HACKER Q&A
📣 tenonyx

At a peak of my dev career, I hate my life


As I write this post, my neighbors from above, probably college students, are having a party of their lifetime, laughing, kicking and screaming. I'm not even mad at them, just full of envy.

The last time I had fun like this was in college. I was broke, renting a big flat with a bunch of roommates, but young, healthy, and full of enthusiasm (and booze). Finding friends in my teens and 20s was as easy as going out literally anywhere. When I eventually went to work, I thought my life would only get better. And I made a good career, but in the process, steadily drifted off into isolation.

These days I work either from home, or at best in a mostly empty office. I tried to meet new people at hobbies and dance lessons, but guess what - they're all full of lonely developers and other socially awkward people - short guys looking for girlfriends, unattractive/aging women looking for husbands, etc.

All the "normal" people I knew in the past are now changing diapers and working to pay off their mortgages, which I guess is a kind of consolation. Still, I'm only in my 30s, and it feels like my life is pretty much done. Doing things by myself is boring and depressing, and getting into a group of "normal" friends, of both genders, to hang out and laugh with, seems like an impossible goal.

In case someone has any advice beyond finding a hobby, going to therapy, approaching random strangers, it would be greatly appreciated. I don't have any skills other than coding, so quitting the career would be a major financial hit. On the other hand, I feel that finding a non-coding job would be ultimately the best way to find new social groups, and get out of the apathy


  👤 zanzibar735 Accepted Answer ✓
This is extremely common. In their 30s, people get married, have kids, and move to the suburbs. Finding and keeping friends in your 30s is quite a challenge.

Some tips:

- move to a city - things are much much easier in a city as people are more transient, groups aren't as established, and new people arrive all the time

- it sounds like you have some friends - ask them if they have any friends in your area you should meet platonically

- the easiest way to make friends is an activity: you mentioned a hobby, but it can be anything - a running group, the gym, board games, etc. The more non-nerdy, the more likely you are to find non-nerdy people

- if you're like me, you struggle to make friends because it's not "easy" like it was in college. Friends in your 30s take work: reaching out, texting, scheduling, planning, etc.

- it sounds like you're not in therapy. So let me be the first to tell you that you're depressed (that "apathy" you're feeling is depression). Which is fine, it happens us all. But go to therapy because that's how you solve that. Just try it for a month, no pressure.


👤 kinnth
I have often been told im good at making friends and I think you can make them anytime, anywhere, anyhow, the first thing to focus on is your personal mindset and build from there:

  1. Just say yes. When someone asks for anything, say yes, no matter how big or small (help them move out, look after their dog) This will put you into novel situations.
  2. Show genuine interest in things. Ask why, learn more, dig deeper, keep conversations going by trying to share anything you think is slightly relevant.
  3. Dress up. Wear things that stick out, even just a bit, a funky shirt, a nice bright pair of socks, use these to add flare to a standard dark blue and grey world, people will reflect back and be interested in you.
  4. Pick one new thing you want to master (not online) my advice here for all round great friend activities - Rockclimbing, Pub Quizes, Boardgame nights, Cycling, Pottery. Each of these almost always need another person to make them work and that helps you grow your confidence.
  5. Don't work so hard. Tell your boss you wanna slow it down, try and do 4 day weeks, give back some commitments, take a pay cut. Don't quit just slow it down and give your head some space.
I'm 35, I just quit my /Director of Product role at a successful startup because I wasn't happy. I'm about to go to Thailand to learn how to become a yoga teacher, not for a career but for a disciplined adventure that will deeply enrich me and is nowhere near a computer! You can do it! Put a plan in motion.

HN Believes in you! :D


👤 taylortrusty
I felt similar to you while living in Kentucky and turning 30. It felt like all my friends had moved onto the next phase of their life and I wasn't ready for that. I felt unmotivated and stuck, but also felt guilty because I had an income and a job that I felt I should be happy to have.

Moving to NYC completely changed my perspective and my life. Moving also had other impacts: it forced a change of scenery, forced me to make new friends, learn about new parks, learn all new neighborhoods to walk through with no prior memories, I felt inspired with new ideas for the first time in a long time, forced new hobbies and ways of spending time (hello volleyball! hello going to 5 networking events in one night!) and the process of introducing myself to new people over and over made me realize I didn't like what I was doing for work.

I'm not advocating for NYC specifically. I was in Austin last weekend and felt a similar draw there, so if I was 30 and in that stuck spot today that's probably where I'd go to start. There's an energy that dense cities have that forces change, in my experience.

Good luck to you! It can be a very rewarding journey.


👤 thrown
> short guys looking for girlfriends

> All the "normal" people

Lol thanks. I used to have self-confidence issues because I'm short. Spent a lot of time at university feeling sorry for myself, unable to make friends or see myself as worthy of a girlfriend.

Eventually realised that it's mostly in my head. I got over my self-esteem issues, went out and spoke to a stranger (ikr isn't that crazy?!) and he became my best friend. We travelled a bit and I met a whole bunch of girls who really liked me (at parties, on campus, etc). Life basically finds ways to disprove every dumb assumption you have, in my experience.

That was a couple years ago. Pandemic put my social life on pause.

I think the "go to dance lessons" advice is so dumb because it just means all the people who are at dance lessons are looking for something other than to learn to dance.

My advice is go to bar or a club and dance with strangers (where everybody is there to have fun and mingle). Go alone, YOLO. Also, if you don't live in a city, move to a city.

Go to a different country. You're probably rich lol you have nothing to worry about.

Good luck


👤 rexstjohn
The bad news is it sounds like you have absolutely nothing.

The good news is it sounds like you have absolutely nothing.

How I would love to move to Taiwan or Vietnam for six months making my current salary and work remote right now.

Or even one month.

Wouldn’t it be fun to go to Europe, take a train across the continent and work on a laptop.

Or an Airbnb in Barbados.

Who convinced you that you have to stay in this little box at a time when developer jobs are in unlimited supply?

Where did you learn that you have to constrain your options to your local environment only?

And I will tell you: The city and location do matter. You may not be crazy to conclude that only other people like yourself settle for a work / life balance like this in that city.

A small local demographic problem turns into a major existential problem for you. No one young and fun wants to live in a boring ass city, suburb or financial center bereft of culture.

Go to Nashville. Go to Colorado.

I have been very surprised visiting Chicago, for example, at how vibrant and different and friendly people were.

And visiting Austin. Wow, you can go to live music all night for $15 and walk around between bars and there is culture to experience.

Or in Taipei. Woah, people hang out in cafes reading books at 2am at all night bookstores.

If you feel like your life sucks and your environment sucks, it probably does.

Lot of people I know literally just book a ticket and stay in hostels around Japan or Asia or Europe. Cheap, meet people, work remote.

Biggest challenge is going to be your unwillingness to take even the smallest risk. That is on you.


👤 uxisnotui
Weigh the ROI of changing your environment vs changing yourself

A lot of people on HN are do-it-yourself, bootstrap types. So you'll naturally get "why don't you just do XYZ."

There's merit in that, but sometimes changing the environment is more effective. That environment may be literal physical location (closer to friends or activities you're interested in), a job environment (different industry) or, at a smaller scale, your home environment. I finally started updating my place and having friends over and it's made a huge difference.

On a personal note: a hard lesson I had to learn for myself is that having fun (as weird as it sounds) is my responsibility. I found that I tended to look "outwards" for stimulation, fun, validation...waiting for the world to give me things.

Hanging out with people who were great at cultivating their own fun & energy helped me realize 1) this is something I could cultivate and 2) I was shirking responsibility.

IMO this cultivation of one's own energy is a long, internal journey. But worth it.

Good luck mate.


👤 conductr
While perhaps a loaded suggestion, if you have the tolerance for it, I’d suggest attending a church. You can utilize the social aspect without fully committing to the spiritual aspects.

The reason I suggest it is because of it’s role as the post-college college where you can build deep relationships and people of all ages are genuinely wanting to network specifically to build a community. They’re not doing happy hours etc. to boost their social capital, they’re in it for the long haul. Also, building relationships with people of all ages is extremely important and rewarding/fulfilling.

I agree with moving to a city or trying to tap into more social stuff. But i also find those relationships to be quite shallow. You bounce around a lot from one shallow connection to another. Dinner once/twice a month with group A. A group to play a sport with on Saturday Afternoon. Another group to do X scheduled event with on cadence Y. For me, and my wife, we found ourselves in that pattern in our 30s. She had her friend circles/silos and I had mine and then we had the a third type of circle for us as a couple. It was nearly impossible for these to overlap. Why would her floral design hobby girls be interested in attending a heavy metal concert with some of my metal head friends.

We missed having deeper friendships. We always used the example of of how when we were younger and not even necessarily coupled at the time we both had friends that just popped in our houses. Never had to be planned or for any purpose. They were always welcomed and were just a constant in our lives. Going to church helped us build those types of friendships.

I’m not even spiritual and I avoid a lot of the overly churchy parts. I do agree with the high level value/moral systems being promoted and enjoy the sermon parts. I look for the speaker who delivers nearly secular messages. It can feel like a life lesson or motivational speech that’s based on teachings of whatever book they believe in.


👤 ceasesurthinko
Sounds like you're heavily projecting. This post is literally the definition of projection. Just read your post over again and realize how toxic and demeaning and unbearable you sound. Maybe look deeply into how much of an asshole your are, and then maybe that'll give you a clue why you hate your life.

But to give real advice to you in a less flippant manner, start embracing who you are. You're going to end up in your 40s fantasizing about living a stereotypical and neurotypical extrovert life like a frat boy and constantly hating and rejecting people who nerdy and geeky only to realize how much time you wasted trying to be someone you aren't. You have people to hang out with. You just reject them because you hate yourself, you have always had a thing against awkward and nerdy people, even though that's who you are.

Trust me, many people on the borderline of smart and cool during their highschool go through this phase. It's taking you till your 30s to learn this, but you will learn it soon. You will learn how superficial these labels are and how the only thing that matters is finding some people that care for you and that you care for them. You're literally self-hating by announcing your distaste for the stereotypical 'outcasts' of society. Because you would be in that group too.

I actually hope you get what you want, a nice friend group full of 'normal' non-autistic, non-awkward, non-short, non-old, outgoing, and non-ugly people. I hope you get that dream and anything else you want- because you will quickly realize that it's not the answer. ~stolen slightly changed quote from Jim Carrey.


👤 anon2020dot00
Instead of the usual advice of taking-up hobbies, I think what's more interesting to talk about:

1. What is the definition of fun?

  - I imagine for most introverts, a loud party and getting drunk is not our definition of fun.
2. Is there a causal relationship between a Dev Career and social isolation?

  - Most dev work is working in isolation and for introverts this is a blessing, but for extroverts this can be depressing. But is this true all the time? or is this just because of the pandemic? Is this true for all dev jobs or maybe it depends on the company? Is being a software developer and an extrovert inherently incompatible?
3. What makes a person attractive to hang-out with?

  - What makes other lonely developers unattractive to hang-out with? Is it because they're introverted? Other lonely developers are more likely to be intelligent, friendly, have financial resources, etc.. even if socially awkward.
4. What's the end goal?

  - Is it just to party together, have adventures and potentially meet attractive women? Or is it to build lasting relationships and meet a person to settle down with?
It's interesting to me because I usually find guys who want to party to be annoying and un-interesting but maybe that's just because I'm introverted and/or boring. I'd probably find other lonely developers to be much more interesting people than people that like to party.

👤 andrew_
I was in a similar rut 'round about 2013. I won't go into details, but sans a very small number of solid-as-granite people, my group of friends disintegrated for various reasons, including everyone I know getting married off, having kids, and being absorbed by one or the other.

I got off of my ass. I moved to a completely new geographic area. I sampled every aspect, every neighborhood of my target area, and I looked for the things that made the time prior so good. I found it, and I got to take a second spin through the best time of my single life. I met outstanding people, made lifelong friendships, partied like there was no tomorrow, met my wife, had my kids, kept my friendships, kept the best parts of partying, and found an incredible life. I liked who I was. I didn't like where I was, physically, spiritually, and metaphysically.

I'm in my 40s now. I just spent the day dressed up like a pirate catching beads, pounding beers, ripping shots of rum, laughing with friends, being absolutely ridiculous, and came back to a 3 year old telling me that she "loves me so much." Use your gifts to lift yourself out. They serve you, you don't serve them.

get. off. of. your. ass. in whatever way that is meaningful to you.


👤 bufferoverflow
Your problem is that you're putting yourself above "short guys looking for girlfriends, unattractive/aging women looking for husbands".

You're one of them.

Of course, nothing would stop you from making friends with the cool people, but you have to do something cool to meet them.

Also don't get caught in the mentality that drinking together is some sort of pinnacle of human fun. I would rather read a book or bicycle.


👤 jollofricepeas
I understand.

Take some time to do some true introspection and consider obtaining a therapist. What are you are living is a common human experience.

1. Your outlook seems quite negative and judgmental. Start there. Acceptance is key.

2. It’s hard to be at peace with others and find enjoyment in life if you’re not at peace with yourself. Do not judge yourself and your feelings but recognize that you will need to commit to change if you truly want it.

For me personally, my happiness is rooted in gratitude. Thankfulness that I’ve been born at the time I was born and inhabiting the space of loving, imperfect people who care for me. My life is much better than what my parents, grandparents and great-grandparents experienced. I am the culmination of their sacrifice and perseverance. I am their dreams come true. This is my North Star that strengthens me when I’m down and helps me remain empathetic and open to others. Be a good friend to others; and you will find they will be friendly to you.


👤 olebrown
I'm going to suggest a radical approach here that I haven't seen mentioned elsewhere. Sounds like you have enough self awareness to notice that you are living outside of traditional social norms. You're in your 30s, aging and not settling down to start a family and pay mortgages off with the other normies. You're an outsider.

You have 2 paths:

1. try to play catchup and fit into the norms that you have neglected and let bypass you. Sounds like you've already made an attempt here and are struggling. You know what it takes: self improvement, shared hobbies, therapy, talking to strangers, personal growth etc.

