its been 2 months, and yes the neighbors are friendly, but the same connection of getting closer is missing. Working from home will especially make it a challenge for us to gain new friendships. I like your strategy of going out there and taking classes trying to connect with other people. A strategy I too will need to adopt to put down roots and have deeper connections.

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  13. Misti Avatar

    Adult friendships are hard. My mom always lamented to me growing up that she wished she had friends that were scattered around. It’s so hard to cultivate that and raise a family, too.
    As soon as I finished college in 2002 I moved to FL with my husband. We lived there until 2010 and finally before we left we had put down some ‘roots’ in the form of many friendships. We moved back to Texas after doing some backpacking on long trails and I thought it might be easy to reconnect with my friends here, which in some ways it was, but we’re all scattered. Now I’m on one side of the state and I don’t see my friends often. I haven’t really put down any roots in this area with new friends and I’ve been here four years already. Now with a toddler I should probably do this more. I don’t even have a babysitter!
    It’s hard.

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  14. MIriam Molloy Avatar
    MIriam Molloy

    This was a wonderful post. I am a Childbirth Educator and always tell my families (mama’s especially) “establish your mama village”. I can’t tell you how many times it has been nice to have a close friend who my kids are comfortable with that I can call if needed. Take your time, chat it up with mama’s and kid at the park. It will come. 🙂 Best of luck.

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  15. kelseyespecially Avatar

    I relate to this post 10,000%, Elise.
    I moved to DC at the age of 19, with just my 6-month-old baby in tow. Now, A FULL DECADE LATER, I’m still here with my not-so-baby 10-year-old and two more kids, but virtually NO TRIBE.
    I’ve spent much of my decade here in DC as a single-ish parent (when I wasn’t single by strict definition, it still felt like it, having a partner that worked nights and slept all day and therefore “got out of” all the parenting, errands and chores duties). For a brief period in my early 20s, shortly after turning 21, I lost control and fell in with the wrong crowd. That crowd was there for me when I needed them to be, but being there for them, and the fun that went along with them, came at the expense of not being there for my at-the-time only child. Since then I’ve cleaned up my act, but at the cost of not establishing a new group of responsible friends because (1) I feel like I don’t have time, and (2) where the hell do I start?!
    When I DO have time to go make new friends, I don’t have money to pay a sitter to watch my kids, and because I don’t know anyone to begin with, I have no one who will do it just because. And the cycle just continues…
    Such a frustrating place to be stuck for a decade (and counting), but I’m hoping that with my middle kiddo starting kindergarten this school year, I’ll have more chances to make new mama friends.

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  16. Samantha Avatar
    Samantha

    This really chimes with me right now. We have very recently realised that since we are both dedicated introverts, making new friends is hard. My son is, of course, learning from us, and we were a little heartbroken when we were on holiday and realised our son didn’t want to make friends with the other kids by the pool, he’s an only child and finds this challenging.
    Then we thought about it and realised we’ve never taught him how to make friends, and he’s never really seen us open up our group of friends.
    So this year, we are going to work hard on our social skills, and we’re going to show him through our own actions to socialise.

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  17. Whitney Avatar

    I can relate to this so much. I have nothing against having friends, but I am often perfectly content to just be by myself. We recently moved to a new city and I am trying hard to get out and do stuff with other people – even if they’re people I don’t know yet. It’s hard, but I know it’s worth it.

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  18. Katy Avatar

    It’s easy when you move somewhere that you know probably won’t be forever to get caught in your own routine and forget about friendships. I recently moved to Northern Cal for a job and to be closer to my boyfriend, but its always been our dream to eventually move East to be near family and a lower cost of living. He’s been out here for a year and hasn’t made any friends. When I moved out here, I put out a call to friends to introduce me to friends they have in the area. I’ve also tried out every church in a 30 mi area until I found a good 20’s something group. It’s definitely not easy and my introvert self would much rather sit at home and crochet, but you need those people you can call on. And don’t forget that a huge percentage of people are also not planning to stay where they live right now forever. One of my best friends out here and her husband are planning to move East in the next few years as well and thats something we’ve really bonded over.

