“This is some rescue. You came in here and you didn’t
have a plan for getting out?”
Ireland is a local country for local people. That is the
latest thing I have read. It seems a lot of expats who come to Ireland have
trouble finding friends. I’ve researched the internet and it seems like people
find the Irish to be kind of uninterested in meeting foreigners. I’ve been here
for three weeks now and I am still without friends. But to be honest I think it’s
about how you approach people yourself. How do you try to sell yourself? When
you come to a different country you can’t expect dinner parties and lunch dates
right away. You just have to have the right mind-set and believe that you will
get friends at some point or I think that if you have already decided that you
aren’t going to meet anyone because the Irish won’t invite you to their place
or drink a beer with you at the pub, then you are never going to find any
friends. The Irish people most likely do have their own friends so in all
honesty you’ll have to be the one to approach them because you’re the
friendless one and you’re the one looking for friends and not vice versa.
Even though I am still as lonely as when I came here I try
my best to go to the pub. I don’t go every day, because I don’t want to make the wrong impression. I’ve always been a supporter of Manchester United so
when they are playing I try to go down to the pub to watch the game. In that
way I have a purpose for coming to the pub and if I don’t get to talk to anyone
I still have the game to keep me occupied and there is also the chance of
meeting other football fans. So far I haven’t spoken to many people at the pub –
apart from the bartenders, who are really nice to me. But I’ve had conversations
with a few people (that doesn’t make them my friends though). But you got to
start somewhere and you can’t really expect everything to happen in one day. I
think it’s just nice to go out and just have a random conversation even though
it’s only for a few minutes.
I have read that people find it hard finding friends in Ireland
and some people seem to think it’s weird that they don’t have dinner parties and
whatever. I’m not used to dinner parties and lunch dates so to me it’s not
weird at all. I would think it was a bit weird if I all of a sudden was invited
to dinner somewhere.
So just like with the prices you shouldn’t trust everyone
when they say something. You have to look at your own life and country and how
you normally do things. It might be normal for an American mother to have
dinner parties with other mothers, but it has never been like that in my
family. The only people we have dinner with are family.
But there is a bit of truth in what some of the people are
saying. Most of the people I’ve spoken to are people who are sitting at the pub
alone. These people are easy targets but despite being an easy target they have
been really nice and open. Even though there are groups of young people (mostly
boys) they don’t say anything to you. They don’t even look in your direction. And I’m almost pretty sure that if you say
something to them they will give you a short answer with no sign of wanting to
actually start a conversation. But again it takes some time and if you keep
coming to the same place you will eventually feel more relaxed at that place
and you might end up making some friends at that place one day. That is my
strategy though. I think the most important thing is that you have to understand
that you’ve come to their country and you have to understand their culture and
then be happy and show them a positive attitude even on the worst of days.
But wouldn’t it just be grand if we could just use the Jedi mind
trick on people in order to make friends and make it seem like it was their idea.
Oh, how I’ve always wanted say, “I just Jedi mind tricked you!”
I'm from the Mullingar area and married to a Danish woman and she has made similar observations regarding friendships. Superficial bladder reigns. Generally people are better at talking than listening.
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