2. embrace that you are an outsider and lean into a degenerative life style. Really give up on fitting into the social norms. Embrace that you are a social degenerate and have fun with it. Start hanging in anti-social circles and engaging in risky non-normal behavior. Get a motorcycle, join a biker gang. Start frequenting punk rock bars and meet other outsiders. Pick up a casual drug habit and socialize through shared usage. Blow all your engineering salary on strip clubs and sex worker experiences. Is this "normal", no. Will you have more fun ? yes.


👤 sometimeshuman
The description of your college days implies that you are not incompetent socially. That's encouraging! Tell yourself this social drought will pass and just bare it a little longer until the Covid situation stabilizes.

In another comment you mentioned digital nomad plans. I'm planning that too. My strategy is to stay in a 20+ room co-working hotel that requires a 1 month minimum stay and then hopefully forming a bond with a few people. Then perhaps traveling with them to the next city. With a few friends it becomes much easier to make the first move with a woman you find attractive since dates are just inviting her to hang out with your pals. Just having friends makes you more attractive to women too, but I think you know this. I live in a desirable coastal city so hopefully encouraging her to move might possible if I find the right person, or heck I can move. It sounds like you live in an interesting city too but even if neither of you can move and it ends, you'll at least break your losing streak.

That's the hope anyway. The fact that you are thinking about and have some ideas is again encouraging. I think you'll be fine.

Lastly it may get psychologically easier as you get older. IME a few high quality half/full day interactions a year are enough for me to stay happy. But unfortunately it is not a strategy for forming a romantic relationship.


👤 manquer
I and I suspect not an insignificant number here would identify with you if that's any consolation .

It always feels grass is greener on the side. All the people paying mortgages and changing diapers also think have they made wrong choices and is their current life making them happy .

Becoming happy in one's life is an internal journey it has little do with it social life /career /family/wealth we have or don't.

Religion /cults / self improvement /therapy (some types) are all businesses that that thrive on selling their flavour solution to the problem. Maybe they even work for some.

It is hard to say what works best for anyone.

I find learning new tech/writing more code I want to write rather than what someone pays me to do helps.

Sometimes even spending weekends cleaning up/refactoring even code from work makes my work week feel way better and less stressed.


👤 SquibblesRedux
Some ideas that may or may not pan out:

- Get a pet.

- Volunteer for a non-profit organization.

- Go to church.

- Visit and talk frequently with family members.

- Join an online dating service.

- Talk with or visit your neighbors as frequently as feasible.

- Every time you go out shopping, make a point of engaging in light conversation with people who work where you shop.

- Take music lessons at a music store. Make a point of engaging in light conversation with anyone you see there.

- Take night courses at a college. Any subject. Make a point of engaging in light conversation with anyone in your classes. Suggest that you study together.

What you need are random collisions with other people. More random collisions means a higher probability of meeting someone you get along well with.


👤 wanderingmind
WTF is wrong with short men and unattractive women, are they not humans with emotions who can make friends? In my experience these regular folks are the ones with whom you can have strong friendships that are not just skin deep.

Maybe your attitude of treating unattractive people as beneath you needs to be fixed before you can find meaningful relationships.


👤 anon_d
People are telling you that you are too judgmental. People are telling you that you need to accept your situation. People are telling you to move to a huge city.

Instead, you need to be MORE judgmental. You need to reject your situation EVEN HARDER. Definitely DO NOT move to a huge city (unless you have people there).

Your problem is that, up until now, you have been following money and interests, and expecting that the belonging issue to sort itself out.

This is a foundational mistake, it's completely backwards. You need to belong FIRST. Your interests should stem from the needs of the people that you love, your tribe. Your work/employment should stem from the needs of those people, and your role in what they are working towards. The other way around does not work.

Basically, you are alone because you were misled into prioritizing the wrong things. Turning that around will involve a lot of pain and sacrifice.

Find the people that you actually love, love being around, and love being connected to. Find them online. Find them through extended family. Find them through old friends. Go travel, and reconnect with your own people.

These people exist! There is no reason to settle for less. Stop what you are doing now, and orient your whole life around this. Once you find it, go find more people like yourself and pull them into the group. So many people like you are trapped in this same situation, and they need your help.


👤 aogaili
Welcome to..real life?

Broken communities and meaningless jobs, surely add to the underlying absurdism of life, but life is fundamentally absurd and lonely, and you are coming to this realization.

Your college experience is a short dose of hedonistic pleasures. The young and attractive bunch you were drinking with are either changing diapers or the unattractive folks you are refusing to dance with.

Accept it, turn inward and get more spiritual and less judgmental. I'd also suggest joining a community but I think you need to get spiritual growth first because you will also judge those communities harshly and get isolated. Dancing community? you'll think old and desperate, cross-fit? shallow and stupid, family? changing diapers, meditation/yoga? weirdos,

Well, all those folks are trying to find a temporary break out of the absurd just like you.


👤 andrewzah
"I tried to meet new people at hobbies and dance lessons, but guess what - they're all full of lonely developers and other socially awkward people - short guys looking for girlfriends, unattractive/aging women looking for husbands, etc."

Gee, I'm just shocked that you're having a difficult time making friends. Who wouldn't want to be friends with judgemental folks?

There isn't anything to mention that you don't know already. There is no quick fix. Find a hobby like sports or music etc and meet people through that, or do other sorts of meetups. But the problem here is your attitude, not the people. Don't take your frustrations out on other people, it's not cool.


👤 rr808
> Still, I'm only in my 30s, and it feels like my life is pretty much done. Doing things by myself is boring and depressing, and getting into a group of "normal" friends, of both genders, to hang out and laugh with, seems like an impossible goal.

Wait 'til your forties, its like this except you're fatter, uglier and no one wants to hire you any more.


👤 rileyphone
Honestly, I recommend psychedelics - no other “simple fix” will be as effective in helping you spin the thread of your life. I mean, get out there and try new things, but coming to this realization through your own impetus on a trip will be much more effective than comments here your brain will inevitably dismiss in a second. Just a thought!

👤 omgitsabird
> short guys looking for girlfriends, unattractive/aging women looking for husbands

These sound like buckets you created to fulfill your own subjective stereotypes.

> Doing things by myself is boring and depressing, and getting into a group of "normal" friends, of both genders, to hang out and laugh with, seems like an impossible goal.

This is a harsh thing to say, but maybe its you. You disparage people who are looking for the same thing in the previous paragraph.

> I feel that finding a non-coding job would be ultimately the best way to find new social groups

As someone who has worked many non-coding jobs, I can assure you that it is not.


👤 7thaccount
Remember that everyone is going through something and that the grass is always greener on the other side.

I love my wife and kid and am pretty much never lonely, but haven't had the time to do much of anything in ages. Before having kids, we would go out to dinner, read a book at a coffee shop...etc. Now I just work and parent and occasionally have a few hours a week for recreation.

This isn't to belittle your experience (I hope you're able to find what you're looking for), but to let you know that we're all there with you in spirit in case you find that slightly uplifting.


👤 ggm
Aside from other recommendations here, think about volunteering in some hands on area like a street kitchen, or outreach to homeless people. Firstly because you will gain from the physical activity and a degree of unquestioned gratitude for small acts.

Secondly because contact either with or for people at the end of their rope in stronger sense of risk due to poverty will put your own concerns into focus. Not that you aren't unhappy, but that your unhappiness has relativity to other people's problems.

Thirdly because you'll be meeting interesting people of all kinds.

Fourthly because they need the help. So even if you don't secure the benefits I propose, at least they will, despite your unhappiness.

It's wrong to diagnose online, and I'm not an MD but your comments could suggest one of the anxiety-depression spectrum of problems which are treatable, and non drug regimes like CBT are surprisingly effective. Be the best kindest person you can be and you may find this alienation and dissatisfaction eases. Seek professional help.

Btw this kind of volunteer work is hard. Dirty. Confronting and may make you feel worse. Nothing is perfect.


👤 krater23
Sounds not like thats all your problem because you have a coding-job. Sounds like you have a coding job like that other things are things that was ever there and lead to a coding job.

Now, you are in your 30s and feal that you want to be normal. fuck it, never happens, you are one of this socially awkward people, short, unattractive looking for a partner and friends, but because you don't want to be one of they, they are not good enough for you. ....oh, don't see that as a bad comment. I'm one of this people too.

The thing is, I have friends from this people, and I have 'normal' friends. But when it goes about having fun, your normal people are absolutely boring. HAve fun with the other ones. Have a lot of booze and talk crazy funny shit that normal people would never understand. Don't try to beo one of this normal people, they hate there life exactly like you hate yours. That's normal in the 30s. They have just other problems. No time because kids, work, pay their house, cant pay their heating....etc

And when all this not works, just quit your coding job and open a pub, thats my plan b.


👤 moneywoes
I hate to be that guy but you might be viewing those previous college days with rose tinted glasses. However, I do see where you're coming from. For some such as myself, those days were spent working menial jobs for minimum wage to afford abhortently expensive international student tuition. While that sounds bleak, and yes working 30 hours while studying full time was, those coworker relationships ( besides the ex haha) at those part time jobs turned out to be very fulfilling. After managing to find a full time dev job I found things a lot more dull especially since most of my post work time is spent trying to reach find a better full time job as you have already. My suggestion would be to find a part time retail job, the shared struggle with other employees will be hugely beneficial to making connections. If you have questions feel free to shoot me an email.

👤 knut5
Walk over there and introduce yourself.

Bring some beers -- don't over think it. If you need a joke to break the ice here ya go:

`why do mermaids wear seashells on their breasts?

it's because the A and B "shells" are too small!"

Get over there!! Don't let Sour Grapes define you! https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Fox_and_the_Grapes


👤 alzaeem
Best of luck to OP, and there are some solid suggestions in this thread!

Just wanted to add that the wholesale adoption and normalization of WFH and remote culture in tech is worrying and will only make this type of issue worse and more common. Personally, I had consistently been able to make good friendships at work across several positions at different companies/cities/countries. That's until WFH and remote work hit, where now I rarely see coworkers in person (if at all), and often people are not in the same city. We feel more like automatons these days.

Tech work seems no longer a reliable vector for creating meaningful friendships or a social life outside of work. Like OP, many of us will have to learn to meet people outside of work.


👤 A4ET8a8uTh0
Take my post with a grain of salt. It is hard to give any real advice without knowing the full picture. You do know your situation though.

I don't remember the exact quote, but Pratchett suggested ( if you are willing to listen to strangers on the net ), and I happen to agree, that focusing on looks is a fools errand. Looks fade. Kisses get less enticing. Cooking skills only get better.

I remember my 20s and 30s through a haze of various mistakes. Eventually, I decided enough is enough and opted for 'boring' and 'normal', because, as it turns out, I am pretty boring. Is it possible that you simply did not reach your limit when it comes to hedonistic endeavors?


👤 formvoltron
Take all that money, quit, go to Europe, buy a camper, learn how to surf, settle down with a lovely french girl who also likes surfing.

👤 Animats
First, get through the coronavirus epidemic. We're barely past the peak of omicron. It's starting to look like that will be over in the US in March.[1] Then more stuff will resume full operation. Clubs, live theater, gyms, martial arts, universities.

Personally, I've had horses for most of my adult life, and I've met many people that way. I know more horse people than technical people.

[1] https://ig.ft.com/coronavirus-chart


👤 jimkleiber
> In case someone has any advice beyond finding a hobby, going to therapy, approaching random strangers, it would be greatly appreciated. I don't have any skills other than coding...

I have lots of things I'd like to say and yet the one that jumps out to me the most:

If you don't think you have any skills other than coding, what's one skill other than coding that you'd like to learn?

I ask because I've found that sometimes it has been the easiest for me to meet people in learning environments, maybe for similar dynamics to college. A place where I feel uncertain yet curious to learn more, and often encounter others who are feeling similarly or have learned and are somewhat eager to teach people who want to learn.

This may be similar to "get a hobby" advice, yet I think it differs enough in that it's more about finding a specific skill you are interested in learning. The challenge with some hobbies is that many people who are there may already be very skilled in it and may not want to deal with people who are beginners. That's what I like about learning environments, many often appreciate and welcome learners.

And, I'd guess that an environment with an assumption of curiosity could lead to interpersonal curiosity as well.

I used to teach salsa lessons and I found that a lot of people came to salsa because they wanted to meet others—not necessarily because they wanted to learn salsa—and it would show. As a teacher, I'm not so interested in teaching someone who wants doesn't really want to learn, just wants to use the class to meet others. Conversely, if someone really wants to learn, I'm excited to teach them, and they seem to have more in common with the others who really want to learn.

Not sure if this will help you, I'd love to chat with you more about it here or at the email in my bio, because in helping you figure this out, maybe it'll help me and/or help me help others. If not, that's OK, too. I think you reaching out and asking for help is a huge step, having the courage to open up and show us a little more of what you're struggling with—I believe so much loneliness comes from closing ourselves off from others. So I'm grateful that you asked for this...thank you!


👤 rayiner
> Still, I'm only in my 30s, and it feels like my life is pretty much done.

The problem may be your mental model of what “life” is. Imagine you were born, like much of the world, in a village in a third world country. Would your conception of life and what it means be conducive to your personal happiness?


👤 brightball
I don’t know if this answer will appeal to you or not but…consider visiting a local church, especially one that has an adult Sunday school class. There’s usually a lot of nice people, active singles classes with activities, opportunities to give back and volunteer, meet other people and learn.

I know people respond with various degrees of emotion to a suggestion like that, but in my experience it’s usually the place where you discover why it feels like there’s an empty hole in your life and what it takes to fill it.

- A random guy on the internet


👤 maximumrose
Hey man, I admire your willingness to ask for help here, that takes courage.

I hear you on the difficulty of isolation and feeling disconnected, it’s tough. You’re definitely not alone there, I know lots of guys in the same boat.

I’ve been where you are. I’m also an engineer in my 30s. I’ve been frustrated, apathetic, and lonely too. But most days I don’t feel like that anymore. I turned it around for myself, I know you can too. You can definitely get reenergized and get back to the fun and connected life you had in college. It’ll take some work, but from your post my impression is that you’re pretty good at learning new skills.

