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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:
Theroadt · 07/01/2026 11:30

PorridgeAndSyrup · 07/01/2026 11:21

You sound a lot like me when I was younger. Very shy and social interaction was often painful. It sounds like the other girls weren’t particularly welcoming, but you didn’t help yourself much either by not initiating any conversation with them either. I know it’s hard, but at uni for example, you can always ask people what course they’re on, where they come from… You said they go to archery soc so you could ask about that…

One thing I’ve found over the years is, when you’re trying to make new friends, try not to make assumptions about what they are thinking or how it’s going to go. So for instance, the second time you met them, you said something like “I assumed it would be like before where they didn’t talk to me, and they didn’t”. But that sort of thinking can become a self-fulfilling prophecy, where you subconsciously act more reserved - which unfortunately comes across as unfriendliness. A better thing to do is go into every interaction assuming the best - assume they want to make friends too but maybe they were shy too, last time, or that last time they weren’t feeling their best. Tell yourself this is the day you will make friends with them, smile warmly, and then ask them about themselves. Maybe you won’t end up being friends with them, but at least it’s practice for next time.

Good advice here. Always greet people as if they are already friends - smile, look happy to see them. People generally need a lot of reassurance, just as you do! You’ll be fine. Y2 is quite often you shake down some of the pals you made in Y1 (when you were all just grateful to have friends full stop!) and become more discerning. Good luck - you sound lovely, you will find you tribe 👍🏻

TorroFerney · 07/01/2026 11:31

venus7 · 07/01/2026 10:42

I'm reading Middlemarch; no issue with that.

Yes. And I was borrowing books from the library pre internet , realising they weren’t for me and returning them without reading !

PortSalutPlease · 07/01/2026 11:33

TorroFerney · 07/01/2026 11:21

People with manners getting introduced to others for the first time?

Teenaged uni students don’t shake hands when meeting social peers. That simply doesn’t happen, it’s stilted and formal and not how things happen.

venus7 · 07/01/2026 11:33

TorroFerney · 07/01/2026 11:31

Yes. And I was borrowing books from the library pre internet , realising they weren’t for me and returning them without reading !

Of course, but that's not an issue with attention span, but taste.

andthat · 07/01/2026 11:34

The OP has made it clear it wasn't formal handshake, it was a dab which is what young lads do when they meet.

BriefEncountersOfTheThirdKind · 07/01/2026 11:35

andthat · 07/01/2026 11:34

The OP has made it clear it wasn't formal handshake, it was a dab which is what young lads do when they meet.

OP has now

But people are referring to the original post

TheOtherBear · 07/01/2026 11:36

I'd like to pose a question that I think will be helpful for your framing, and your next steps - What do you want?

It's a really helpful question to ask yourself as you navigate through life and work out what is / isn't important, what to do next / what not to do next, whether to think about an experience as positive / negative. Because most of the time, these things are subjective rather than set in stone. I don't necessarily think what anyone did in your original post was 'wrong', but it all depends on what you want.

Here are some examples of what you might want, and what my advice and thoughts would be as a result. Obviously this isn't exhaustive.

  1. You want to vent a bit because you feel like this group was rude to you and unwelcoming --> Ok, that's cool. Totally fine to think that. Good to post here, and you'll get some people saying that friendship group was a bit cold and welcoming and could have tried harder to include you.

  2. You want to be part of that friendship group --> Also cool. In this scenario, yes I think you were a bit of the 'problem', to use your words. If you actively want to be part of that group, you're going to need to do more to show you're interested in the people in it. Waiting for them to initiate things probably won't do that, so yes, have a think about your social skills and how you develop them. There'll be plenty of advice on that too.

  3. You want to have more friends generally, but not that specific group --> Yep, also cool and makes sense. In that case, I wouldn't see anyone in your original doing anything particularly wrong or being a problem (you or them), and I wouldn't hold on to any feelings of being pissed at them or thinking they're pissed at you. I'd see it more as a learning opportunity to think about how you work, how you make friends (and keep them), what connects you to others, what you like about other people, etc. Again, there'll be plenty of good advice around here on that.

EmeraldShamrock000 · 07/01/2026 11:38

They're not your people. Your post was very long. Try not to over think it, they weren't over friendly.
Better luck next time.

andthat · 07/01/2026 11:40

@pxseyocto you sound lovely, but struggling with your social skills and as many posters have pointed out, overthinking past interactions.

You clearly are likeable and can hold down friendships - as evidenced by your relationship with your school friends.

Maybe a smaller group is better for you as you get to know people - could you invite your friend plus one other to go and do something?

