One of the weirdest things about
graduating from college and moving across the country is the absolute
social disorientation. It's SO WEIRD. I mean, who sits in their
room and says “Hey, I think Imma just leave all the people that I
know and go to a place where I don't know anyone at all except for
one person that I'm dating, but whom I've barely seen in a year”?
Well, as someone who does that, let me tell you, it really effs up
your sense of having a place to belong. I definitely don't belong
back at Bethel anymore since I graduated (also I don't want to be
“that person,” and all you people know exactly who I mean), I
haven't belonged in Clay Center since about a year after I left, and
I don't quite feel like I belong here, either. It's like being stuck
in limbo, and it's just SO WEIRD.
I mean, it certainly hasn't been a bad
thing to move out here, it's just something that's super far outside
of my realm of experience. The last time I left everyone that I knew
and went someplace new was when I moved to college, and even then, I
already knew Brian, Jackie, Alan, Dan, Ben, and Matt. And I was only
2 hours from home. And also everyone on my hall was in the exact
same situation. And I'm realizing that I'll never have another
experience again where I am literally surrounded on all sides by
people that I could hang out with and be friends with. At Bethel,
all I had to do was walk upstairs or even just yell across the mod,
and someone would show up to talk to me. At Bethel, I was super
extroverted (or at least, more extroverted than I'd ever been in my
life) because it was so EASY to make friends and maintain friendships
with people, because I saw them literally EVERY DAY, sometimes for
hours every day. But now, I'm trying to make friends with people
that I only see once a week at church, and it's really hard to build
a relationship inside of one hour-long encounter per week. Now, I
have to actually exert actual EFFORT to spend time with people. But
the thing is, having to exert so much effort (money and time to BART
across the Bay, walk for an hour, repeat) to spend time with people
that I barely know is just such a skewed cost:benefit analysis. I
mean, it's pretty fun and stuff, but it's just so much easier to be
introverted again and just not go out. Which, obviously, makes my
feeling of “oh poor me, I don't have any friends” just that much
worse.
So right now, after having gone back to
Bethel and seeing that life goes on without me (of course it does,
good grief, even I'M not THAT conceited!), and then coming back to
San Francisco, where my friend circle is in its infancy, I'm just
experiencing the loss of a sense of belonging that necessarily
accompanies new surroundings. And you know, in a year, I'm sure I'll
look back and be like “haha, what a silly person I was, everything
turned out just fine!”, but right now I'm kind of like “OMG I
WILL NEVER EVER HAVE GOOD FRIENDS EVER AGAIN!!!!”
Dear Claire-Bear,
ReplyDeleteAs someone who has made the same decision twice (I realize this isn't a whole lot more experience), I understand where you are coming from. It sucks not having friends immediately accessible. It sucks having to plan times to hang out with them. I'm lucky I don't have to commute to another town to hang out with people. I've found though that when you exert more effort to spend time with people, the relationships grow deeper. If you both are exerting extra effort, you are both invested, and want the friendship to grow. It automatically takes out the superficial lunch room friend relationships.