A lot of people have made great suggestions on how to meet people. Save those for a month from now. The key thing in my experience is getting your energy up. If you’re low energy when you meet someone new, neither of you is going to have much fun and it won’t lead anywhere.

Here’s how to get your energy up:

1. Exercise every day - if you’ve forgotten where to start, walk/run a mile and do 25 pushups. Adjust based on your current fitness level. Keep it simple. 2. Drink 64oz of water every day. No, really, this is important. 3. Get outside first thing in the morning for 10 minutes to get natural light - this can be when you get your exercise or it can just be to sit and drink a cup of coffee.

That’s it. Start with those three. You got this - friends, fun, connection and a fulfilling life are closer than you think.


👤 itg
“I tried to meet new people at hobbies and dance lessons, but guess what - they're all full of lonely developers and other socially awkward people - short guys looking for girlfriends, unattractive/aging women looking for husbands, etc.“

I wonder why you have trouble making friends.


👤 the_gipsy
Either have kids to prevent having time to think, or just accept that life is meaningless.

Remember that happiness is relative to your last phase, there is no such thing as "peak".


👤 johnnyApplePRNG
I've made more friends in my 30s than I have in any decade prior, surprisingly.

How? Through Yoga.

Making friends was not my goal whatsoever. Just started practising daily a few years ago because it spoke to me.

Found a good studio (one that teaches real yoga and not just aerobics) and started helping out there for free (in exchange for unlimited classes). I met a lot of the teachers and managers that way.

After about a year or so you start to recognize a lot of faces... and it turns out that a lot of people who regularly go to yoga classes (where they constantly talk about being kind to yourself, others, and the planet) are incredible people.

I have met some real assholes too, don't get me wrong. You just disregard them and carry on.

I am sure this is possible with anything that's open to the public and encourages daily participation, like religion or fitness centers, etc.

However, I spent years attending a fitness gym prior to this and never met a single decent human being I would want to spend time with. Most of the "friends" I used to go to the gym with I don't even talk to anymore.

Yoga classes around me have been canceled/in lockdown for the past few months, but I still talk to my yoga buddies and go for walks with them almost every single day.

It's great! I encourage you to give it a shot!


👤 RomanPushkin
The easy fix (IMO) is to go to Ukraine (easiest for US citizens), work from this location for a bit, and start attending parties/events/etc, and start talking to strangers on the streets. You'll be surprised how many male/female friends you can make in one week, and how much is going on. People are extremely friendly to English-speaking folks. I'd recommend Kiev, but I imagine Lviv is the greatest place as well.

👤 yes_really
> I tried to meet new people at hobbies and dance lessons, but guess what - they're all full of lonely developers and other socially awkward people - short guys looking for girlfriends, unattractive/aging women looking for husbands, etc.

So what? Lonely developers can't be good friends? Short guys looking for girlfriends can't be good friends?

Sounds like they would solve your loneliness problem but you are too judgemental to accept them


👤 sureok9000
You sound kinda judgy, throwing words like "normal" around and giving the shaft to nerdy types. Maybe you're having a hard time finding friends because you're so fucking anti.

People are not the labels you assign to them. You can have common interests and form friendships based on that while being from entirely different walks of life.

If you only want to be around someone else who is exactly like you, what the fuck is the point?


👤 Terry_Roll
Always have an exit plan, what I mean by this, is make sure you have the means to walk away from bad situations.

I see this alot where people get stuck in a rut and then it becomes unpleasant for everyone, it could be people stuck in a marriage/relationship who stay together for any number of reasons include for the sake of the kids, in a job you dont want to do anymore, or in a location you dont want to be anymore.

Maybe go travelling, if you can work from home, whats stopping you from travelling and working at the same time provided the net access is good enough where ever you go? You only need 56K for VoIP, 2/3times that for AV comms, and mobile telecoms internet is getting better all the time.

It seems like only yesterday, I was skyping someone for an hour from a boat over the 3G network when that telecoms std appeared.

Job flexibility is key though and I'm aware many people dont have that, but if you do have that flexibility or you can create that flexibility like setting up your own business then go for it, the technology is only going to get better and cheaper making this more of a reality for people in more and more places around the world.


👤 jaw
At several points in my life I've been so discontent that I felt I had no choice but to try something that felt (at least to me at the time) drastic and risky. This has included:

- pursuing romantic interests that I knew could get complicated

- reaching out for emotional support in ways that made me feel embarrassed and vulnerable

- confessing suicidal thoughts to my doctor

- quitting my job and taking >1 year off work

- moving across the country with no job lined up and no long-term plan

I've never regretted any such decision; I think it's always had a major positive impact on my life. Because when I'm trapped in my routine the world can start to feel very small. To shatter that illusion and remind myself how wide the possibilities in life really are, it's often necessary to behave in some way that violates inhibitions I normally have.

So... taking a break from coding could be a great idea, especially if you can build up some savings first. It doesn't have to be forever (I took ~15 months off then got another software job). You don't have to plan the rest of your life - find a direction that looks promising for the next year or two, and adjust course again as needed after that.


👤 MichaelRazum
Honestly I can very understand the situation. To be honest I don't have a solution for you. But let me comment on some points:

- Is travel really the solution? I mean isn't it not just walking away from you problems. Yeah I know myself some really great guys who went to Thailand or Philippines and had much more success with women there. One found his wife. Anyway that might be the solution.

- Regarding the age. According to a well known formula you can date people 1/2(your age) + 7. So it is nothing that special dating someone in their 20s if you are in your 30s.

- Regarding dance: Maybe you went to the wrong places. What you describe is not always the case.

- Regarding the Job: I once did had a very very exciting job with a lot of coding involved. Everyone was working a lot here. Changing the job kind of helped (low stress, nice people). It's much more about your team then the actual tasks in my opinion. Also jobs with a lot of meetings in big companies might be the hell for some of us, but might be a blessing for others since you often have to communicate much more.

If you found a solution. Please let me know ; )


👤 throwaway300122
I don’t know why many people here seem to assume that finding a significant other will solve your happiness/loneliness problems.

I met a girl some years ago we are now married and even though the first year was great it has all started going downhill from there. I am now at a point where I hate my life, and as OP even though I’m making more money than I ever dreamed I am still miserable and still remember my broke college years as the best of my life.

Now I’m thinking about how to get a divorce without hurting my partner that much. It’s awful and I feel terrible for her. But I think it’s for the better as I definitely won’t stand 40+ years like this, I’m also in my thirties. Marriage is definitely a bad deal for men (and great for women). I can’t understand/believe how many men are able to marry twice. For me it’s enough to make a huge mistake once to learn from it and never do it again.

I guess in the end I’d say be careful what you wish for I’d trade places with you right away.


👤 corndoge
You have money and no commitments. You can work remote. These are insane assets to have. Few have any of these. Virtually no one your age has all of them. Take these as your basis to do something you are uniquely advantaged to do, that interests you. Others suggested traveling, that's a great idea. Also, don't be afraid to spend your money. What are you saving it for? A lonely retirement? You won't be young and able bodied forever.

I might suggest a niche outdoor hobby. Dangerous hobbies in particular, like hang gliding or something. I've found a decent friend group tied by a strong shared interest this way. We plan trips to go do this hobby. Because it is dangerous there is a level of mutual trust and respect. As someone without a significant other or children you are well positioned to tak up such a hobby that most others could not afford or tolerate the risk for. There is adventure if you go look for it.


👤 hashin
Politics.

It may sound a bit of place in a forum like HN, but I have a point to make here. What you feel is a fairly common phenomenon and I know a ton of people who aren't happy at this setting. I would like to suggest joining a political grouping and study the in-group dynamics.

From the background you have stated, it is highly unlikely that you have joined a political movement or seen its inner workings at any point in time. You don't have to be a politician, but you can join the team of one. You can make yourself a lot useful. You wouldn't realise the huge value a website or a robust analytics infrastructure for a local/provincial level politician. Or your could collaborate in strategy, outreach, electioneering etc.

The best thing about a political movement is that it derives people from various background, age groups, ethnicities (I know that this is not true for many political groupings, but you could choose based on your taste) and experiences. They are generally very much driven and at least care for a cause. Once you bond, you'll see that the in-group dynamics and response to questions like general ethics, economics etc shifts from the advertised positions. This shift in dynamics is what makes you politically aware and literate. It is a great liberating experience. In movements that are around for long, you'll see yourself interacting with a lot of people as if you have known them for years - sometimes like family members. This is a great way to connect with people from different classes, backgrounds and develop the kind of empathy that will help us appreciate ourselves better.

I realise that the socio-political situation in different nations are different. But if you can do this, this will definitely light up the mood. It is also a great contribution to society - but you don't have to look at it that way. Political activity is a great addition to our lives, as many people across the generations have found out. Do give it a try.


👤 tasha0663
> short guys looking for girlfriends, unattractive/aging women looking for husbands, etc.

Heed well the wisdom of one Benjamin Franklin:

https://founders.archives.gov/documents/Franklin/01-03-02-00...

in the dark all Cats are grey


👤 andrewshatnyy
Mate, switch countries. I assume you're in the US - But honestly doesn't matter.

Move to non-western countries where friendship and relationship are valued more than wealth.

I did that whenever I had a burnout. And it wasn't easy for a Russian kid.

But moving will expose you to struggle, which life is all about. Embrace it stay open and you will find friends.


👤 baremetal
I left coding. "Retired" at 29. goofed off until covid hit (age 33). Was very apathetic, developed some nasty self destructive habits.. covid kinda woke up me up. Moved to a rural area. Bought a 20 acre farm. Got a entry level job as a carpenter. Within a year i had hired the master carpenter i was working with (after our boss was in a motorcycle accident and closed his business). Just got our first house (custom home, 3600sf) to build two weeks ago. Im making $500-600 a day now.

im happy, way more happy. still a bit hard to make friends (slow process). currently trying to find a (young, traditional) wife. my health improved greatly (strong as an ox now, where before i was spindly and underdeveloped), and im not depressed or apathetic at all. i leap out of bed! eager to go to work. and the sense of accomplishment at the end of the day is unparalleled.


👤 tinyhouse
Making friends is getting tricky and here's why I think. Where most people good friends are from? school, college, work, and the like. What's common to these? You get to spend a lot of time together with the same people which creates bonding. That's the key I think. Later in life it's just much harder to spend a lot of time together, and now with remote work it's worse. You kind of need to work hard and once you find people you like, keep trying to meet them and doing stuff together. In the beginning it'd be meeting for coffee or playing tennis together. Then if things go well it can become something that creates more bonding, like traveling together for the weekend. Keep in mind that it takes two to tango. Sometimes you'll try hard and initiate but the other side won't make the effort. Move on.

👤 orange8
> lonely developers and other socially awkward people - short guys looking for girlfriends, unattractive/aging women looking for husbands, etc. All the "normal" people I knew...

I never knew short guys and unattractive/aging women are not normal people. Is life a hollywood movie?


👤 legerdemain
Get a cat. Its cuteness helps take your mind off things, and it's easier to keep a cat secret if your landlord doesn't welcome pets.

👤 oxplot
Think about your situation as if it was a minor foot injury. First thing is to alleviate the pain so you can think clearly without rushing.

Have a great meal, eat an ice cream, go for a run in the park, get a massage, pedicure, have a cold shower, do all above and keep doing it regularly.

With that under control, increase your exposure to stuff and people. Attend meetups. Sign up for 10 different friend/dating site and put up profiles. Do volunteering work. Take some random day classes. The point is not to pick the right stuff, but to come in contact with more people. Maybe one of them out of 100 is someone you take liking to and that opens you up to their circle of friends.

It’s all a game of numbers.

Best of luck.


👤 mettamage
Make friendships with groups. I lucked into it, since I am not great at doing it myself. But I've seen people do it (other friends of mine in the group).

Every 3 months we rent a house and chill with each other in the weekend, give each other workshops, talk about life, drink amazing wines and cook our best dishes.

Doing this is different than being friends individually with them, which I also am. To me, it feels I am much more supported.

I share your sentiment with what type of people you want to meet. In my case, I've been lucky to have studied a business program (that I dropped out of) and meet my friends there, that still are my friends to this day. From there the friendship group grew. It means that I am the geekiest of the 5, and they tolerate that since I focus on being curious, adventurous, playful, creative, a little crazy and fanciful with them. I position myself a bit as a curious bon vivant that happens to have a geeky side. It's not that I don't have those traits, but I do emphasize them more than I otherwise would. And honestly, I like it. Pulling out the adventurous side in me is exactly what gives life a little fun, you know? I mean, from a rational point of view I find it utter nonsense because all I care about is truth and advancing it. Science is wonderful, it is an amazing tool to know that something is true, false or has some probability value to be true or false. But from an emotional point of view, adventure baby!

So if you have friends that are relatively tight with each other and you are as well. Make a conscious effort to become a group. Get an AirBnB, get an activity list and do a weekend getaway together.

What also helps me is my girlfriend. Her view on the world brightens my life, even when I feel utter shit because my career is going nowhere (as a programmer), or even when I feel lonely. She takes a lot of the loneliness away to be honest.

With that said, I feel a similar sentiment to some extent to what you say. In that sense, I am not the perfect rolemodel, not by a long shot. But the two things I wrote above (consciously formed friendship groups + consciously formed friendship culture, my girlfriend), they help me feel that life is worthwhile.


👤 gafferongames
Sounds to me like you may be depressed. If you are depressed, I recommend against traveling without getting that looked at first. When you are depressed, no matter where you go, there you are. Travel won't help.

There's no shame in this, I had undiagnosed anxiety/depression for 20+ years. I had no idea what it was, or why I felt that way until it was treated and it went away completely.

Seek professional help. CBT (talk therapy) is good. Drugs + CBT are even better. If you find an SSRI that works + some CBT, it's life changing stuff right there.

Without this, you are fighting with one hand tied behind your back. Fix this first.


👤 leashless
Burn out. Or maybe some kind of clinical depression.

1) covid's almost over, and that'll help

2) Burning Man? I'm semi-serious here.

3) After 10 years away from writing code, I took a full stack contract to do something esoteric and difficult, without a tight deadline. It took me nearly three months to recover 100% of my coding capability, and after the contract ended, nearly three months to recover my social skills.

