Hey everyone. So I’ve been lurking for a bit and finally made an account. I guess I’m just wondering if anyone else has moved to a completely new city where you don’t know a soul, and how you even begin to build a social circle from zero in your thirties. I’ve tried a couple of hobby groups but it feels like everyone already has their established friends.
Welcome to the forum and congrats on the move. Building a new community in your thirties is not easy but it can start with small steps. Showing up to the same class or cafe every week can slowly change things. What tiny thing would feel like a win this week?
That vibe is real and it can sting when it feels like every table is taken in a new community setting. Not every meetup is a fit but a different angle might help like a single day volunteer gig or a casual hang after a talk. Do you worry the network is too closed?
I found that joining something with a defined end helps with the awkward bits. A four week course or a small project forces interaction and you can decide later who from that circle you want to keep in your community.
I moved and did not push it for a while. Then I joined a gym on a whim and met a couple folks by accident. It felt random and a bit lazy but it worked enough to grow my circle and my sense of community.
One trick I liked is a hobby that meets regularly but with a simple goal like a book club or a language exchange. It lowers the pressure and the community stuff can grow when you least expect it.
I am not sure if this is different in your city but I met a neighbor by helping out with a local cleanup. It felt small and it was not glamorous but the next week I knew more people and could join a casual plan. It did not fix everything but it helped the community feel real.
Are these groups mostly aimed at a younger crowd or students in your area I wonder the premise feels skewed? Maybe the idea is to stop chasing big events and instead chase one or two small contact points in the community.