Practicing the art of small talk will help you too - all relationships start out superficially as you just don't know one another! Have a few things in your head that you can say when you meet with a group - for example, in the climbing scenario 'nice to meet you - i've never done this before, have you?! Have you got any top tips?!' Open questions lead to conversations

You don't say if your course is the kind where you can also work part time - that's also a route to friendships as working in close proximity gets you to know one another. I'm still very close friends with two people I met working part time in a pizza shop when at uni.

Sending you luck - try not to spend wasted energy on thinking about the past, use your time to focus on the here and now.

andthat · 07/01/2026 11:40

BriefEncountersOfTheThirdKind · 07/01/2026 11:35

OP has now

But people are referring to the original post

then they should read the thread before commenting

MichaelmasDaisiesAndAutumSunset · 07/01/2026 11:43

pxseyocto · 07/01/2026 11:16

Wow, that’s probably the most replies I’ve ever gotten. Thank you to everyone who took the time to read and help me out. I do admit I went into detail a lot, I’ve been told even by close friends that I’m bad at storytelling and getting to the point.

Anyway I saw a lot of similar questions so I’ll try to clear most things up.

I’m a guy, I’m 20 and this is second year actually. The so called handshakes weren’t actual formal handshakes, they were “dap-ups” but I thought I’d refer to them as handshakes to sound a bit more formal. So not shaking hands like grown men but dapping each other up is how a lot of us greet these days.

I admit it sounds like I’ve just started uni, but I already made some friends from last year and that friend I talked about was from the friend group we had last year.
We all met at freshers and I managed to click right in. I talked to all of them pretty easily and we went out plenty of times, made lots of memories and first year was generally good.
In that first year group I got closer with two other guys who I saw much more frequently than the rest.

I kind of lost that group now though. After first year ended most of us didn’t talk for the summer and drifted apart, some even left the group and two moved universities this year.

The guy I used to be closest with now rubs me the wrong way because he’s made some weird racist comments either in text or in person, like recently referring to me as the n word with a w because I’m white (he can’t say it either way?). I told him not to say that and he apologised, but a few days ago he did it again so it’s not looking great. I barely speak to him anymore since I gave it more thought and realised he’s a bit weird. Last year he even admitted to being racist himself over text, and I told him I couldn’t do with that but his excuse was “I’m sorry I know” and that “half of the people at uni are racist”.

The other now shares a flat with two other friends and I went over a few times to hang out in sept and oct this year, but I remember that in June he made a racist comment towards my girlfriend and I now feel like if I keep hanging out with him I’d be endorsing or tolerating it so I’ve largely stopped talking to him as well. My closer friends from before university said they wouldn’t care what someone else had to say about their gf and as I didn’t confront him there and then but rather I was unamused by his joke and said “bruh”. I could either bring it up now a few months later and ask for an apology or move past it unless he does it again.

So second year I’ve lost most of my uni friends as I’ve had to cut two close ones off feel free to call me out if I was wrong or judgemental on them but I have a guilty conscience if someone does something like racism and I still hang out with them. That’s why I compulsively cut some people off and are mostly by myself or that archery friend now.

The closest people I have are my secondary school friends who I still talk to daily and go out with every month or so, so outside uni I’m fine but I need to make uni friends so I’m not constantly by myself on campus too. There are people on my course that when I see I dap up and have a conversation with, but again they’re mostly acquaintances I don’t talk to outside of when I run into them on campus.

That’s mostly the context, a fallen apart first year friend group and me having to cut people off caused me to lose my uni group, and I’ve been unsuccessful in trying to click with new people.
I think second year’s a bit late for me to try making friends because most people are already in solid groups from first year. I could try reignite the old group again as I do text some of them here and there and they have expressed that they miss our fun times last year

This is nearly as boring as your first post! Learn to summarise.

Though it does baffle me that if you have this much to drone out on paper, why you can't talk to people? Also, while mumsnet is for everyone, it may not be the place to get your advice about social interactions with other 20 year olds. Just a thought.

Glitchymn1 · 07/01/2026 11:43

PollyBell · 07/01/2026 05:37

Ok so you read it, please advise then

Or move on to another thread if you can’t be bothered to read it.

OP you are a massive over thinker! Possibly slightly introverted perhaps? That’s what I get from it, I don’t think anyone did anything wrong at all. It’s hard to make new friends and even harder to break into established friendship groups. Just keep doing what you are doing, sounds like you enjoyed it in the end and all had a good time.