It's a very very hard job. To be better than the technical problem is much, much harder than being better than (say) competing bankers or lawyers. The opponents are not human when you write code. They're harder to defeat.


👤 austhrow743
What happened to all those friends you used to have? Look them up, if any are nearby hit them up and see if they want to catch up.

Regarding going the hobby path. Dude, sports. Yes things like dance are going to have an abundance of weirdo singles trying to mix with the opposite sex in a planned environment. Join a pub league rugby team or something. I guarantee there would be people at that party above you who met through sports.

Also, you are still allowed to have housemates as a professional in his 30s. I'd be looking at that well before something as drastic as a career change.


👤 gfodor
Read Starting Strength and start lifting with that program.

Cut out all the junk you eat, start eating heathy. Stop drinking or smoking if you do that.

Make sure you get at least 8 hours of sleep.

Read the Almanac of Naval Ravikant, specifically the parts about wealth and happiness.

At least once a week, take a walk outdoors.

Avoid therapy until you have taken the above simple steps to try to remedy your situation, which isn’t that you are lacking friends but that you have envy and a feeling that you are lacking something fundamental in your own life.

Friends don’t create happiness, happiness can create friends though.


👤 WalterBright
> dance lessons

It's true that many sign up for those lessons looking to meet people, and have no particular interest in dancing. The trick, though, is to persist until you get good at it. Your attractiveness to the other dancers will go up as you get better, and so will opportunities.

Besides, even if it doesn't work out for you, the skills you'll learn in posture, elegance, etc., will pay off for you in other activities. A woman likes a man who knows how to make her look good.


👤 twayt
Hey OP imagine the people you would like to be friends with. Why would they want to be friends with a lonely nerd who judges other people with no selfawareness?

Become the person who can add value to the people you want to be friends with. Without specifics it’s hard to give actionable advice on this.

At general social meetups you’re going to find similarly lonely and lost people with nothing in common. They also very likely have a negative mindset. So skip those and go directly to the events of people you want to be friends with.


👤 bjowen
Others have said it already - it’s harder in your thirties, your existing friends have children or move for work, everyone’s busy.

A couple of things I’d add - there are things like night classes in trades that can super fun as a skill to learn and teamwork helps you meet people well out of your regular circle. I recently did metalwork as a short course and it was great on both fronts. Make it something you’re curious about learning so you’re engaged.

Meet your neighbours. In my neighbourhood it’s easiest if you have a dog to walk, but I met mine by painting my front fence over a sunny weekend and just saying hello to the passers-by. Now we have a group chat and have drinks on public holidays and generally look out for each other. Knowing the people who live around you is really beneficial on lots of fronts.

Find a Discord server of a podcaster / streamer / YouTuber that you like, one that has local meetups. Existing communities like that are usually pretty welcoming and easy to make conversation in.

Not my thing, but I’ve heard that martial arts clubs can be good places to find community, similar to the CrossFit suggestion, but they’re organised around teaching and keeping people on a learning pathway. I do know people who’ve met through a taiko (drumming) dojo.. it takes all types. Find a thing that you want to keep coming back to. Best of luck!


👤 jmce
Hey bub, I think part of the challenge here is you have some hangups and prejudices about “normal” that are not serving you. Your narrative dismisses categories of human beings, as beneath you or not worth considering as people to connect with in a meaningful way. You also dismiss therapy but getting an outside point of view could help you examine some of these assumptions about who you are and who others are. It sounds like those are barriers to the connection you seek.

👤 surfsvammel
I’m in the exact same situation. I’ve been working with therapists (it took a couple to find the right one), and it’s been great!

I now consider it a super-power, and a luxury—to have someone totally external to my normal life, that I talk to regularly, who understand me, and who is paid to help me. It’s the only relation in my life where the dialog is 100% about me, and my well being, where I don’t have to have any considerations for anything, or anyone else, else at that time.

Highly recommend it!


👤 eternityforest
I never bothered with the "normal" friends, they all seem like they bond over common interests like everyone else, and... I'm not actually that interested in clubbing and restaurants(The big things where I was).

Before the pandemic I was super into renfairs and live action roleplay and met a lot of my best friends through that.

I also have a few friends I know from various places I've worked, but... not many in traditional software development.

I really think that software development got "too easy" for them, and now all the fun logic challenges are in super abstract stuff and constant fussing, and that somehow leads devs down a hole of isolation.

Random Code blogs basically tell you to constantly rewrite and refactor and perfect and to always be trying new code katas.

The whole culture revolves around tinkering with random small toy projects. Which is extremely isolating because.... nobody cares all that much. Anyone who would care has their own random toy projects.

It's hard to make friends when you are encouraged to spend your free time on things that, almost by design, nobody else will care about.

Programmers seem to hate software. It's always bloat this, insecurity that, all day. That's also isolating, when the whole industry feels so negative about their own work.

Some of it is legitimately crap, but I feel like even some of the people doing amazing world changing stuff probably enjoy playing with Vim plugins more than their job.

Nobody wants to be social when they feel like shit, or be around other people who visibly are depressed.

Not that that's how I think it should be, of course, but it seems to be true.

It seems like there is a cloud of darkness over software culture, and the whole "nerd scene" in general gets sucked into it.

Something is also wrong with video games too but I'm not sure what. They are no longer ultra exciting. Nobody camps out in line for a Wii. LAN parties are mostly gone.

Something happened to the tech industry and everything "Nerd related".

Maybe it's just because I've only ever worked tech and it's like this everywhere... but software seems uniquely isolating.


👤 cbreynoldson
I know a number of people outside of software engineering/tech that are going through this. Since COVID, many people have learned (the hard way) that community is important.

Try meetups (even meetup.com). It only takes one person you meet to stick and become a friend, and that's 1000x better than where you started. Keep doing it, go to random meetups and things where there will be other people open to making friends. You don't need to actually be interested in whatever the activity is (though many meetups are at bars), it's just an excuse to meet people, just like college was.

Try standup comedy clubs/shows (the small ones). These people are usually friendly, and people usually stick around to chat afterwards. You can meet people easily this way.

Eventually you or someone you meet will ask to do another activity together (maybe food, maybe golfing, who knows). You could even make it a regular thing over time. This kind of thing builds the sense of community you're looking for.

Wanna feel good tomorrow? Go to a few stores (or similar) and make small talk with some cashiers. Try your best to engage and be nice. You may not meet a friend this way, but you'll connect with others in your community around you, which will certainly help.


👤 tomc1985
All I can is that I found my tribe (a Burning Man theme camp/artist collective/event crew) by repeatedly showing up at parties and events in my local music underground scene. Eventually we were all comfortable enough that I was welcomed into the friend group with open arms and they asked me if I wanted to camp with them at a local festival. Fast forward several years and we're all super tight and have been through some serious shit together -- deaths, police scares, drug scares, you name it.

After enough of rolling with this crew I am regularly recognized when I go out to other events by people I met and partied with once or twice, and then they introduce me to their friends, and suddenly I have even more people to talk to and befriend. It becomes a virtuous cycle.

I consider myself an introvert and prefer staying in most nights. But most people think of me as a hard-partying Hollywood type. I can only attribute that to simply showing up. (Though the pandemic has taught me I might actually be one of those introvert-extrovert hybrids, the "omnivert")

So if there's one thing that I know works, it is persistently showing up to things that have the kind of people you want to meet.


👤 Blackstone4
People can smell desperation and loneliness… I could tell you to find hobbies…but those by itself won’t help. If one walks around thinking negative thoughts and that people don’t like me… it’s self fulfilling…

Thinking positive thoughts and making compliments. Walk around the world with the belief that it’s is a wonderful place and that you have the ability to make friends. You have as much right to be liked and loved as others.


👤 noselfpromote
You feel your life is done while you are unhappy, you come seek help on HN because you logically understand that you have much more things to do in life.

Work part time. As a developer, you can make 7-10k usd a month working part time, without much effort, from any part of the world. This is pure luck, we live a time with free money, VCs are pouring the tech with billions and billions, grab the cash.

No western country: Move to a place with sun, parties and good food like mexico or thailand. It's much more easy to make new friends in your 30s in a foreign country because western migrants are always grouping together, in small communities easy to find and to join. Bonus point, go to a place with peaceful locals, no stressed commuters and welcoming people. Learn the local language, make new friends in the new country.

Improve yourself, now you have free time to travel deeply in yourself, understand the whole psychologic movement happening in your brain. You have time to experiment and ultimately learn how peace and hapiness is generated in your brain and body. You will also learn how to understand other people, which will lead to new friendships.


👤 atum47
Without going into much detail about my personal life, go travel. If you travel alone you will force yourself to meet new people. I'm doing this rn and it's going great.

I'm only leaving this comment cause it's the second time I see someone complaining about this. I'm a dev, also in my 30, single and looking... If you have the opportunity to travel (working remotely) book a nice hotel and go travel.


👤 habeebtc
If you are only meeting lonely programmer types at dance lessons, you should pick something more social.

Book clubs. Films clubs. Run clubs. Hell, take up fishing and go to meetups (super social sport, believe it or not).

There are many varied ways to connect with other people. If it is a romantic partner you want to meet and you are a straight man, skip fishing meet ups and replace that recommendation with Yoga or Zumba.


👤 peruvian
> short guys looking for girlfriends, unattractive/aging women looking for husbands, etc.

This is your problem, or one of them. Stop judging people and seeing them as below you. Guess what — you may not be short or aged, but you are also lonely. Probably have more in common with them.

This attitude will poison you even if you meet "normal" people, you will find reasons to talk yourself out of meeting them.


👤 Bolkan
> short guys looking for girlfriends, unattractive/aging women looking for husbands

Do people like this exist? I thaught it was just a meme/stereotype.


👤 FloNeu
I am a dev - but it's not a dev problem really, more a mid-life crisis problem. I went through a rough patch myself during my mid-thirties... All I can say - even if you don't want to hear it - it's a you problem. If you are not pleased with the crowed you meet at the hobbies you enjoy, you may have to find something else... But well women in their 30s-40s aren't looking as lively - same with yourself, but honestly to me it felt like man have a lot harder time to become self aware of the fact they aren't what a 25 year old is looking for either... Btw younger you could have gone up and ask if you could join for a drink... We always had neighbours at parties... Much better then cops, also how I learned I am way to fucking old for that shit. (Way out for me was finding new hobbies I enjoy - a girlfriend, giving up on weed and drinking 99%, and going freelance and being very selective with the work I do and who I do it for/with, also I enjoy hanging out with old friends and their kids every once in a while)

👤 ianbicking
I was just reading this essay (also linked from HN) and maybe I am projecting because I am suddenly in love with this article, but I believe it does speak to where you are at...

"On Self-Respect" https://www.vogue.com/article/joan-didion-self-respect-essay...


👤 wly_cdgr
Move towards a tech job that connects you with communities of artists, musicians, and/or fashion people. Those crowds party well into middle age and the vibe is very much make-friends-wherever-you-go. For example: https://www.elumenati.com/, https://cycling74.com/, https://www.recurse.com/, https://tisch.nyu.edu/itp, etc

The money you'll have from still working on the tech side will allow you to bail out easily into suburbia if you ever do develop a taste for it

Games could be a good option too - small/medium studios full of people who are really passionate about what they do, like Klei, Supergiant, Private Division, etc. Might be too nerdy of a crowd for your taste, but you might be pleasantly surprised too


👤 austincheney
Some suggestions:

* Train for a 10k run and then train for a half marathon.

* Join a local charity and contribute towards your community.

* Join the military and learn new skills while traveling the world.

* Build something with your hands such as modeling or wood working.

* Write. Writing is a skill so no matter what you are writing it will take some practice.

* Get a pet to raise and cherish it. My cats and dogs are among my closest life companions.

* Go back to school and work on a graduate degree.


👤 crdrost
Will this break 500 comments? A thousand? Good luck, mate.

Yeah, one definitely both wants to grow up and not lose the smiles in the photos of when we were young. I feel you.

What you've described sounds like a spiritual crisis, but I couldn't counsel you through that without knowing you better. I will say this, your world has changed, and that is loss, and loss has to be mourned before you move on to the new season. So give yourself some grace if you're upset with yourself for being upset—no, being upset is natural, it's grief and you can't control it into oblivion.

Chasing a different profession with the idea that that somehow going to make things better is very risky. Could work out, but a lot of girls dump the old abusive boyfriend and find a new abusive boyfriend... You want to make sure you understand why you were attracted to the problem case before you go find another problem case, yes? If you feel like you have adequately done that soul searching, then yeah, follow your gut. But the gut definitely has a bias to retreading the same mistakes again and again, you have to compensate for that bias.

The biggest thing that I will say is, you can't be living as if you'll get everything in order today and start your actual life tomorrow. If you do that you will never recover those looks from the photos from when we were young. This is it: that is your first axiom. It may be weird for a religious person to be telling you that, hah... but even we have the problem, as Hillel’s poem goes, ‘... don't say “I’ll study when I am free” / for maybe you will never be!’

Good luck recovering that brightness of youth. If you are looking for interests, might I suggest binging some podcasts or Teaching Company courses or audiobooks or so, find something that catches your interest there and build up from that initial connection?


👤 ChrisMarshallNY
I’ve found a lot of satisfaction in working in volunteer Service. Not the kind that we wear like a badge, but the kind where we make a huge difference, and no one notices that we did it.

Of course, there’s a lot more to my story, but that’s where it ended up, and it has made all the difference in the world.

Nothing good is ever easy, and the most interesting roads are full of twists and turns.

I sincerely wish you well.


👤 reid
Hey. I’m sorry to hear how finding friendships is challenging and feels impossible.

I believe it’s okay not to be “normal.” Do what is restful for you, which may not be normal at all. Then be looking out for others who like those things too.

Folks say relationships take time, but I believe it’s something which can happen gradually and then suddenly.

I don’t know what you enjoy doing outside of code. But doing things which are not code helps me rest and helps me find other folks over time who also like that rest. And the friendship grows deeper with these shared experiences.

A new job or address can help you meet new people. But think about what’s restful for you and then be looking out for people who like doing that.

