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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

Was I the problem in this group?

209 replies

pxseyocto · 07/01/2026 04:43

I have a friend at university who I’m pretty close with, probably my closest uni friend.

She recently got into archery society, found a friend group and invited me to go rock climbing with them in November. I was pretty excited since I thought it’d be good to make some friends. Once I met them there were two guys and three girls including my good friend. I shook hands with the guys and said hello to everyone, but it was initially sort of awkward since we’d thought I’d be able to get them into their first session for free (as I’d signed up there the year before and the friend mentioned something like if an existing member brings along friends they get to go free). However that didn’t work and we all had to pay individually for a session. So it was off to a bad start but I moved past and got to climbing. I didn’t really talk to the girls as I was pretty shy, we just waited for the guys to change and then we all went to climb.

I noticed from then on, that the group was mostly talking among themselves. We all had goes at climbing the same wall and when it was my turn they did give me tips and answer my questions, but apart from small talk and a few sentences they didn’t talk to me much. I could tell they were all comfortable with each other and I was kind of the outlier there, and I thought that was normal since obviously I’d just met them. I mainly kind of followed them around and had goes at climbing or pointing out which walls to do, but was mostly talking to the friend I knew already.
At one point we all got to climb one wall and I was kind of struggling at the end, when they helped me out and one of the guys pulled me up to get to the top with them. It was good and we had a sort of jokey conversation on the way down the ladder as to who should go before who.

An hour or so of climbing and one girl had to leave. I followed shortly after since I was meeting with another friend. When I was saying goodbye we got into a small conversation with the friend and the two guys. They said they were doing a boxing/mma session the next day and if I wanted to come, and I was kind of shy since it would be only me and the two guys, but I said I could and that I’ll see how things go tomorrow. I shook hands with the guys and said goodbye to them and the friend also. Not a great start but it wasn’t too bad as it was the first time meeting.

The next day I think I completely forgot about the boxing/MMA event, but I didn’t get the guys’ numbers or anything and the friend didn’t even follow up about it so I didn’t end up going, not that big of a deal.
I didn’t really expect to see them after that but I didn’t have any harsh feelings towards them, just that they were mostly talking among themselves.

A week or so later, I was eating by myself on a bench outside on campus when I saw the friend with the same group walking by. The friend didn’t see me, but the others pointed out “hey isn’t that your friend” to her, after which she came back and spoke to me. She asked what I was doing alone and I said I was just eating at my regular spot to chill by myself after lessons.

I asked where they were going and she said to an arcade, so I figured let me try and be social and asked if I could come along. She said sure and we followed right after them as they’d gone quite a bit ahead of us while we were talking. I think that in the moment I was happy they recognised me and stopped to say hi, which I took as a good sign that we broke the ice and they were comfortable with me now, so that’s why I got so confident and wanted to go with them.
As me and the friend caught up to her group though, I could tell the vibe was off again and remembered what happened at climbing before and how they mostly spoke to each other and I was the obvious outlier. I realised it’ll probably be the same now so I’d have to try extra hard to talk first, and regretted getting too confident and asking her to join them.

My guess would turn out correct as on the way there they were again mostly speaking among themselves. One of the guys who was also there the week before seemed kind of upset and wasn’t really talking to anyone either, just following quietly at the back like me. I felt kind of awkward and just kept walking along with them. We got to the train and we kind of split up in the carriage with the other guy and the girls in a large group and me, the friend I knew well and the guy who was upset were standing outside of the group, so I was talking to the friend I knew from before. She then told me to go talk to the rest and why I was just standing by myself. I don’t remember how I responded but it was probably trying to defend myself and saying the other guy wasn’t talking much either.

With him though, I noticed that the girls and other guy realised he was kind of upset and asked him if he was okay trying to find out wha was wrong, to which he kind of shrugged them off. With me though, I was just there standing around or following like a sheep as they were again, keeping and talking amongst themselves. I don’t blame them as they knew the guy well and it probably wasn’t normal for him to not talk much, while they barely knew me and had barely spoken to me before.

So back to the train and the friend telling me to talk more. I think at the end she even asked why I was there if I wasn’t gonna talk, to which I took offense. That kinda killed my mood and I saw her as being kind of blunt, saying I might as well go home at that point. I don’t think I’d ever say that to her or any friend of mine if they were left out in my friend group, rather ask them to talk or be fine with them talking to me to at least not be by themselves.