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  19. Kathryne Avatar
    Kathryne

    Hugs to you!! If I had been there, I would’ve picked E up in an instant! Miss you guys.
    I’m fighting those same awkward times to make new friends here, too. It can be frustrating to “start over”, but I’m hoping it’ll smooth out and be worth it soon. And I’ll be hoping the same for you! Sounds like you have some new and awesome opportunities to connect. 🙂

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  20. Julie Avatar
    Julie

    Elise,
    Don’t feel alone! I lived in a city with no roots for two years and it was really hard. Actually, my best friend from that time, we met on CRAIGSLIST. I’ve developed some weird making friend habits, like if I am interested in being someone’s friend, I invite them to hang out at least three times. And I’ll target people I know who also need friends too. Yes, it’s weird to put this much effort in to thinking about friends. But, adult friendship is hard work, thank you for sharing here. It really means a lot.
    Also, might I suggest this book: MWF Seeking BFF. This woman, after having few to no friends for three years in a new city decides to go on a new friend date ONCE A WEEK. As an introvert, it sounds exhausting. But, it’s a good read!
    http://www.amazon.com/MWF-Seeking-BFF-Yearlong-Search-ebook/dp/B004W3IDM8/ref=dp_kinw_strp_1

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  21. Tiffany B. Avatar

    Oh man this hit me hard. I need to find friends in my area as well. We have lived here for over 2 years and now with a 5 month old baby boy – still no friends in the area. I need to find a mom’s group or something for me and my little guy!

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  22. Kim Hacking Avatar

    I think you are an amazing woman. Find your tribe and love them hard! Sending you lots of good friendship making vibes!!

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  23. JC Avatar

    Man I know that feeling all to well. It’s hard to make friends as an adult.

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  24. Hannah Joy Avatar
    Hannah Joy

    Thank you, Elise.
    I totally feel the ‘I don’t have time to have friends’. I am actually close (several hours) to two of my best friends from college. But there isn’t anyone nearby. Life on the farm is full and busy and beautiful, and trying to find people to build friendships with is a lot of work so that often gets ignored.
    Maybe somewhere way down the road there could be an episode on making friends as a adult?

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  25. Jessica Avatar
    Jessica

    I have literally Googled, “How to make friends as an adult”. For real. More and more I’m finding that it’s ok to have friends that aren’t your BEST friends. It’s ok to have a friend who is just for fun times, one who is a super good shopper and one to talk to about yoga (or what have you). All of my best friends are spread all over the country. New York, Texas, Colorado, I’m in Oregon.
    It’s also hard because (maybe since I work in Customer Service?) I find as I age, I have less patience for irritating qualities people have! Ha! Because I’m SO perfect. 😉 Also, I don’t have kids and don’t enjoy them (sorry mommies, it’s not you, it’s me), so that cuts out a huge chunk of people.
    It seems like dating, do you ask someone, “Will you PLEASE be my friend?” 😉 jk. kind of.

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  26. Martina Avatar

    I moved to the US from Ireland and left everyone I know behind – family, friends…everyone. I found it extremely hard to make friends. Everyone I work with is about 10 years older than me and married and settled with school-age kids and they never want to meet up outside of work…ever! I tried really hard to make friends at the start but it’s so awkward….I always joke that it feels as though you’re friend-dating….for instance I had to cancel on a potential friend after we’d met up two and after that she never called me back….like I said awkward! It’s something I wish was different and it makes me very homesick at times but I also know it’s something I should work harder at!!