I say restful because then the activity is motivating even without a friendship, but as you go do those things you tend to bump into people who also enjoy those things. And who doesn’t want to be around people who are just as motivated about something as you are? It’s a joy I wish for everyone and I believe it happens gradually and then suddenly. :)


👤 david38
What were you doing in your 20s? You should have been getting girls, engaged, married if you want that kind of life. It doesn’t usually happen over night.

Remember how people will see you. A 30-something guy, programmer. How fit are you? Socially competent? Are you reasonably successful? Do you have skills and hobbies outside of work? Skiing, martial arts, scuba, sailing, climbing, lifting, whatever.

A girl will look at you and likely have some expectation of where you should be at your age. Hint- it should look like you haven’t been wasting your life. Savings, career, house, decent car, well spoken, fit, etc. Remember, the more attractive/ younger, the more options she has. How do you stack up against the competition?

Do you have any female friends? If not, get some. It’ll be a real eye opener seeing the world through her eyes. A world where she gets hit on constantly and lied to to get into her pants almost as much. It will at least teach you what not to say and do.


👤 slothtrop
> getting into a group of "normal" friends, of both genders, to hang out and laugh with, seems like an impossible goal.

This has no basis in reality, it's a distortion. You can make friends. Do what people do when they settle in a new city: meetup groups, pick up sports, book clubs etc. Covid is a current impediment, but it won't be later.

This sounds like loneliness. Having a partner helps.

> On the other hand, I feel that finding a non-coding job would be ultimately the best way to find new social groups, and get out of the apathy

Having had corporate & government gigs in offices, and working remote, I would re-think that assumption. What the office environment grants at the very least is water-cooler talk, which provides at least some level of socializing. Not necessarily more than that. A good social group need not depend on workmates. At any rate, you can meet new people outside of work, and offices never made me feel any less lonely in and of themselves in my worst years.


👤 lhuser123
It could be just the normal outcome of so many years focusing more on coding & less in social interactions.

There’s no magic to fix this like there’s no magic that will make you a physicist by next month.

It will take time & effort. And no, no pill will fix this either & it could easily make it worse.

Slowly build those social skills if that’s what u want. Read books, watch videos, get counseling, practice, practice, practice.

Keep in mind, “ Loneliness is primarily a psychological state. A person who spends a lot of time alone, and is ok with that, is not lonely. Conversely, there are people who say they feel lonely even when they are in the company of others”.

Maybe u just need to find the right balance. Whatever u do, figure out first who u really want to become. Is very easy to take the wrong route again, & again & again…

BTW, the counselor (therapist or whatever) doesn’t have the answer either. The answer resides inside you. Use the counselor as a rubber duct. Talking about it, is like doing an extensive research.


👤 space_rock
Travel. People think traveling is escapist and not helpful. This I don't believe. Yes you'll drag all your problems with you but now you have no excuses and you'll have to fix them. But you'll have a fresh perspective on everything and a broader perspective on life. You'll understand yourself and the now bigger world better

👤 MarcelOlsz
I've had the same problems as you OP. I realized this has to do with house prices and income inequality. Tough spending money on fun when every dollar spent not towards saving is seen as wasted. When life is "handled" people think and do things that are unrelated to making more money.

During COVID I had some time to think, and I thought back to what I enjoyed as a kid and what I was good at, and I remember always wanting to go fast. So I got into simracing, loved it, did a bunch of research to find the best hub for my new hobby, and long story short I'm moving to Finland to pursue amateur racing in real life for fun and building a community around that. Their real estate market seems good and it looks like people still like to have fun and live life there. I've been to a bunch of races and its super easy to make friends. I enjoy working on things with people more than I enjoy drinking and stuff so it worked out for me.


👤 raguilera
> In case someone has any advice beyond finding a hobby...

If you want to meet new people you're going to have to bond around something whether it's a new hobby or an old one. When you're young it's easy, you bond over anything. School, shit jobs, getting high, etc.

When you get older it's tougher. My theory is that because as we get older out time gets more limited so we get more selective. So pick something non-nerdy like sports for example (crossfit, running, hiking). Or maybe work remote from one of those live-in coworking spaces (check out Outsite for example).

I feel you man, I've been there and sometimes still am. My suggestion is do any of the above or reconnect with an old friend and foster that friendship. Having a few good friends goes a long way.

Oh, and for those fun loving 20 something upstairs? You're looking at through rose colored glasses at a brief moment in time. They're probably lonely too. We were at that age.


👤 yuppie_scum
I mean, there’s been a pandemic on. I think people are all going to be looking to get out and have a lot more fun come spring.

👤 lostcolony
Go hiking every weekend. Somewhere that takes some planning and a bit of effort to get to.

I know you said doing things yourself is boring and depressing, and this won't fix the social aspect or give you wild and crazy fun, but it's what changed things for me, when all my usual hobbies and activities didn't. The separation it imposed from my day to day recontextualized everything; it made the job I hated bearable, it gave me purpose each week to figure out where I'd go that weekend, and a task to solve in actually making that hike happen. I felt great afterwards (exercise + accomplished something personal to me), and it started to change how I interacted with the world. It wasn't a magical fix-all, but it started the ball rolling in a bunch of different ways, changing my outlook and how I presented myself to the world, in what I invested in, and it clearly had an effect on how others saw me.


👤 burner-acc-123
Sounds like you're in a lot of pain from the meaninglessness and the loneliness. Let the pain happen. Don't get on pills, dont get too drunk or stoned, dont get too wrapped up in work, just sit with the feelings. They'll tell you what you need to know.

I would say, don't be too hard on yourself. Yeah, you're lonely, your job is monotonous and unstimulating. That's real, that's what it is, and that's ok. You're really not having fun. Just be honest with yourself and that will make the burden lighter.

Get yourself sorted. The happiest people I know listened to Stefan Molyneux for years. If I were you I would listen to him for a couple of years.

It's time to feel the pain... No way around it. All the answers are probably not going to please you. Maybe you'll have to make some sacrifices. Just listen to yourself, be honest with yourself, and get yourself sorted.


👤 abridgett
Things that helped me:

- small steps

- accept failures, don't let them stop you. My first "solo-traveller" holiday was a disaster, but the next four were great

- be open (i.e. say "yes" to things even if you don't really feel like it - being with people is IMO well worth it)

- life throws spanners in the works - but also golden opportunities

- help others. I enjoy baking and cooking, I might meet friends and bring some home-made treats along. Or offer to help them in DIY.

- be pro-active. e.g. ask if anyone fancies a walk/visit to a local attraction. Arrange a trip somewhere. Your circles may start small (e.g. with work colleagues) however make them interesting and it can grow.

- meetup.com has been helpful, however do something you'd enjoy _anyway_ - if you meet someone (friends or romantically) that's a bonus

This isn't a panacea, I'm personally struggling. However when I look at the good things I _do_ have, this is how I have them.


👤 smilebot
> I tried to meet new people at hobbies and dance lessons, but guess what - they're all full of lonely developers and other socially awkward people - short guys looking for girlfriends, unattractive/aging women looking for husbands, etc.

I’m going to assume positive intent here: what you probably mean is that most people who do this have other agendas/goals and you want to meet someone genuine who wants to have some fun.

Moving to a big city would be a good option. You’ll find regular people who are still single and like to have fun.

I would encourage checking out local arts. Live music, theater etc

Join a trendy gym craze. Idk what’s in these days but CrossFit/orange theory etc make it a point to build community around them. Gives you a chance to hang out with normies. You end up seeing the same people a few times which makes it a lot less awkward to say “hey let’s hangout sometime”.


👤 kova12
I'd say find a spouse and raise children. It's much harder than you think, and you will have to go through many sacrifices. But people changing diapers and working to pay off their mortgages have purpose in their lives, they have something to live for. Life is often brutal and it is hard to live if you don't have a goal. Many are getting stuck in their career phases. Career is not an end goal. You only need so much money to be happy. You need to something bigger than yourself in your life to be happy, and for most of us it's being a parent. Even Musk, who arguably has all the purpose in his life a man could get has spawned six children. We all die, and you will as well. If you don't leave someone behind, what's the meaning, why bother? Your life ends with you and all your money and career are gone.

👤 derac
You say you don't want a hobby, but this is how you meet people and make friends. Climbing is a good one. Improv and artsy things like that attract funny, fun people. Athletic and artsy activies tend to attact the sort of people you're looking for (probably). Working out has great effects on your mental state as well, if you aren't doing it.

Also, make an effort to communicate with people and hang out. It's hard and takes a while to break through. Once you make a strong friendship with one or two people, you'll start meeting more. It's absolutely not impossible to get into a good friend group.

You could sell all your stuff and work from an RV. You could move to East Asia. You could get a more socially engaging job. Try lots of stuff until you find what you want. What are you working for? If you don't know, figure it out.


👤 rekoros
I know what you mean!

One way to meet lots of people you’d be able to relate to without abandoning your engineering career is to start a startup - your own company, where you use your developer skills to make a product.

That’s what I did, and the only time I dove back into depression was after we got acquired and I had to deal with a regular job again.

If you don’t have any ideas, there are lots of folks looking for technical cofounders - e.g. at this YC resource: https://www.ycombinator.com/cofounder-matching

Being a founder comes with its own set of challenges, but over the past few years mental health in entrepreneurship has been adopted as a serious issue by the community - you’d have a wealth of resources and plenty of people will help you without expecting anything in return.


👤 tonfreed
If you're at all religious, go to church/temple. The religion is often second to the fellowship or community it can foster. Charity work could also help you find someone with similar values, and if you're feeling unfulfilled from work it might help pick you up doing something meaningful.

👤 orliesaurus
If you happen to be in ATX - I've started hosting "indie" meetups for techies/ makers/ hackers where we meet and chat about life. Folks who are into tech and have ideas / or want to break free from the 9-to-5 routine are the majority of the crowd. The goal is develop more "real" connections than co-workers and hopefully from there some might turn into friendships. If anyone is interested the next meetup is posted up [1], just show up I guess so far the age-group is mid-20s to mid-30s! If you're in a different area, there might be a meetup for your location...but it's not run by me so I can't guarantee what that's like.

[1] https://www.indiehackers.com/meetups


👤 kdiwoqlgkf
> In case someone has any advice beyond finding a hobby, going to therapy, approaching random strangers, it would be greatly appreciated

Wait wait. What's wrong with approaching random strangers? That's literally the only robust solution to this problem.

> they're all full of lonely developers and other socially awkward people - short guys looking for girlfriends, unattractive/aging women looking for husbands, etc.

You mean, socially awkward like you? You think that short guys and unattractive women aren't good enough for you, but I'm guessing that tall guys and attractive girls impute the same kind of vapid judgement to you that you do to aging women? Essentially, you're just miserable because you're starting to realize you belong to the same low value category you despise so much.


👤 betwixthewires
Of course, finding a hobby and approaching random strangers is the only way to find new things to do and new people.

But maybe consider some part time, low responsibility, public facing job. Don't worry about the pay, that's not the idea. Something that will put you in front of people to talk to.


👤 asdadsdad
It's a normal problem that we face when we get out of college. From a foreigner POV though, it seems it's a bigger problem in the US than many other places. People here move a lot, it's common to go to college and meet people in one state, and get a job in another state. Also, friendships don't go as deep as in other cultures where perhaps the initial chit-chat is not as welcoming but getting to know someone truly builds reliable, long-lasting friendships.

In my opinion, big cities like NYC can make it better or worse even. They make it extra hard to build community as everyone is minding their own business and people come and go without any attachment to anyone, but on the upside there's a lot more people, so the odds are obviously better.


👤 akomtu
Bro, sign up for your local sailing club, learn to operate a boat and advertise discreetly on your instagram you've unexpectedly got single and going on a lonely sailing trip this weekend. Find a local crossfit club. Do something that an average nerdy coach warner wouldnt do.

👤 d--b
More points I didn't see mentioned here, that are likely low hanging fruits:

- Try coworking instead of home, or change job. Work is definitely the easiest way to socialize (besides being a parent).

- You could also retry the flatshare thing as well. Plenty of creative people do it in their 30s. It's fun. People are cleaner. Why not?

- Or, you may try and volunteer in a non-profit / charity / political party / art group. This is kind of like work, but with people who are not in it for money so more socializing. There is always some computer stuff to do in these.

- Also, you can try teach coding somewhere. You can make teacher friends...

More generally "how can I help?" is an easier icebreaker than "will you talk to me?", and literally everyone needs to know someone who can code.


👤 nyxtom
Making friendships is actually easier when you are enjoying something you like to do. I recently got back into scuba diving in the last few years (used to do it a lot years ago) and I've met a number of people in the community. A lot of acquaintances, some friendships along the way, but it's great practice for learning to establish a community around yourself. You'll find that making friends is easier when you frequent a community you actually like being apart of.

In all honesty, that feeling of isolation (i think) has a lot to do with just feeling bored because you've got nothing you want to do or anyone to do that with. Expand your peripheral a bit, figure out what makes you excited, try new things, (yes take a class). If you really liked dancing - like a lot - then yea you might make friends there if you decide to take enough classes idk.

When I got back into diving I found multiple avenues for opportunities to make friends. One - the dives themself are typically always with other people, two the planned trips together, three the classes themselves, four honing your own skills and learning how to become an instructor..etc.

I've known friends who got really into rebuilding cars, jeeps, motorcycles..etc for instance that they became regulars at certain places, groups or meetups that you make friends that way. Or others who are really into d&d, cosplay, and loads of other geeky stuff. It's a preference thing of what you like to do and whether other people like to do that too. Like a child who just wants someone to play with. It's innate.

Personally I'm a bit biased towards doing hobbies that involve being outside and doing something physical. Too much time in front of a computer staring a code all day - I need to do something else sometimes. Helps to talk to other people when you're working on some other skill set - you learn from others and you get to meet cool people. However, I've also just enjoyed playing card games and setting up movie nights - just having something you like doing together with other people - whether that's a group of friends or your wife and kids (for the parents/married group)


👤 _zooted
> In case someone has any advice beyond ... going to therapy

Everyone proceeds to tell him to go to therapy, lol.


👤 XCSme
Not sure if it's any help, but I enjoyed the books "How to win friends and influence people" and currently "The Laws of Human Nature".