We got out of the station and the way towards the arcade was pretty much the same, them talking amongst themselves and me following around listening. What she said didn’t help me socialise any more at all, probably made me feel more stressed and I wanted to leave at that point but I felt awkward saying it and had no idea how to get myself out so I just stayed. At one point we stopped as some of them had to use the bathrooms so it was me, the friend and the two guys. I stood around quietly agin as the guys weren’t really saying anything to me, and the friend tried again breaking the ice by reintroducing us to each other and telling us to speak and say something and not make it awkward. One of the guys then said “I tried, just letting you know I’ve tried” and the other who was previously quiet and upset said “just let him smile” or something along the lines of that, because I wasn’t saying anything but smiling and walking with them. I still find that rude and backhanded, I think the first guy was trying to say he tried talking to me to no avail, but he hadn’t said a single word to me that whole journey there and I know for a fact if he spoke to me I would’ve carried on a conversation, so no he hadn’t “tried” at all. It really pissed me off even to this day but I didn’t say anything there and then.
I don’t know if the second guy was trying to defend me or make fun of me by saying to let me just smile.

The others then came back and we resumed walking to the arcade. One of the girls actually started a conversation with me then, asking me what I study. I answered and asked what she did etc, asked about archery and commented on her climbing from the week before. So I can socialise and have a conversation, it’s just I need the other person to either start it or just engage with me in the first place. We spoke until we got to the arcade, then they all started talking about who would pay on the card machine as we needed an arcade card with prepaid points inside it to go on the games and machines.

Anyway, we play a few first games and again it was mostly them competing with each other and talking, with me saying something here and there or being given the turn to play. I then spoke to the friend again, who again told me to walk up to the others and talk to them. I got a bit defensive as I was still bitter about her previous comment about why did I come if I wasn’t gonna talk, so I tried to tell her my point of view - that they weren’t talking to me either and that a conversation goes both ways, not just me trying to start convos to no avail while they mostly talk amongst each other and I’m just there outcasted. I wasn’t really keen to go up to them as it would seem like I’m begging to be inserted into the group, but I was confident to have a conversation if one of them included me like the girl who started talking to me on the way there and I reciprocated on.

After that, a third guy arrived who was also a friend of theirs already, and he was actually much nicer. After I said hi to him and we played some games he would turn to me and start conversations with me, ask me about what I do and try to include me or talk to me. That’s when things got better, I was talking to him but also the others if they were nearby or joining in, and we eventually partnered up with the guy for a game where you race with a partner, and competed against them in other games as well. We kind of broke the ice after that and us guys started talking a bit more as a group with me too. We even shared a group hug towards the end which was kind of wholesome, even said we loved each other. So the third guy coming and talking to me helped me bloom a bit like a butterfly and show that I can be talkative when the others are open to include me or initiate.

That was most of it, we went home after that and even the second guy who previously said to let me just smile was telling me a story about their group chat and just funny small talk in general. We all ended up splitting as we took different ways home, and I said bye to everyone. I later saw one of the girls at the end who happened to be going the same way home as me and we spoke about university and stuff until I got off the train.

That was around 2 months ago now, but I just wanted to ask on here if I was really the issue by not talking a lot or if a lot of you would’ve done the same as me, if maybe the vibes were off and if there’s any truth in what I said about a conversation going both ways, not just me the outsider trying to initiate with the already-friends in the group.
Another friend who I asked said I should talk to them and put myself out there and not be quiet especially as they already knew each other well.

Am I also being unreasonable to get upset at the friend’s comment about how I shouldn’t have come if I wasn’t going to talk? The whole group was mainly talking among themselves and I felt like an outlier just being there unable to insert myself into the convo. They weren’t really acknowledging me either or talking to me. Is it unreasonable to expect anyone to try and talk to me then?
I still find that comment kind of blunt from her.
Also the comments from the two guys before we got to the arcade, one who said he “tried” (when he really didn’t at least from my perspective, he was just talking to the girls he knew already and the second guy, barely acknowledging me), and the second who told her to just let me smile.

Do I need to improve my social skills of approaching people and starting conversations, or is it normal to keep quiet and not be keen to integrate if they mainly keep talking among themselves? Or maybe our vibes were just off and I don’t happen to click with them in general?

OP posts:
Bluebluesummer · 07/01/2026 08:18

You are clearly not a problem you are a person who is learning but you are very introspective and maybe just need to brush up a bit on social skills.

You will get people smoothing over your part in this to be kind to you but I think that would miss a learning opportunity for you.

In groups people want people who add energy to the situation and don’t take energy from the situation, so people who ask others about themselves, their courses, interests and hobbies, then a bit of banter and back and forth. There is a certain amount of fake it until you make it with social skills. Focus on what you can bring to dynamics early on, fun, chat, interesting stories, energy and stop looking inwards for a bit.

OnlyAfterwards · 07/01/2026 08:22

Like many socially-unskilled people, you’re expecting too much from others.