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  27. Terra Avatar
    Terra

    This is why I love reading your blog so much! I was just talking about this with a friend the other day. When you move to a new place with a little one it’s SO much harder find those deep friendships. Finding time to meet up while on a toddler schedule is hard enough, but then actually making meaningful conversation while keeping an eye on your little one makes it that much harder! We moved to Sacramento almost two years ago when our daughter was first born and have made a couple of friends, but we need to step it up to find a real community. It’s just nice hearing that other people have the same struggle. Thanks.

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  28. Rachael Robinson Avatar
    Rachael Robinson

    This was just so encouraging. I love reading your posts every morning while my little eats breakfast. Your posts used to get me through the first nursing session in the morning. Nursing did not come easy for me and I hated it, but in the morning I always knew I would have your post to read during the first feeding. I don’t often comment on your posts because I am a quiet follower, but I love your blog and I am thankful for it. If I was in San Diego I would love to be your friend and be part of your tribe, but I am in southern CA very much in the dessert.
    When I moved here I was not quite happy about it. My husband bought me a lovely home, but I had no friends, no church, and no little yet. I felt very lonely. I had to be extremely intentional about finding things to do to make friends. It was hard and not in my comfort zone, but I am so glad I did. I now have a “tribe” of mom friends who encourage me daily.
    I know your husband works lots of nights. So does mine. He works lots of double shifts so I actually only see hime one morning during the work week right now. It makes it even harder to have the momentum to meet new friends. I understand. Keep up the good work Elise! Its worth it to have tribes in many areas!

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  29. emily hassman Avatar

    Making friends as an adult is so HARD. I went through a thing a few years ago when I realized I had no local friends other than my husband. Our car battery died and I thought: we don’t even have a friend to call for a ride right now. It was a painful realization.
    I’ve made some really wonderful friends since then. It has taken years to establish, and oooo boy I’ve had some strikes in there, but it’s so worth it. Good luck ❤

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  30. Kathleen S. Avatar
    Kathleen S.

    I’ve just recently started reading your blog, and find it refreshing! Let me tell you, my stomach dropped when I read about the potential missed pick up; what a relief to have it work out well. That’s a lot of info to process in two weeks — think you’ve done well!

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  31. Melissa Avatar
    Melissa

    OH this is my life right now. We recently moved from Florida where we had lived for 15 years to North Carolina. We knew literally ONE family, but their lives are different than ours (they have younger children, ours are older) so we don’t see them often.
    I feel like I am drowning some days. I am trying to find friends, but boy is it hard!! I have joined a local yoga studio, but it’s not like we can talk in class. I am frustrated because I am starting to doubt this move and where we are. Was it all worth it? My kids left everything behind, as did we. Trying to put down roots and thrive isn’t easy. I enjoy being around people by nature, and this is quite hard….
    Thank you for the post. It was good to see that I am not alone and that we all struggle….

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  32. Nadine Avatar

    Hi Elise, thanks for opening up this conversation. I too struggle with finding my roots currently, well for the last three years. In 2012 I moved from Germany to England to live with my boyfriend. While I have made many friends among his friends, I struggled a lot to build up my own tribe. Which I believe is extremly important. It is a painfully slow and yes sometimes akward process: making friends as adults. Until recently I always thought i would move back home if our relationship would ever end, but now I am not so sure anymore. I guess it means I’m making progress on setting roots. (And progress is what we aim for, isn’t it!)
    Lots of love from England. Nadine

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  33. Susan M Avatar

    Oh man this post is so me in a few weeks, months and/or years. I just moved across the country from Massachusetts to SoCal and I feel like a zombie. Like I am her but not really. I guess what is different is that my husband’s family is all here so my little one (2 yr old) will have family and cousins around but I don’t have that anymore. I miss my friends a ton and the ability to text any of them and meet up after a long day or a hard one or even a good day when you just need some girl time. I miss that. It’s only been three weeks though. So I needed this post. I need to sign up for a mom club or something!

