I’ve noticed a pattern in my friendships that I’m struggling with, and I’d love to hear other people’s perspectives.
Whenever I suggest something I genuinely want to do with friends, the plans always get changed around — often to fit schedules or budgets — until they no longer resemble what I originally suggested. By the time we meet up, I usually don’t enjoy the activity itself, though I still value being with my friends.
This cycle tends to repeat:
I suggest something → it gets reshaped into something I don’t want → we meet up but I’m bored/miserable → then we don’t talk for 6–12 months until someone breaks the silence.
Recently, I’ve made a change: I started doing the things I enjoy on my own, without waiting for friends. For the first time, I’ve actually been happy doing what I love — but it also means I’m doing them alone.
Part of why I’m trying this is because I’ve lost friends in the past from being visibly miserable all the time when I adapted to things I didn’t actually like. Honestly, it feels like for most of my life I never really chose my friends — I just adapted to the people around me. Now, I’d really like to choose friends who genuinely align with what I enjoy.
So here’s my question: Is it wrong to want to choose my friends? How do you balance doing what makes you happy with maintaining friendships, especially if your happiness and your current friend group don’t line up?
Any thoughts, advice, or personal experiences would be really helpful.
ai disclaimer
I’m going through a lot and instead of just dumping my feelings here I thought it would make more sense to have Chatgpt handle it.
Here’s the source chat but if you want to cite my words I’d prefer you just cite my post instead.
Regardless I stand behind Chatgpt’s output as my own words and am accountable for it as though I wrote it.
Instead of making plans with friends, plan your activity and invite friends. If you’re the defining factor, and plan your activity as it is, others may join or not.
The fewer people you involve, the more stable the plan will be as well.
Make friends with people who also love what you love?
No, it isn’t wrong to want to choose your friends based on your hobbies. It’s healthy. Sure, you will need some flexibility. It can’t all be your way all the time. But generally you want friends who enjoy the same activities and “things” you do. You want enough similarities to have stuff to do and talk about, but enough differences that you aren’t just repeating the same things to each other.
And as with most relationships, a small handful of great ones can sustain us for longer and more deeply than a deluge of shallow and circumstantial ones.
You could try “I’m going to do this thing on this day. If you would like to join me, I’ll be there at this time. Let me know if you’re coming by (RSVP date) so that I can book you a spot/plate/room: it will be $this much.” And then make your plans and do them anyway.
This way it’s clear that you are doing the thing. If people say “can we do this or this instead?” you reply with “Hey, great idea! Maybe next time. I’ve already planned the other thing for this time.”
Sometimes it will be on your own. Sometimes others will want to join you. Sometimes you can join others on their quests, too, but remember to not try and change their plans to suit yourself.
I don’t have friends.
Hello, friend.
I’ve learned that it’s important to spent time on my interests, and it’s important to spend time on my friends, but trying to do both at once sometimes cheapens both.
I’d suggest scheduling just chill hangouts with friends, and keep doing the wild things they can’t afford by yourself.
One thing every other comment has failed to mention is that, to be comfortable around other people, you must first be comfortable with yourself fully. And, because of that, I recommend you keep doing activities by yourself, and try new things by yourself, at least at first. Discover who you actually want to be, while still respecting everyone’s freedom, including your own.
Sounds like you’re meeting up with big groups and many people pulling different directions? Try smaller meetings.
it gets reshaped into something I don’t want
It is bizarre that this happens so regularly to you. Could you go into detail, like at least 3 examples of this? What’s going on?
Is inviting strangers an option, someone who is more into your (version of the) activity?
Thank you for the AI Disclaimer and owning up to the words it spit out, at least you’re being honest about it, and that’s respectable. 👍
My personal opinion is don’t expect anything.
You can try to plan everything out, but almost never will things go perfectly according to plans. And the more effort you put into planning, the less likely things actually go according to plan.
If you’re just trying to enjoy time with friends, then plans might as well be just suggestions, but sometimes you just gotta roll with whatever happens, and get a good laugh when Jeremy pukes behind the car LOL!
Sometimes you just gotta live in the moment…
First, it’s not only you: making plans that accommodate everyone’s schedules and budgets can be tricky, especially if a lot of people are involved, so you might not be doing anything wrong. You can try letting them know what you want to do earlier in advance so that they know not to make plans for the day. People are more likely to respond to concrete dates, times, and locations instead of vague ones.
Also not all of your friends are going to share your hobbies and interests and that’s ok. Try inviting just the ones you know for sure enjoy the things you do, or joining clubs or activity groups for those things to potentially meet new people to do them with. The time with your other friends can be spent on things you know they want to participate in and can afford.
Appreciate the honesty about the AI disclaimer.
It would be helpful to have an example (or more) of what you suggested and what ended up happening.
Other people have good advice, but I’m wondering if you are planning things which are a bit niche, or if your friends have strange interests, or if you find it difficult to enjoy normal activities.
There are lots of activities that people do that I’m not that interested in, but I’ll go along anyway and still have a good time - it wouldn’t be my first choice, and I’d be annoyed if my plans always got taken over in favour of them, but I wouldn’t be “visibly miserable” doing something like this: for example, one time we ended up going out for “electric shuffle” (just shuffleboard which is electronically scored) which is pretty expensive for what it is, but whatever. The main attraction is being with friends and interacting, anyway.
I remember one time I planned a cycling trip and everyone I invited ended up doing something else (I can’t remember what, but I remember distinctly it being something they could have done on any weekend). I was a bit miserable at that but still had a good time on my own.
I tell my friends hey im doing X on this day if you want to come. Sometimes they will say “I cant do X day can you move it?” and ill decide if I want to and if its fine then i reschedule otherwise I go without them. Plans never get changed from what I originally set.
if I just want to hangout and dont care about the activity I just ask if they want to meet up and do something making it clear the activity is open for anything. We then throw around ideas and whichever has the most interest we do.
I don’t have any shared hobbies or interests with any of my friends (and very few with my wife!) besides going somewhere, putting things in our mouths and yapping the day/night away. Idk, it never felt weird to me, but I might just be a bit of a boring guy since I mostly like reading, talking (IRL and online) and playing single-player videogames so it all fits for me?