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  • My wife and I were best friends before getting married. I'm a social butterfly and pop from place to place and she is a ginormous introvert. Neither of us were lonely but loved the adventures we had together. Ten plus years into our marriage and nearly fourteen into our friendship, we still do most things together. Her friends come and go, and she's the one who understands me deeply and more than anyone else on this planet, and yet we find solace in each other, friendship, and a partnership neither of us expected. Marriage is not for everyone, it's a lot of work, it's a lot of trust, but mostly it's not there to fix a problem. If you go into it broken looking for something else, you may never find it. In the end, it takes two complete people to make it work.

  • I married my husband because I love him, not because I didn’t want to be lonely.

  • I wish it was as easy as it was when we were kids and on the playground. You would just show someone your sweet dinosaur toy and ask them to play with you and boom friends for life. Or until mom got tired of sitting in the bench. Whichever happened first.

    • With the real ones out there, you can still do that at any age!

  • not really, at least in my situation. i've been married for over 5 years and my partner is absolutely my best friend and i can be my full self with them.

    however, i also have a lot of other friends and acquaintances. each of them fills a different role in my life. all of them are unique. my partner doesn't have all of the same interests as me, but my friends all fulfill a different part of my personality that my partner cannot, and they also help support me through difficult times as a team.

    it's really essential to have a support system and a wide variety of friends in your life. putting all your eggs in one basket isn't healthy or fair. adulthood can certainly be lonely. i'm approaching 30 and feel it now more than ever as people in my life go down different paths and we have less in common and less time for each other.

    it's okay though. there are so many people in the world to connect with. you'll find your people.

  • My wife is absolutely my best friend and everything I do is better if she is there.

    I am, however, just starting to come off the effects of the pandemic. I have acute social anxiety and thought I had weathered the lockdown well because not being able to go out and do things is my comfort zone. However, as things became less dangerous and restricted, I found that my social anxiety had way worsened (like two extra medications worsened) and it was difficult for me to even do some of the social things I had been used to pre-pandemic.

    I was able to ignore it because of my strong relationship with my wife until my only other nearby friends moved to Illinois. That’s when I realized that I had no friends except for my wife, and I was in danger of using her as a replacement for my own social life. I didn’t want to force that unfair responsibility on her, so I decided to try to get back in touch with a friend that drifted, and started going to a local game store to play MTG.

    I’m now far outside of my comfort zone, but having a good time netting new people and playing a game that I kinda missed.

    I guess the point I’m making is that, yes, it’s easy to fall into that trap of using a significant other as your social outlet, but it’s unfair to them and you should do everything in your power to avoid it.

  • I think some people do this. However, I'm 30, live with my long term partner, and have a bigger friend group than I've ever had before, with weekly events. My partner isn't a stand-in for socialization.

    I'll fully admit I have some advantages because I have no kids, and a job that pays decently and isn't too demanding. I've met people through:

    • dating apps. This is how I met my partner and also a very good platonic friend
    • activist/interest groups. Got involved with a local urbanism group, now I know many of the people there
    • house parties. I got lucky here, I met someone that throws monthly house parties, went to those regularly, and made some very good friends that way
    • reconnecting with childhood friends. Again, lucky, but a few of my HS and college friends live in the same city as me and we reconnected and hang out.

    The one bit of concrete wisdom I think I have here is that if you go to the same social place regularly you'll see the same people and if you put yourself out there you'll get to know some of those people. Activist groups or meetup groups are great because you probably already have some things in common.

  • It's not you. It's how society is structured. It necessitates the hyper-individualization of the work force. As you grow older, you work more, but your work is disconnected from all the things that truly matter to humans. Your "friends" become shallow, hungry for money to survive. You start disconnecting from them too, and realize you can probably only share your deepest thoughts with perhaps one other person. That ends up as your partner in our current society.

    I believe we can move towards a better structure where we can all be friends. Good question for all of us to ask constantly is: "What's preventing people from becoming friends?"

  • Honestly, I've met a lot of people who settled with the wrong person just because they don't want to be lonely. It's a terrible situation to be in, especially if they have children with that person.

    I've been single for a long time, and it does get lonely, but I've been trying to get out more. It also beats being stuck with the wrong person.

49 comments