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  34. Susan M Avatar

    P.s. I’m sure you know about it but the meet up app has a ton of local stuff you can look through and see if there is anything that interests you. I just downloaded it last night and is worth looking at. They have hobby section too for craft groups and such!

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  35. Sara B Avatar
    Sara B

    Aw, you will have no trouble making friends 🙂

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  36. Haley Avatar

    I can relate to this so much! I have always been a person with just a few close friends and when I graduated from college last year many of them left the area. It feels so silly to have lived in the same place for over five years and only have a few friends here, but finding like-minded people and putting yourself out there is hard. I often tell myself that I can put the time that I would be spending with friends into creative pursuits and that that should satisfy me. Thanks for the reminder that it doesn’t have to be that way.

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  37. Rebekah Lozano Avatar
    Rebekah Lozano

    I’ve been feeling this, too. I’m originally from Ontario, Canada but now live in the Fresno area here in California, with my husband who is from here. In March, I quit my job so I could stay home with our daughter (she’s now almost 13 months). NOBODY from my old job (where I worked for 6 years) has kept in touch, despite my attempts. My tribe is on the other side of the continent, in a different country even! My husband’s family has so much drama, that we tend to stay away for our own sanity. After spending 6 weeks at my parents’ house, I realized just how alone I feel when I’m here. I’m very much an introvert, and making that effort to GET OUT THERE and make new friends is so overwhelming. Thank you so much for your honesty in this post. I have often felt like, “am I the only one who feels this way?” and it’s so nice to know (from you and others in the comments) that I’m NOT alone. I’m looking forward to getting out there this fall, now that Moms and Tots programs are starting up again. And I just discovered that our library has toddler time every Friday afternoon! 🙂 Best of luck building your local relationships! ❤

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  38. Jennifer de Treglode Avatar

    I very much relate and thank you so much for writing this post. I live in Oakland and my tribe is very much in San Luis Obispo. A place that is my heart’s home. It’s full of community, community vibes, relaxed and beautiful spaces. Here in Oakland I feel so totally out of my element. I made some great friend’s at a previous job that I don’t see as much now that I don’t work there but they are still great but other than that, I have been holding out until that hopeful someday when I can move back. We may be on the brink of that moment as the hubby is about to apply for a job there but it has been so hard. So best of luck to you. It is so much harder to make those kinds of friendships the older and busier we are. And in some places it’s just harder than others to find those people who mesh well with your personality. I went to school in San Diego and to be honest, I never liked the place much, mostly because I didn’t feel the people meshed well with my personality. And I don’t like large cities and prefer smaller towns.

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  39. Cheryl Avatar
    Cheryl

    I too recommend checking out Meetup.com. There are groups for everything you can think of…tons of Mommy groups, exercise, art, dance, going out to dinner, languages, touring and all kinds of hobbies. You invest very little and find potential long term friends. You can find someone to take a walk with you or go to the opera (depending on your location.) And if you can’t find a group you like you can start one. Elise could attend a knitting group and potentially come away with other Mommy friends or even a potential local grandma for the kids.

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  40. Sarah Avatar
    Sarah

    Oh Elise, I feel you! We’ve been in this part of Virginia for TWO AND A HALF YEARS and i have exactly two local friends, one of whom is a military wife pal who is here temporarily, another of whom is a mom I met at story time who happens to have a son exactly my guy’s age with the same name so now we are friends? But I spent two years here without making a single friend. We leave here in eight months to spend six months in Rhode Island and then head out to San Diego. I’m planning to make a real effort when we get to California because yeah, having local friends is SO important! But man, is it hard!

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  41. Elizabeth Avatar

    It is so hard, especially with military moves. We just made our tenth move and the friend possibilities are still hiding after almost three months… do you know the Peter Brown children’s book “You Will Be My Friend?” It is THE BEST. Go find it at the library, it always gets us giggling about our plight in this family : )

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  42. Elizabeth Avatar

    Almost 21 years of this moving around with the military business and this latest stop may prove to be the toughest for making local friends… sigh. You’d think it would get easier, but not so much yet. We are all missing our people from previous places.

