Making Friends as an Adult

This is, perhaps, not the best place to ask this question but maybe if we bang rocks together we can make sparks.

It feels like when you're an adult, your opportunities for socialising in general begin to fall off a cliff-edge. I was having a chat with my parents about it recently, and they expressed a similar sentiment: "Most of my friends are from work. I don't really have the time to look for new ones anymore." It feels like that's where I am at right now, twenty odd years earlier than them in the timeline. 

I was curious if that is the experience many of our older folks on this forum experienced as well? Obviously the struggles of being Autistic doesn't help our case in any way, but I can't help but think this might be a universal issue among people just in general now that so many of our relationships are conducted through the screen. (Heck, i'm even asking for help online right now!)

I'm happy to bring up where I think Autism plays a role in this in replies, but i'm curious on how people try to make friends once they have left higher education. (College/Uni)

Parents
  • As JD-on-sea said, hobby groups help. 

    I actually don't retain any of my friends from school, bar one. All my current friend group are people I have met after leaving uni. Mostly friends of friends who became my friends. I used to have just one 'best friend' when I was a kid, but now I realise that you can have different friends for different things. So I have friends that I meet up with once or twice a year and do things with, and a friend that I see after work and we sit on the couch and eat dinner and watch TV, and friends that I occasionally go out to the pub for a drink with, etc.

Reply
  • As JD-on-sea said, hobby groups help. 

    I actually don't retain any of my friends from school, bar one. All my current friend group are people I have met after leaving uni. Mostly friends of friends who became my friends. I used to have just one 'best friend' when I was a kid, but now I realise that you can have different friends for different things. So I have friends that I meet up with once or twice a year and do things with, and a friend that I see after work and we sit on the couch and eat dinner and watch TV, and friends that I occasionally go out to the pub for a drink with, etc.

Children
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