BriefEncountersOfTheThirdKind · 07/01/2026 08:23

wineosaurusrex · 07/01/2026 05:33

I read it just fine. It always shocks me when people struggle to read a few paragraphs. Attention spans really are being destroyed by technology 😂

It's not the attention spans
It's that this goes into such minute detail about absolutely nothing

Bogofftosomewherehot · 07/01/2026 08:28

wineosaurusrex · 07/01/2026 05:33

I read it just fine. It always shocks me when people struggle to read a few paragraphs. Attention spans really are being destroyed by technology 😂

It's not a few paragraphs, it's 17!!
I got half way through and gave up.

GeorgeMichaelsCat · 07/01/2026 08:31

It sounds to me like you were very quiet and didn't try and interact enough. Try and interact more. It can be hard but try your best.

Also I agree with PP, you do not shake hands in informal situations.

CraftyBalonz · 07/01/2026 08:35

You are over-thinking everything - that OP was ridiculously long and unecessary.

So I can socialise and have a conversation, it’s just I need the other person to either start it or just engage with me in the first place.

you are way too awkward and trying to run before you can walk.

You meet people for the very first time, they're nice, just chill. You are not becoming besties in 5mn or a class, they might have known each other for years.

Keep meeting new people and for your own sake, let friendship develop organically! Chill.

OnlyAfterwards · 07/01/2026 08:36

BriefEncountersOfTheThirdKind · 07/01/2026 08:23

It's not the attention spans
It's that this goes into such minute detail about absolutely nothing

This. OP, in the nicest possible way, if you want people to pay attention to you, in person or in print, you need to work on making it easier and pleasanter to be around you.

museumum · 07/01/2026 08:37

I’ve read it all and still don’t understand the issue. Your friend is being lovely including you with their new friends. It’s a bit stilted cause you don’t know each other but they’ve invited you to further things after meeting you so it wasn’t terrible.
you can’t expect others to always lead the social interaction you need to take your turn. It’s fine to not talk all the time but being silent all the time feels odd and sky for the others.
it sounds like most examples of getting to know new people to me.

LadyQuackBeth · 07/01/2026 08:37

It was you in this instance but it's not a fixed indication of your personality or anything other than an awkward anecdote. It's a little different when you invite yourself along, the expectation is that you want to be there and will be a bit enthusiastic and sociable. I can see why your friend was blunt with you, she'd already had to do the heavy lifting at climbing when she'd invited you and now you were putting it on her again.

It's interesting you consider the third guy who showed up to be nicer because he made so much effort with you. By that reasoning, you aren't very nice - you can't have it both ways, they get blamed for not being sociable/nice enough but you get a pass because you can respond to someone. They could all have conversations with others too.

You need to get out of your head and into the world a bit, meet a variety of people and experience different situations. A part time job in a customer facing role would be brilliant for you, for example. You're clearly very young, it's fine to make mistakes and have funny stories to tell, stop worrying about putting a foot wrong and start embracing life a bit. Instead of treating friendships like video game levels unlocked, go along if you think you'll enjoy it, if you like them and treat people how you'd like to be treated.

After this thread, never give this meet up another thought, time to move on.

PollyBell · 07/01/2026 08:44

MichaelmasDaisiesAndAutumSunset · 07/01/2026 08:11

I’m not sure it’s attention spans. I can read pages of legislation no problem but that was just dull and repetitive - bloke goes out with group who already know each other, he’s a bit odd (e.g. shaking hands with men not women, which could be cultural - though still likely to be read as strange by the other people), doesn’t talk much. Randomly invites himself along another time and doesn’t talk, then spends two months thinking about it before writing it out in minute and boring detail. Have I got it?

In answer to the question, yes, it is you. You’re not part of that group and are unlikely to become so. But that’s ok. Try to find your own friends not connected to an existing friend, don’t shake hands in informal situations, or if you must, shake with everyone. If you ask someone where they’re going and they tell you without inviting you, don’t ask to tag along. Stop thinking about it all so much.

Its not attention spans but the previous poster knew that

Chiaseedling · 07/01/2026 08:45

Ithinkihatethislittlelife · 07/01/2026 07:26

Honestly, it would have been ten times easier if you’d all just gone to a pub and got pissed.

Edited

Nailed it!!

ExpectZeroContext · 07/01/2026 08:46

I will wait for the movie to come out if that's ok.

Braixen · 07/01/2026 08:50

You're really overthinking it.

SpaceRaccoon · 07/01/2026 08:53

You have raging Aspergers (not an insult, I have it too).