Grammarninja · 07/01/2026 11:43

When I meet new people, I'm always terrified and on the backfoot but I force myself to ask them questions, smile and laugh a lot and pay them compliments. It really works but it takes a lot of energy as I am naturally an introvert.
I have a very good friend who will sit in silence, with an unfriendly resting face (not deliberate), and I often feel a bit irritated that she's not making the effort to ingratiate herself into the new group. It means I have to really try to introduce topics of conversation that might get her involved and loosen her up.
Social skills are skills. They can be acquired through effort, practice and pushing yourself out of your comfort zone. They come more easily to some but everyone can hone them to some degree.

NewGirlInTown · 07/01/2026 11:49

Dear God. This can’t be real. You need to learn how to summarise, OP.

BunnyLake · 07/01/2026 11:50

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 😂

There’s really no need to write War & Peace when you’re writing an OP, unless every point is very serious and important on a legal or safety viewpoint.

Condense tomes please. 🤦‍♀️

I have actually read W&P cover to cover. I didn’t manage to finish OP’s post, I lost the will 🫣

Brightlittlecanary · 07/01/2026 11:55

op it seems you’re socially awkward and introverted, focused on your internal thoughts rather than social interactions. Yes I do think a large part of the problem was you, you seem to think people should have been going out their way to include you, not you going out your way to join in. That you just had to turn up. That’s not how it works.

try to relax and not over think stuff, looking for slights where there are none,

gamerchick · 07/01/2026 11:55

For Christ's sake get off the lads back. If people can't hold their attention long enough, then back out of the thread and go to another one.

MiddleChildX · 07/01/2026 11:57

FatBat68 · 07/01/2026 11:21

This! I'm shocked at the rudeness and lack of empathy in some responses. Not everyone is confident talking to strangers! These sound like uncomfortable meetings in which all but that last man made minimal effort to include the OP, and the 'friend' doesn't seem at all understanding. Frankly I'd ditch the lot of them, they're at least unfriendly and at most were excluding the OP. I would have found this upsetting too, if I'd elected to go to Uni (and these kind of situations were one of the reasons I didn't).

I'm 57 and have learned over the decades not to waste time on people if we don't 'click' fairly quickly; if conversation is stilted and awkward then I'm content to think that we're just on different wavelengths. Some here maybe need to remember that there is nothing wrong with being introverted - introverts have their own positive qualities, just as extroverts do. As MiddleChildX says, you will find your tribe, however long that takes. In the meantime, remember that there is nothing wrong with you!

I shouldn’t be surprised given how toxic MN can be. But yes! What is wrong with society that people think it’s okay to be so rude and derogatory to a young person who is clearly finding their way and wanting to navigate social situations.

ManyPigeons · 07/01/2026 11:59

Sounds like you’ve attached yourself to her friend group but just keep standing there like a lemon silently and she feels like she then has to look after you and the others feel weird that you’re this stranger who just smiles at them and hovers. You don’t gel with the group naturally and your friend is feeling put upon by you and embarrassed.

You’re expecting a load of strangers to put a lot of effort into talking to and including you when it seems like they didn’t really want you there in the first place. As the interloper it’s generally expected that you will start conversations and be sociable - not expect to be pandered to.

Pancakeflipper · 07/01/2026 12:01

In your update you say you think everyone has made friendship groups in their 1st year.
I found the opposite- it was the 2nd and 3rd years that really friendships started to form. The 1st year was about surviving together!

Oneborneverydecade · 07/01/2026 12:09

MichaelmasDaisiesAndAutumSunset · 07/01/2026 11:43

This is nearly as boring as your first post! Learn to summarise.

Though it does baffle me that if you have this much to drone out on paper, why you can't talk to people? Also, while mumsnet is for everyone, it may not be the place to get your advice about social interactions with other 20 year olds. Just a thought.

Agree. Have you thought of asking ChatGPT? Infinite patience unlike most of AIBU (myself included)

BriefEncountersOfTheThirdKind · 07/01/2026 12:11

andthat · 07/01/2026 11:40

then they should read the thread before commenting

But they commented before the update and then continued their conversation... they can't predict the future...

BriefEncountersOfTheThirdKind · 07/01/2026 12:12

gamerchick · 07/01/2026 11:55

For Christ's sake get off the lads back. If people can't hold their attention long enough, then back out of the thread and go to another one.

The fact he overanalyises and goes into too much detail may well be relevant to why he struggles to connect with people though

Glitchymn1 · 07/01/2026 12:13

Oneborneverydecade · 07/01/2026 12:09

Agree. Have you thought of asking ChatGPT? Infinite patience unlike most of AIBU (myself included)

Have you thought about skipping a post you find boring 😂 chat gpt is frying the universe for what is basically a set of algorithms. Though I agree it may be more helpful than some insights.

StolenCookie · 07/01/2026 12:18

Have you considered autism?

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