The main gist is that many of the things you see in people are just a reflection of yourself, mostly your insecurities/defects. Try to really get to know people without instantly assigning the label "unattractive", "looking for a husband", "boring" when you see them. People are very complex; everyone has good and bad parts. Even if you have no interest in befriending someone, just try to understand them and their point of view, it will also help you understand yourself better and what you really want.


👤 pm90
It’s really a numbers game. If you’re in the Bay Area, I would recommend moving to another region, or to move to SF or Oakland proper (not the suburbs). The Bay Area is very male heavy because tech is so male heavy and tech dominates the economy. Austin, Denver or any of the East Coast cities (+Chicago) have lots of single adults and a more balanced mix of genders. I’m not talking just about dating either; having a good friends group requires a little bit of diversity of interests and experiences.

After you leave college, you’re transitioning out from a life in which you always had people around you who you went to classes with and had some shared context to form bonds.


👤 Cyberthal
Well my bro, if you want teh girls, you gotta be the bumblebee visiting flowers or the flower attracting butterflies.

Money? Yeah you could flex a little. But they like other stuff more. And you got a gaping god-sized hole in your life. Women are big into spirituality. Hot ones, nice ones. Get yourself a priestess, mate.

Or you could get rich first, by starting a business, cuz it'll be hard to do that after the kids start coming.

Now, if you want religious suggestions, I can offer you a coder-friendly menu...

But most of all, stop thinking about how you can fix your depression and start thinking about how you can benefit whichever groups you identify with. That will put the light back in your eyes immediately.


👤 shp0ngle
Go to Church. Regularly.

It helped me! But not sure if what you want.


👤 moltar
> in my 30s

> my life is pretty much done

Hahahaha

Consider that we have essentially figured out how to live super long (> 100) and maybe even much longer, your life is faaaaar from over.

My advice is to take a sabbatical and go travel. You’ll meet lots of people outside of your zone and have fun.


👤 rustandstardust
So, from your post you: a) don't know who any of your neighbors are. b) think you're better than those you do attempt to associate with c) don't want any advice on 1) doing things you love (i.e. hobbies) 2) seeking help from mental health professionals 3) meeting new people

no offense, but this seems like a social experiment or fodder for a medium article no one will ever read. Supposing you're genuine, you have a few options: a) get dogs and go do a dog park b) find a magic wand and wave it c) (sorry this is against site guidelines) stop being a loser - and, no, material success has nothing to do with that.


👤 ardit33
Move to NYC or a different large city. (I am assuming you perhaps live in the Bay Area). SF is intersting, but the rest of the Bay Area is a giant suburb. It is nice to live as a family (but expensive), but it is not the right place for younger single people.

In NYC you will find enough of everything. As a city it has different problems (eg. hustler culture, dating is like mortal kombat, making you feel disposable, where anything longer than 3 months is considered long term). But at least you wont be bored.

And if you don't like interacting with people, just go to coffee places, work from there and people watch. NYC has plenty to offer.


👤 mullikine
The starting point is to begin taking back your personal truth. And live in that truth regardless of what people say. Apply your talents to the people that bring you happiness and meaning. You have to stop denying to yourself what really makes you happy. Sometimes, like for me, that means a long time to wait, but at least I have hope and are working towards what I want instead of away from it.

https://semiosis.github.io/posts/describing-melee-s-painting...


👤 poisonborz
> short guys looking for girlfriends, unattractive/aging women looking for husbands, etc.

Coupling some generic perceived success in life with some generic perceived beauty standard is a real bane of our society.


👤 dave_sullivan
Try psychedelic mushrooms? Or take a trip to the Mediterranean? Or go upstairs and knock on your neighbors door and bring a bottle of tequila? Do something that seems kind of crazy. Break your pattern.

👤 smorgusofborg
Having flat mates is not always easy but makes a huge difference in the quality of your life and makes some level of socializing a regular part of your life instead of an optional project to attempt.

👤 dec0dedab0de
Lower your standards. Don't judge people before you know them. Just get on the move. You're young and don't have kids, go somewhere new and if you don't like it go somewhere else.

👤 throwyawayyyy
The advice here seems generally pretty good, so I'll suggest a different angle. Have you considered leaning into your work? Your career as a developer is going well, why not see how far you can take it? As you point out, your peers are spending time raising families etc, that's time not spent on their careers. There's an often unstated assumption that only one's life outside of work counts when it comes to personal happiness. Does that have to be true? What if your ideal work/life balance is just work?

👤 sigstoat
> In case someone has any advice beyond finding a hobby, going to therapy, approaching random strangers

did you try those things? they're common advice for a reason.

> I tried to meet new people at hobbies and dance lessons, but guess what - they're all full of lonely developers and other socially awkward people - short guys looking for girlfriends, unattractive/aging women looking for husbands, etc.

...are those people not worthy of meeting?

> Finding friends in my teens and 20s was as easy as going out literally anywhere.

what happened to those friends? what about contacting them?


👤 johncarfax
This is not a software developer problem, this is a socially awkward dude problem.

You go to places for socially awkward people and are astonished to meet socially awkward people. Woah, who would have thought.

Yes, your peers are changing diapers. But here's a brilliant idea - you are a man and women love older men with resources. Go to places where these younger women are and you will solve your problem.

What will not solve your problem is yapping about it on hackernews, because as you may have guessed, young women are not known to hang out at hackernews.


👤 twistedpair
I've got that house, spouse, kid stuff. It's awesome, but also an anchor that limits what you can do, where you can go, etc. You don't have that at the moment, so go be spontaneous. I don't travel any more, but you can. I don't do silly, dumb, or risky stuff any more, but you can.

You sound like a mid career dev, you should be well situated. OK 401K, pay, 'benes, etc. About wealth, they say "you can't take it with you." Spend some of it living it up now while you're well situated.


👤 jstrebel
Honestly, I can relate to your situation - been there, done that. I think I am a step further now, I kind of found a fitting lifestyle for myself. The absolutely first thing that you really need to do, is finding a girlfriend.

Don't worry about being nerdy - there is someone out there waiting for you! You are an attractive man. Finding a spouse will dramatically improve your quality of life.

There are enough options to reach this goal. Online dating comes to mind, but it might take a while to find the right match, so hang in there!


👤 shrubble
I have different friends who have used different methods:

Two(recently divorced 30yo woman, 35-40 divorced man) got into swing dancing (met her now husband there and they have 2 kids) and folk dancing (met his 20 year relationship gf there). Advantage of dancing is that usually people are very sociable... my folk dancing friend ended up with a huge circle of friends who would go out as a group for restaurants and other cultural events.

Gym: as mentioned by others.

I might recommend learning either piano or guitar, it helped me at least...


👤 Graffur
You have a bad attitude and this post really shouldn't be accepted on this forum. If you hate your life, please don't spread that hatred outwards towards other people.

👤 fastball
Become a digital nomad.

In "stable" cities and contexts, people have established social groups that can be hard to "break in" to.

It's much easier to make friends as a nomad, because everyone is in a state of constant flux. This also means that a lot of friends will come and go, but you can always make new ones.

Check out this website[1] for a list of places you could move to that have thriving nomad communities.

[1] https://nomadlist.com/


👤 amerkhalid
It sounds like you tried hobbies to meet people instead of having any real interest in those hobbies. People with real interest can tell if someone is faking it.

Try to do things that really interest you. Also don’t judge non-attractive people. They may make good friends and introduce you to their friends who might be attractive for you.

And even if only thing interests you is programming then try to volunteer your programming skills somewhere. Not only you might meet someone but also do social good.


👤 newacc9
Climate affects personality. People in warm climates are more sociable; Spain or Miami is better than Denmark or Minneapolis. Move somewhere warm with law & order (not SF), then do group fitness, etc. Would like to hear an update when you have one.

https://www.bbc.com/travel/article/20181016-how-the-finnish-...


👤 antigirl
This happened to me. So I actually quit my job and went travelling. I met a girl. My photography got better. It was life changing. Then I picked up remote work and stayed abroad.

Moved back home recently. Found out that I didn’t like being back. Went to European city for a year. Went to meetup when I got there; made loads of friends. It was a really fun year. Albeit very transient.

Now I’m back in Asia. Ultimately you’re looking for a life partner. So a gf. No number of friends will fill that void.


👤 dougmwne
A job is not a substitute for life. Your answer is to explore your life more, not explore working more. Go take some good risks. Talk to some of those old women and short guys. Stop your routine and try something new. Change your approach. Change your mind. You may not be in your 20's anymore, but each stage of life comes with new perspectives, highs and lows. And forget normal. No one is normal since we are all both strange and familiar to someone.

👤 tata71
> Still, I'm only in my 30s, and it feels like my life is pretty much done.

Take a meaningful break, or vacation,

and begin doing work that is closer to something you are actually passionate about.


👤 JSavageOne
What's stopping you from working remotely and booking a ticket somewhere else? Sounds like you live in a boring area.

I've been traveling and living abroad for the last 4 years after getting sick of the NYC grind. Although I wouldn't sell it as some miracle cure as it definitely has had its ups and downs, I wouldn't trade the experience for anything.

You don't need to conform to some traditional idea of what life is supposed to look like. Create your own path.


👤 colordrops
I went through the same thing and moved to China. It was the best thing I ever did. Wouldn't recommend going there now but the idea is to go live somewhere completely different from what you are familiar with.

You could hike the Appalachian trail. Or the Annapurna trail. Do a month at an animal shelter in the Amazon. Live on the beach in Mexico or Thailand or Bali for a few months. Study Spanish in Argentina. Whatever you do, sell everything and start over.


👤 rejectfinite
>Doing things by myself is boring and depressing

Only becasue you think it is. Husbands with kids would LOVE to trade places with you lol. Im single but at work all the dads complain lol

Fix yourself first.

Just look at https://old.reddit.com/r/relationship_advice

Having a relationship is exhausting.

For me online works. Just join discords and talk & game. And if you dont like someone, just ignore or block. easy


👤 stjohnswarts
Go hang out with people younger than you, there is no shame in that, or join something where athletic/adventurous people hang out, you will meet people who don't necessarily fall into the geek group. Join some more extreme activities like camping, climbing, skiing groups where people still like to do adventurous things rather than play with the kids and play some CoD before they head off to bed to do it all again the next day.

👤 rdiddly
I don't think this is specific to working as a dev. It's more about the pandemic in my opinion. If you're not busy raising a family of your own right now (in which case you'd be like your friends, too busy for a social life), then you presumably still want to meet & be around people, and the loss of the office as a place for that, is a bigger loss than it is for someone who's not leaning that way.

👤 SamoyedFurFluff
Please consider volunteering or using your coding skills for a nonprofit for free. This will give you responsibility, structure, purpose, and a social net.

👤 mmcgaha
Sex with an unattractive woman is better than no sex at all.

A difference between guys born in the 60/70s vs 90/2000s is that we were a lot less picky about the chicks we banged. Not sure what changed in the culture but I don't think the current situation is optimal for anyone.

BTW, I know that I am not speaking for everyone from these age groups but I am comparing boys I grew up with vs my boys who were born between 1990 and 2004.


👤 sheeshkebab
Honestly, there is not much in the whole diaper changing side of the world so you’re not missing much (and those that are changing diapers likely envy your situation).

In terms of things to do (other than therapy or looking to start changing diapers) - Learn to day trade - it’s a whole other world out there with great community (virtual), and software engineers do well in that environment. Travel the world in your spare time.


👤 sagarpatil
There are 2 things I’d like to add which helped me. YMMV.

1. When I was in my late 20’s, I would meet my existing friends and try to hang out with their social groups. It helped me make a lot of really good friends.

2. Sports: If you are interested in a sport, try and see if there are local clubs where you can play. If you become an active member, they will call you to hang our with their group, where you can make more friends.


👤 xvilka
Most people do. They just rarely say it. Other people that you think are happier are often not, and they envy someone else, sometimes they envy you. World full of people who are envying each other, poor or rich, and neither are happy. Most of the life is boring objectively anyway, only a few moments really matter. Most of life doesn't matter, it's what you do with what you have is.

👤 andrewseanryan
I recently stayed in a hostel in mexico and met a bunch of very cool people who were all open to meeting people (as travelers often are). I still rented a private room but the environment of shared amenities (even bathrooms) and the fact that everyone is a traveler tends to lead to good interactions. So… try traveling and staying at a shared place (not Airbnb or hotel).

👤 richardw
Not the answer but a good idea spinner: sports. I met a ton of people doing cycling group rides, and first went for a MTB ride as a non date with my now wife. We were on distant leaves of a social tree but that was a great way to spend time one on one and just have fun. And it’s healthy and can be competitive and gets you out of the headspace of “only know software.”

👤 p0d
I recommend finding a local church.

I didn't grow up going to church but I started going as a young adult. I met my wife and nearly all my closest friends there. I still go 30 years later.

I love my church community. It has wonderful people, weird people, intelligent people, mentally disabled people, rich people, poor people, programmers, bin men and at least a dozen people I call close friends.


👤 rochak
If you are in Seattle, hit me up anytime. I used to feel the same way that you did but COVID really forced me to step out of my comfort zone and try different things. I have so many people to tag along with that it is getting a bit too hectic. I can introduce you to them as they are spread out all across US (with some in Europe too).

👤 fidgetspinner
I know you said advice outside of finding a hobby, but I'd say team-based sports or other game type clubs are a great way to be part of positive social groups that aren't full of sad, lonely people. Also, with sports, you're also doing something athletic which is probably good for your body and serotonin levels.

👤 joemazerino
Sorry to hear all of this.

I would recommend looking at your life the same way you look at your code (presumably you care about the quality of code you write). Try something different and if it does not work then try something else. No one will be handing you what you want on a silver platter and if they did you certainly would not appreciate it ;)

Good luck!


👤 yes_really
> On the other hand, I feel that finding a non-coding job would be ultimately the best way to find new social groups, and get out of the apathy.

If you are feeling lonely I suggest getting back together with friends from college/high school or joining hobbies/groups. That's what helped me when I was alone in the Bay area


👤 cattown
"they're all full of lonely developers and other socially awkward people - short guys looking for girlfriends, unattractive/aging women looking for husbands, etc."