KitsyWitsy · 07/01/2026 08:53

wineosaurusrex · 07/01/2026 05:33

I read it just fine. It always shocks me when people struggle to read a few paragraphs. Attention spans really are being destroyed by technology 😂

Nothing wrong with my attention span but that OP is way too long and convoluted to waste my time on. After the first few paragraphs it became obvious the OP was a massive overthinking rambler.

UniquePinkSwan · 07/01/2026 08:54

PonyPals · 07/01/2026 05:02

There is no way anyone is reading this wall of text

Have you never read a book?

Fingernailbiter · 07/01/2026 08:54

I managed to read it all, but you are hugely overthinking everything and dwelling unnecessarily on minute, unimportant details.

The first thing that struck me as odd was the shaking hands. Maybe I’m wrong but that sounds much too formal and old-fashioned for this situation to me.

But the main thing that struck me was that you seem to just wait for other people to initiate conversations. Why? Do you show (or pretend) that you are interested in them, or just wait for them to ask about you? Do you actively contribute to a conversation (unless, of course, it’s about people you don’t know)? Do you show that you’re a pleasant person to be with?

Friendships and social interactions go two ways. It’s fine to be an introvert but that doesn’t mean you shouldn’t try to contribute something, rather than just stay silent and hope to be discovered.

PumpkinsAndCoconuts · 07/01/2026 08:57

PonyPals · 07/01/2026 05:02

There is no way anyone is reading this wall of text

I actually did. And then remembered that I could have used ChatGPT to summarise it…

anyhow. Seems to me as if you’re massively overthinking everything, OP. I absolutely understand that this may be part of your „shyness/social awkwardness“ but it is never helpful to ruminate in such a manner. You ended up having a positive experience. That’s the takeaway imo!

(and yes, if you agree to go to MMA the next day you definitely shouldn’t just forget about it. Write the person who invited you to properly cancel!)

Hippiedippi · 07/01/2026 08:59

I think it might be worth getting in touch with uni wellbeing services for a chat and some reassurance.

Try not to worry you are still very early on in the year so lots of time to find your people. Look up spotlight effect and Dr Julie on social media to get tips on navigating social situations.

Keep going you are doing great will just take time for things to settle. It’s a big transition going to uni x

MuckSavage · 07/01/2026 09:01

Your post bored the arse off me and I lost the will to live several paragraphs in.

Stucknstoopit · 07/01/2026 09:01

That’s several minutes of my life I won’t get back. I couldn’t read it to the end but yabu or yanbu I guess.

I’ll never know 🤷🏽‍♀️

TelephoneWires · 07/01/2026 09:05

I read it all and was suprised when I got to the bit that said it was two months ago. You remember in such detail. I would say you are overthinking.

There wasn’t really a problem - you are shy and with a group who know each other well. It is always going to be a bit awkward. Your friend was maybe a bit hard on you but I guess she was trying to encourage you to join in.

Maybe do more 1:1 things and chalk this up to experience. You can’t win them all. Sounds like you did chat a bit with some of the people involved so it wasn’t all bad. They won’t be thinking about how you were at these events two months ago or even at the time - try not to dwell.

TelephoneWires · 07/01/2026 09:09

Do you still get on well with the original friend or have you fallen out?

MissDoubleU · 07/01/2026 09:15

In short, yes. You do need to improve your social skills. I think you also need to relax a little. If you are going over this much detail from a few simple interactions then you are overthinking things way too much. This likely comes across in person. I would imagine it’s hard to engage with someone who is just stood there not joining in, laughing along, or anything. If you just wait for someone to purposefully draw you in the correct way and eagerly enough, you will only show to be excluding yourself. Your friend ties to tell you to join in and you pushed back, saying no one is including you. She literally said “join in” - why was that not enough?

They want you to join in, it doesn’t have to be a formal invitation. Making a show of “well if I’m not wanted I will stand further away until I’m asked back into the fold” is needy and tiresome. The whole point is to have fun. You shouldn’t need people to prove how badly they want you there.

The wall of text shows that you need to take these casual encounters much more casually. It shouldn’t be this much hard work for anyone.

MyRubyPanda · 07/01/2026 09:16

Yeah as others have said OP you're triggering us autistics' A-dars big times. I also think you might be male - you talk a lot about shaking hands which is more normal in male circles.

This group isn't it OP. And yes its intensely irritating when a neurotypical woman chastises you for being autistic and not behaving like her, as if suddenly un-disabling yourself was in your ability. You're ruminating about this because you correctly read the signs and want to avoid feeling this way again.

You need to find your people OP. I don't know where they are at your university but they will be there I promise. My (neurodivergent) kids are at university and have both joined heavily neurodivergent groups/social societies.

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