Mr. Son (
dreadlordmrson) wrote in
mrsonvsyoutube2024-12-26 12:12 pm
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Entry tags:
Loneliness
My comment:
Being out there with weird hobbies is be the best way to make friends, and the less shame you have you better it gets. But it's HAAAAAARD to get over embarrassment or fear. But because last year I mentioned to my friendgroup about this one nsfw rpg I was playing, I ended up talking more with someone who'd just been a sort of 'friend of a friend' acquaintance. And now we're working on our own games together and sharing art and worldbuilding ideas. One moment of reckless "hey so I'm playing this thing I'd normally be terrified to mention I was into-" and now this cool person I was only vaguely connected with is one of my closest friends.
Re: Thoughts
That's only looking at one facet of the situation though. Here's a couple more:
If your interest is common, those people you find who share it are more likely to already have their "people I talk about this interest with" be filled. Some of them will still be open to more friends, but others will talk with you briefly about it but not make a connection. While if you find that one other weirdo into a rare thing, you're going to snap together like magnets because omg finally someone into [thing]!
Also, it might not matter if they're actually into your interest already? By having a weird interest you might make them curious. You're a novelty! You're unusual! Tell me more about custom-sculpting frog terrariums please?
So it's more complicated than just the numbers of matching interest-to-interest.
>> Loneliness on a large scale means that a society is doing a terrible job of meeting human needs. So much of modern life is just prone to pulling people apart, and that's a problem, because humans aren't solitary animals. Individual humans might have a higher or lower need for company, but the species as a whole is a troop species.
For sure!
I have a really low amount of ability to socialize regularly, because I'm am HARD introverted. Even chatting with friends I love in a casual and laid-back manner drains me. I have a lot of fun, turn off voice, and immediately get a burst of energy back because the social drain stops. But I still need that time to chat or I start to go stir-crazy in my own head. I'm on Discord daily chatting with the couple of people I'm close with. It's easier through text, though even then it can get draining and I need to take alone breaks...
>> Recently though, I noticed the opposite. It's possible to be in a place, know none of the people throwing an event, have no particular personal connection other than the one I went there with ... yet still feel a sense of welcome and belonging. The event itself was designed for that, with no more common ground than general proximity and vague cultural stuff.
Huh, yeah. You got me remembering the only concert I even bought a ticket for. Back when I used to listen to ICP they had a concert up in Oregon while I was living there, and I got it. It was incredible. Even waiting in line with all these other people passionate about being there?
One guy was mobility impaired... I forget how... a walker? And everyone rallied around him like look, this guy showed up. He loves this so much that even though he can barely walk he came here. And I sort of felt a community and belonging vicariously by being there as they were cheering this other guy on.
...then I had a couple crowd surfers dropped on my head because I was too short to support them and I was a dip in the hands. That part sucked.
>> Someone who can do the kind of stunts with people that I can do with languages or some other folks can do with computers. Impressive.
Yeah the people who can engineer that kind of emotional landscape for events are absolute wizards. Masters of social engineering. Much respect, and honor for the ones who use it for good like that.