Welcome to becoming a mature adult in the real world! It's true, as people age they become gringey dorks. And you may be surprised... It happens even to people who don't work in tech. I participate in a few communities that have little or nothing to do with tech, and they're still filled with awkward characters searching for connection too.

Sure, there are people in their 30's still partying and leading the lifestyles of the young and beautiful. But, maybe those people are still doing that because they haven't grown much since their early 20's. And if you haven't found focus in life beyond "being cool" and drinking and socializing by the time you're in your mid 40's, that lifestyle starts to be a pretty cringey look of its own.

Maturing emotionally means becoming more guarded and picky. You and the people around you have lived in the world, become invested in your own ways of living, and taken damage from the ups and downs of life. It's never again going to be as easy as being 20 something in a room full of 20-somethings who all want to meet each other right now.

But, there's also the chance for connection beyond what's possible at a party with "laughing, kicking and screaming" full of people who closely match your demographic. Ask people what their lives are about, people usually like talking about themselves. You'll get them to open up and you'll learn new things. Let things take time and be willing to let friendships form on a timescale more like months or years rather than days or weeks.

Not so much to your original point, but you mentioned "quitting the career"... If you're sick of tech, start on your second career. Even if you're not super confident, pick something that seems doable and pursue it. It will be exciting and rewarding and you will re-experience the feeling of joyous surprise you once felt when learning tech. You have time for this and can afford this easily since you're making tech job money and it sounds like you have time for weekend/evening/intensive classes. And you will meet a new batch of people. I've been in a program where I've taken a number of classes with the same group, and it's been a great way to get to know some new friends.

No reason to be scared because you don't have to "quit the career". Tech will take you back if your other thing doesn't work. You can learn a new thing and switch back and forth. Or you can do both part time.


👤 giantg2
When you have a kid and are working to pay the mortgage, you basically don't have time for friends either. This leaves a very small group of potential friends who are single by choice.

I think the biggest thing is managing expectations. Nothing works the way we envisioned it as kids. It's disappointing, but that's life.


👤 gpas
Keep the coding job. Meanwhile work on anything else on your own, invest some money, build a passive earning, buy a property and rent it. Depending on your definition of financial stability it could take a week or a couple of years. Done? Resignate. Take the passport and a backpack. Live your life.

No really, time is running out.


👤 neilv
Longer-term, you might like yourself more, if you can get past dissing the people at hobby meetups and dance class.

👤 sputknick
What about a more social software job, such as project management, or sales? Those would necessarily involve building relationships with people, and you would be branching out in your career. People who can do the less technical jobs, while having an engineering background tend to be highly valuable.

👤 Beegle
Change scenery and surround yourself with people. That advice about finding a hobby is good because if you can find one that involves other people, it is a great way to break the ice. I struggle with everything you mention and more on a regular basis. I am sorry you are dealing with it.

👤 fnbr
I like clubs. I’m an avid mountain biker, so I joined a club with group rides twice a week. I’m signing up for master’s ski racing. I chose these because they’re as far from computers as you can get, and we have something to bond over (bikes! Skis!) that isn’t anything to do with my SWE job.

👤 ericmcer
Have you tried dating apps? They suck in many ways but ultimately with a bit of time and effort, some good and bad dates but eventually you wills find a relationship. As far as making a circle of friends, I think that is actually way harder in your 30s than it is to find a partner.

👤 birthday
Simple, get a remote coding job and book a ticket to South East Asia. Thailand is a good start.

You will very quickly meet tonnes of people and can travel and see the world. Constant stimulation.

And if you are ever lonely while doing the above then download Tinder and start meeting people in your area.


👤 istorical
I don't really recommend digital nomadism for being less lonely or making friends. You end up just having to make new friends over and over if you keep moving (which is what being a digital nomad is) which is emotionally exhausting and feels sisyphean. I'm speaking from experience here. Unless you want to be an expat or move to a new city, which is a different thing. But won't necessarily solve your problems, and while other expats can be an extremely friendly bunch to befriend (you're both all alone in a foreign place / isolated linguistically) - it's also easy for it to be a booze-based friendship. That being said, travel is definitely worthwhile, but try some shorter trips first before deciding to move your whole life to see if you like it and find out what kinds of destinations appeal to you. Don't trust what you read online about the best spots, or location arbitrage, or what the locals are like or how hot they are. See for yourself because everyone has different tastes when it comes to travel.

But I mean if you live in a huge city in a shit neighborhood, maybe try a nicer neighborhood. Or if you like in a small town or city with nothing going on, maybe try a bigger city. Mix things up.

Learn to be the host of your own events, to connect the new acquaintances you do meet to each other, rather than sitting around waiting for a new person you just met to text you. When I was at my peak extroversion and friend-making skills while I was doing my own digital nomad thing, I would literally throw out random "you seem like a pretty cool person and I'm new here and trying to make new friends, here's my number if you'd like to go out for drinks with me and another recent acquaintance I've made named Jorb this weeekend" to random employees at cafes, whereever and hand them a napkin with my #. Cringe as hell, but when you get truly desperate while traveling you throw your pride to the floor.

Live in a walkable big city with lots of events and diverse types of people if you hate the nerd monoculture (see NYC not Palo Alto). Or if you are in a smaller place, lean even harder into making things happen yourself. If there's no first-person drone racing group in Toledo, OH but that's what you wanna do - figure out ways to advertise it - start your own. Tell every person you meet and everyone you interact with - cashiers or whoever - that you're starting a FPV drone racing group and if they are interested or know anyone who might be to check the meetup.com site you make or whatever. Pretend you're a quest giver in an MMO.

Join activities where there's opportunity to talk during or after (so not a yoga class, but yes to a kickball league where you're on the sidelines for stretches), or there's activity->followed by drinks. Just make sure you limit yourself to a drink or two and don't make getting drunk a necessary part of friendship. It's not sustainable, especially in your 30s.

Join activities (or create your own) where you'll see the same group each week.

Put forth effort. It's hard, but it's worthwhile.

Avoid friendships that only are fun when you are both drinking. Or friendships that are based on no common interest/activity OR humor. You either need to share an interest or share humor for it to work IMO, even if getting drunk together for a couple of years once a week will make the person tolerable.

Accept that a lot of activities that foster friendship just either cost money, and allocate the budget for it, because its absolutely important for mental health (if you are the type that is extremely frugal, but also feeling really depressed or lonely).

When you start to make friends, try to think about what you can do for them. Check in on how they are feeling, offer help when they are struggling with something, or offer to bring food when they are sick, or move boxes when they are moving. The older you get, the more difficult it is to forge really strong emotional bonds, but that means these sorts of things mean a lot more to people.


👤 codenesium
Felt that way in my 20s. Married a girl and bought a house and those feelings went away. But...if you don't want to do those things don't renew your lease and go travel. Do some risky stuff while your out there. You never know who you're going to meet.

👤 hogrider
It's not just you. Modern civilization inevitably leads to general anomie among the masses. Idk what will we do to solve it but I posit this is part of the great filter explaining the drake equation paradoz of not observing any intelligent life anuwhere.

👤 silexia
The most obvious answer here is missing: The purpose of all biological life is reproduction... we learned that in school and never realized it applies to us humans too. Make it your #1 goal in life to find a great life partner, get married, then have kids.

👤 copperx
The only cure for someone with such judgementalism is reading. Read some literature. Start now.

👤 hungryforcodes
Move to another country like one in Asia or South or Central America or Europe. North America is rapidly becoming a vacuous wasteland of self hate and inane boredom. Girls are for sure more friendly in other countries if that's your thing.

👤 throwaway6734
>Still, I'm only in my 30s, and it feels like my life is pretty much done

I feel this way and I'm very happy about it. I've lived my youth and now it's my turn to ensure future generations, especially my children, have the same opportunity.


👤 fassssst
A therapist would really help, I’ve had a few that helped me through existential crises.

This site is a great way to find one: https://www.psychologytoday.com/us


👤 cafard
Volunteer. You might prefer to find an area of volunteering that offers a favorable balance of the sexes.

Or take up some kind of sports. Kickball seems to be a thing for 20-somethings now, but there's softball, and there are running groups.


👤 hda111
Find a coding job where everyone must come to the office. Maybe not easy these days but it’s worth it. I personally found this to be good for my mental health because I need the social interaction and discussions in person.

👤 btorretta
In my humble opinion, you're searching for meaning, which I've only found at Church: https://youtu.be/zoK8uXl3f9c

👤 penguinlinux
you are very lucky to be in your 30's, there are so many things you can do after work. Join a gym, volunteer, online dating is fun in my 30's I had dates almost every week got to meet a bunch of beautiful girls, also got into running and joined a running club, volunteer. also going to a bar is fun you can go to a bar and just meet a few locals in your neighborhood. Also it depends on where you live. maybe if you are working as a developer you can get a job that is fully remote and travel and work from some fun place like Thailand or Spain .

👤 poorbutdebtfree
If you can work remote, go on a road trip and book airbnb rooms in homes where there are many other rooms listed. You are guaranteed to run into other digital nomads who are open to meeting new people..

👤 magicroot75
If you aren't actively inviting people to things and being turned down, start doing so. If you are actively being turned down, ask why, the answer will get you closer to where you'd like to be.

👤 zethsg
a drastic change, like moving to a diff country/culture could be a good start. it might not be the end solution, but as a starting point it could help you because drastic (non-toxic) changes tend to put us on our toes, attentive to new environment, etc. specially if you're in a city-country where walking is the norm (i.e. you don't depend on a car (isolated) to get around). Move to a sunny country like spain (southern spain, works). there are non-lucrative visas you can get without much hassle. good luck

👤 hestefisk
I experienced this when moving to a new country. I knew no one, didn’t know there to start. I ended up joining a running club where I met heaps new friends from all walks of society. Highly recommended.

👤 pacaro
A former coworker used to recommend getting a job in a local bar, it's definitely something that you can do alongside a developer job, and you'll meet a very different set of people. YMMV

👤 jimmaswell
At least you had fun in college. I tried so hard to get into the dating/hookup scene and have the experiences I was supposed to but nobody wanted me because a slightly overweight computer science student with the wrong hobbies just isn't good enough. 0 dates all of college, and I was never picky about women being "unattractive" or "aging" like you apparently get to be. It gave me such a bitterness I haven't tried again in the ~5 years it's been since graduating. I make great money but it's no consolation for such a profound rejection, more like I asked a monkey's paw for success. Even if I find someone I'll still always look back and shake my fist at what happened.

👤 TheAlchemist
You buy a bottle of good whiskey, and next time they party, you go upstairs with it and say that you can't sleep, so you may as well join them. Most of the time, it's as simple as that

👤 zupreme
Find a non-technical hobby and go so fully into that (visibly) that you become a magnet for others just getting into the hobby.

Being there is like living midway down a river. Just stay there and “they” will come.


👤 azth
I highly suggest looking into Islam. Life in the West has been delegated to partying and always expecting to "have a good time" in the sense you described. There is way more to life.

👤 unityByFreedom
If you are unhappy, this is not your peak. Perhaps you are gauging your peak based on other people's expectations. Do what seems right for you. It's okay to try something new.

👤 Jakewk
Move to a different country. I think you’ll find other cultures’ may have more interesting social constructs that rejuvenate your lust for life and ability to grow your social system.

👤 culebron21
All my 20s and 30s I was desperately searching for a couple and socialization the way you describe.

If you ask for a radical solution, and you're from English-speaking country, my radical suggestion is: go teach English in country like Brazil or Russia, Ukraine, etc, but make sure you stay outside of the capitals, where expats are rare enough. I know some guys who did this, they have social life, are rather important people, and have no reason to come home to be the average Joe.

If that's not an option, like it wasn't for me, manage the probabilities. All hobby groups are places where you have a chance to get some social life/couple. But they differ. Invest less time in those with awkward people, but don't abandon completely -- sometimes friends from there will invite you to other, more interesting social groups.

Eco-, new-urbanism or political activist groups are much better than dance groups, because people go to dance exactly to find a couple, whereas any form of activism filters those out and the share of "normal" people is much higher. (Of course, their age and marital status may vary, so choose appropriately.)

Where you live also matters. A metropolis is very un-social, interactions are awkward, and you must be highly active to just stay in contact with some people. A small town has much more social cohesion, but may make you passive in dating. Something in the middle is better.

Living in suburbia is antisocial, it's better to live in walking distance from places to socialize in a walkable city.

Since you're still looking for a couple, it's better to live near a university where the share of young people is higher. Also, write down when you had dates, or was approached, and what social activities you had then -- it can give insights.

P.S. Therapy works only as painkiller. After couple of meetings therapists open up their stone-age beliefs: NLP, positive thinking, hypnosis, homeopathy.


👤 andrethegiant
If you’re in the Bay Area and want to grab a drink, DM me @jasbarry

👤 mertd
Travel but don't go mainstream like a cruise. Try adventure travel or unconventional destinations. That's where you meet interesting people and some might live nearby.

👤 akulbe
Hey, I realize I could be way off base here… but other times when there are posts with a tenor similar to yours - the thought often seems to be burnout.

Is it possible that's a factor here?


👤 nprateem
Try international meetups if you're in a big city. People are often open to making friends and less socially awkward (but sometimes don't have much money...)

👤 deanmoriarty
Have you tried online dating? You could get a lot of entertainment out of it and, with some luck, find a permanent companion to do activities with.

👤 jvilalta
Find a dance studio that has partner dancing. Pick a style you like. You'll meet new people, add movement to your life and music.

👤 tomcam
First off, good on you for willing to take suggestions. That's a wonderful first step.

My approach to this has always been to start with first principles. It has unerringly kept me in a position where the general state of my life felt coherent and fulfilling.

I'm about to get specific but it's only to illustrate how this framing helped me. I am not at all trying to say you choose the same set of options I did.

For me having a balanced family life was always going to be mandatory, even though I tend toward workaholism. Having one parent stay at home and take care of the kids was high up there (didn't have to be me, but I like work and my wife doesn't ;). Marrying someone with similar values was essential. Nearly as important was work that fulfilled me and that was consonant with my moral/ethical requirements. At the bottom was making enough money that I could take care of my family.