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  43. susan black Avatar

    especially LOVED today’s podcast !!

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  44. Julia Avatar

    Loved reading this post… and obviously it resonates with quite a few of us. When my husband and I moved from Georgia to Kentucky (far, far away from our familiar tribe) I jokingly told people I was “friend-dating”… but I totally was. I’d awkwardly invite girls to coffee or out for drinks… some worked, and some didn’t. But like you said, there’s only one way to really find out. And now, 6 years and a kid later, our roots are in Kentucky… and instead of just one tribe, now we have 2. And I can only hope we’ll have more in the future. I’m such a dork and totally just thought of that little song you sing in girl scouts, “make new friends, but keep the old, one is silver and the other’s gold…” 🙂

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  45. Kristen Avatar

    Add me to people who relate! I find it so hard to find people in my area that I can connect with on a common interest + trust + our lifestyles align. I have a lot of health issues so there are literally month-long stretches where I’m not able to do anything social– it’s definitely hard to find people who understand that situation and don’t think that I’m just some flakey hermit who would rather stay in watching Netflix every night. (Though there is a nugget of truth in that, lol!) We also live in an affluent area but are not affluent ourselves which makes it hard when so many social activities are $$$. I think it’s easier knowing that I am not some sort of freak and that other fabulous women are feeling the same way– wading through the pool of awkward to try to find those true and lasting friendships with other fabulous people who get it! Thanks so much for sharing this 🙂

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  46. alexis Avatar

    Thank you so much for your openness and honesty on this topic. I can really relate. You are not alone in this challenge. As an introvert who has a young baby and is building a business, plus I moved to a new country two years ago, making friends just seems so difficult and like I don’t have time, plus I have my friends back in the states I can Skype with when I get lonely. But I know this is not the best attitude long term. I’m trying to take tiny little steps, like, make one or two friends. Anyway, I wish you luck in friendship.

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  47. Jennifer I. Walker Avatar
    Jennifer I. Walker

    Thank you for sharing this. Making friends in adult life is hard!! so hard!

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  48. goshery Avatar

    Thanks for sharing such honest feelings with us, your online people! I am so blessed to have a tight circle of friends and they have honestly helped me through so many good and bad times. My “baby girl” is getting married THIS Saturday (ahh!) and I wouldn’t be sane or as ready as I am without their help. We met through church many, many years ago and it’s hard to imagine my life without them to lean on and to make great memories with. I think meeting people organically is great (at the park or the library as you mentioned) but you could also join groups or even start a group centered around something you love, like knitting, quilting or reading. You’ve mentioned not being a big fan of Facebook, but our small town and several neighboring towns have a “Real life in . . .” page where people post garage sales or activities going on in the area. If San Diego has something like that it might be a good place to find out what’s going on around town. If you are open to friendship I think you’ll find it! Hugs!

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  49. Gisele Chastain Avatar
    Gisele Chastain

    Thank you as always for aharing your heart and reality. This has been on my mind a lot lately…been living in my current home for 3 years, dragging my feet in making new connections, and now finding out I’ll be here for a long time I suppose it’s time to put myself out there. Friendships are so much different with a toddler, it’s tough to be fully engaged and really connect the way I did before having a kid. I suppose it will just take a little more time.
    I think I’ll pick up the book you mentioned…sounds like a good thought provoking read. 🙂 Good luck on your journey into new friendships and roots…those you connect with will be lucky to have you as a friend!!

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  50. Morgan Avatar
    Morgan

    Making friends is hard. One idea might be to join a mom’s group on meetup.com – the one I’m in in the Bay Area plans at least 2-3 events a week and they’re so easy to attend and meet some cool people. I’ve made some really great friends through it and my daughter (about Ellerie’s age) also is friends with the kids her age. It might be a good starting point!

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