Definitely not saying you should adopt those same values. What I'm saying is that it helped us figure out what decisions would help us in the long run. We opted not to move to Silicon Valley because we hated the work/life imbalance there. We made less money early on (pre kids) because my wife didn't work. At that time I did a lot of freelancing and studying. My wife understood that work was necessary and didn't bug be about it, though we still went out to movies and restaurants, based on a tight budget (it was fun). We didn't have the extra expenses or stress of a second working person, but my working & studying at night gave me the skills to get very successful later. We both hated debt so we happily lived without a kitchen table and ate on the floor for a few months until we could pay cash for one.

Another hack I have is to set things up so second best is still pretty good. When I was younger I wanted to be rock star but at some point in my early 20s I realized that wouldn't happen. I chose second best, programming--for which I had zero aptitude and almost no experience. Had to work as a tech writer so I could teach myself programming, but eventually got there. Another example of second best working out well: we used to live on the beach in Southern California. But when we worked out what was most important to us, it turned out the Pacific Northwest was better all in all. Would I rather live on the water in Newport Beach? Hell yes! But we live on a beautiful peaceful farm outside of Seattle where life is much more sane, there's actual privacy, and there's plenty of room for animals and band instruments. A damn good second best.

I always loved programming and feel lucky to do it. Maybe you don't like it as much? Perhaps it would be worthwhile to do a spreadsheet listing other options that you'd like, and start making moves toward the next step in your life.

Last, once you've settled on how to be a pretty good version of yourself, you'll find it sort of magnetizes other people to you. I am totally not good looking but I'm comfortable in my own skin and confident about where I'm going. It has made a massive difference in my life.

Good luck. This whole situation could wind up working out well for you.


👤 pmalynin
If you’re in the Bay Area I’ll hang out with you

👤 thehog
Well, IMO, it's time for you to embark the spiritual journey now. The mushroom awaits you! Buy the ticket, take the ride.

👤 thehog
Well, IMO, it's time for you to embark on the spiritual journey. The mushroom awaits you. Buy the ticket, take the ride.

👤 tzm
The older I get, the younger my mind becomes.

👤 aristofun
> In case someone has any advice beyond finding a hobby, going to therapy

It looks like you don’t really want to solve the issue, rather just get busy solving it.

Because therapy is the answer, often is the only real answer, way better than any advice you can possibly imagine getting on the internet.

Even though finding a good therapist might take a lot of work itself.

Im speaking from personal experience of running away from similar issues by finding sophisticated ways of procrastination.


👤 EVa5I7bHFq9mnYK
What about night clubs? That's the place to party, kick and scream. Doing a lot of that in my retirement age.

👤 bradly
I'm sorry you are struggling. The book The Road Less Traveled was helpful for me. Wish you the best.

👤 la6471
Help others !!

👤 powerapple
we are sad because we don't make enough money. money cannot buy happiness, but it definitely gives you the freedom to quit your job when you don't have any other skills than coding. It is all finance. stop worrying about now, plan for future.

👤 r_harriso
My sympathies.

tldr; You (like many others) are having an existential crisis. The facts that previously underpinned your reality no longer seem true. Your challenge is to find some way to live authentically. What you've identified, a sense of belonging, is crucial part of living authentically for many people.

---

I'm 35, and though I have a growing family, I am also nostalgic for that time in my mid 20s where I had less money, but intimate friends were close at hand. Recently, I've been having a feeling that something is "over".

The best encapsulation of this feeling I've read is from the Witcher short story "The Bounds of Reason". "... a wish, as desire, a yearning. Faith that there are no limits to possibility"

The ignorance of youth is really ignorance of an unknown future stretches out ahead. As I've aged the limits of possibility made themselves apparent. That faith in limitlessness was broken, and that break caused an existential crisis.

The single piece of advice I have is to grapple directly with the nature of the human condition. There are lots of ways people deal with this: finding a purpose, finding a community (like a real one, not one based on a comercial product), finding god. Put simply, the

I've seen a lot of nice ideas: volunteering, relocating, exposing yourself to different kinds of people, finding projects, therapy. I've found those helpful. But that might not be enough.

A crisis is also an opportunity. This is a chance to reevaluate what your life means to you, and what you want to do with the time you have.

I wish you the best.


👤 GoldenMonkey
Move to a warm culture country. You will make friends and have a great social life.

👤 nnoitra
>only in 30s

Teens use a 30 yo smoker as evidence that smoking doesnt kill one even in old age


👤 tim333
Random idea but:

Leave and set up your own business/startup doing dev work similar to what you do now, ideally serving customers you are familiar with.

Hire some young people, trainee dev, secretary etc.

Better social and a career move forward. Even if you take a pay cut you are going from dev to more a ceo type thing on the cv.


👤 beebmam
Talk to a therapist, please, for your own health and the people around you.

👤 qaq
Travel more, go to countries with prevailing happy go lucky attitude.

👤 cupcakesupreme
Buy a piece of land in the desert. Paint it green. See what happens.

👤 kingkawn
Take some classes. Sounds like that worked in the past.

👤 imron
Go and introduce yourself to your neighbors from above

👤 ruchirp
get part time minimum wage jobs at Starbucks etc. You'll meet people different than you :)

👤 dlahoda
if you drink coffee or alcohol you may consider stop messing with your brain like that:)

👤 tarboreus
A lot of people are diagnosing depression here. That's fine and all, but this problem is one that seems extremely common for people I know in their 30s and beyond, at least in the United States.

It seems that people hit a certain age and just retreat. First, they move to a city or suburb where they know nobody so they can have a yard, drive to a Dairy Queen, and/or earn $15,0000 more. They enjoy the new lifestyle for 5-7 years—they get a car, they work on their house, maybe they have a kid. Then they look around and ask themselves, "What's the point of all this?" The thing that makes life worth living, which is, by and large, human connection, is just not there. Often all this is precipitated by a couple settling down into a relationship, then ignoring or uncultivating prior relationships and becoming 100% of each other's social lives, or, alternately, the development of workaholic habits combined with moderate addictions to boring things like sleeping pills or TV.

The reality is that maintaining or, even more difficult, creating a social life in your 30s and beyond requires energy, organization, thick skin, and relatively strong social skills. Often people don't have even one of these, let alone all four. And, as people age, and careers peak or stall, it becomes even more obvious that the only thing that really matters in life is human connection. Having kids helps here, but only so much.

A few decades ago, there were thriving cultures of local community that it was almost difficult not to join. People would, by and large, go to church. They were part of civic organizations like the Knights of Colombus, book club, weird utopian or improvement clubs (Bellamy societies), business associations, bowling league, Rotory Club, or INSERT WORKPLACE HERE Over 40s Poker. Local politics was a thing, the bar scene was a thing, dancing was a thing. The average person would be in ~5 of these. Nights where you would stay in would be more uncommon than nights you would go out.

What happened? It's hard to say exactly, and there are lots of books on it (Bowling Alone is a good one). But cable TV and the internet, I think, are big parts of it. It was just not possible before a certain year for the average person to stay in all the time. It was just too boring. TV sucked There were, functionally, no games as we now know them. No porn as we now know it. No social media, no link aggregators, no chat rooms, no dating apps. There were drugs, but they were more social drugs (coke and booze). MJ was pretty bad and niche, people were popping massively fewer sleeping pills and opiates. If you wanted to watch a movie, you left your home. If you wanted stimulation, or your fix of dopamine, probably you left your home.

It was a more dangerous world. People would booze, and fight. There was more serious crime before the 90s, discrimination. People fucked more, and with more people. There were predators. People would also get together and drink, and talk about ideas. There were social movements that were actually kind of new. People would get together and drink, and make music. There were scenes, undergrounds. You had the Harlem Renaissance, the Berlin School. Places were a thing, you would go to another city and the scene would be a different scene and the culture a different culture. There would be a cene around a bar, or a street, or a music store.

What OP is experiencing is the default state in the US in 2022. The inertia is to stay inside, be alone or with your immediate family, and to get your fix there. We've invented technologies of approximation and recapitulation. Social Media approximates human connection. Porn approximates sex. GrubHub approximates going to a restaurant. On social media and 24/7 news, all prior social and artistic movements are recapitulated. We try out the 60s in 2020, we try out the 70s in 2022. We larp as Malcolm X or Ira Glasser or Ronald Reagan. Place is collapsed, Montreal and Berlin get the same internet as San Francisco. There are fewer murders and less STDs and fewer missing children. There are fewer artistic movements, serendipitous connections, long afternoons betting on the races. Tolkein doesn't meet Lewis, Diddian doesn't meet Dunn, Hemingway stays away from the bulls. Unless you make a big effort, you live inside your head, and your head is inside and staring at a screen.

So maybe OP is depressed, but maybe it's not just OP. Maybe this time and place has something to do with it.


👤 codeyperson
Move into a share house

👤 ncmncm
One word: Volunteer.

👤 baby
Take some holidays

👤 tellmelies
quit your job, buy a one way ticket anywhere.

👤 anon9001
> As I write this post, my neighbors from above, probably college students, are having a party of their lifetime, laughing, kicking and screaming. I'm not even mad at them, just full of envy.

If you're fun (warning: it sounds like you're not fun), you can probably just party with them. We're the same age and I've had girlfriends that are still in college. It's not weird if you're not weird about it.

If you haven't had kids and aren't boring, 18+ is a valid dating range.

> Finding friends in my teens and 20s was as easy as going out literally anywhere.

It still is, you're just going to the wrong places or presenting yourself wrong.

> When I eventually went to work, I thought my life would only get better. And I made a good career, but in the process, steadily drifted off into isolation.

I think there may be some naivety here. Work is to acquire capital, to invest in assets, to generate capital, to avoid work. Work is not supposed to be fun or satisfying. Work is supposed to acquire capital.

I think in previous generations, you could ask coworkers out on dates, but that's dangerous and most SWEs are remote now anyway. It's best to keep work to just work.

> they're all full of lonely developers and other socially awkward people - short guys looking for girlfriends, unattractive/aging women looking for husbands, etc.

If that's not your scene, then don't go to those places. Find something that's cool and happening now and meet people doing things that excite you.

If the goal is young women, you can be in your 40s and find plenty of college girls interested in age gap relationships.

> All the "normal" people I knew in the past are now changing diapers and working to pay off their mortgages, which I guess is a kind of consolation.

The people I know with kids end up so defeated that they essentially martyr themselves with employment to give their children a better future. I understand that people willingly make this choice, but it's not for me. It's really good to see times changing and the idea of "normal" going away.

> Still, I'm only in my 30s, and it feels like my life is pretty much done. Doing things by myself is boring and depressing, and getting into a group of "normal" friends, of both genders, to hang out and laugh with, seems like an impossible goal.

This is your error because it's not impossible. I've seen whole communities of old people form meaningful friendships and they're all 70+.

It might be impossible for you while you're doing your career. That's ok. People will still be around when you're done working.

If you're at the peak of your dev career in your 30s, you can probably be retired by 40 with some good negotiation/investment.

> In case someone has any advice beyond finding a hobby, going to therapy, approaching random strangers, it would be greatly appreciated. I don't have any skills other than coding, so quitting the career would be a major financial hit. On the other hand, I feel that finding a non-coding job would be ultimately the best way to find new social groups, and get out of the apathy

IMO you're already in deep enough that you might as well see it through. Try to get a job with high total comp, work hard for a few more years, retire before 40. Learn enough about investing and finance that you don't screw it up.

Then simply do things you find legitimately interesting that involve other people. It's important that you actually care about the activity, so you can be happy and confident and present at your best.

You can't just "try ballroom dancing" and expect to meet a new group of cool friends. Compete with cool people at doing cool things, and then you'll have groups of cool friends.

Maybe audition for a rock band. Or start an NFT project. Or become a nature youtuber. Or dance on TikTok. Or whatever you'd do anyway, once you're not tied down by a tech job.


👤 CRConrad
When I was in about the same situation (and probably at about the same age) as you are now, a bit over twenty years ago now, I went to a bar and had a beer (and probably dinner) one Friday afternoon. Probably with a paperback SF novel in my pocket, as was my wont in those days, to have something to read while I ate and drank. The bar -- which fittingly was also named Friday -- can't have been too popular, because I had a whole booth to myself. (This was before everyone became too anti-social to even answer their phones, or use them to make actual voice calls to actual people, so it was customary to share space with strangers if space was in short supply.) Well, a few years later the bar closed anyway, so Friday is no more.

But, as I sat there in my booth reading my novel and nursing my beer(s), I noticed two women -- old friends, from what I overheard of their conversation -- in the booth next to mine. A while after that, I noticed that they had also noticed me, and a further while after that, we struck up a conversation. Can't recall if the blonde one, whom I at first found the more attractive of them, threw me a line or if it was me who interjected some joke into their conversation. Perhaps they asked what I was reading, or something. Anyway, after some time talking, I came to the conclusion that the brunette was even nicer -- not just good looking, but a great sense of humour (got in some real zingers about me, but all in good fun), and with a very sensible outlook on life in general. So I did my best to keep up my end of the conversation, took an interest in them -- no faking it, I was interested! -- and hung around until the talk turned to what to do for the rest of the evening. Can't recall who suggested another place, with music and dancing. So there we went.

The place was called Pikkuparlamentti, "Little Parliament", because it was right next to the parliament building. (Hm, also closed now -- am I cursed?!? Naah, at least media claimed it was torn down because the Finnish Parliament expanded their building in that direction.) This place was really popular at the time, so we talked some more while waiting in line to get in. At the door, disaster struck: "Sorry, no jeans and no sneakers!" I told the ladies I'd see them inside a little later, and took a taxi home to change and back there quicker than I would have thought possible. Then I danced, IIRC with both of them (possibly even at the same time), but definitely mostly with the brunette... Whom I had by this time realised was definitely the more attractive of them, and wondered how I could ever have thought otherwise. (See other comments about how attraction grows from more than superficial qualities.)

If all goes well, our son will graduate from "lukio" (~"high school") this year.

So:

1) Go to bars for dinner and beer after work.

2) Don't be so immediately judgemental.

3) Remember to bring a paperback novel.

[Edit: Ttpo.]


👤 throwawaynay
"they're all full of lonely developers and other socially awkward people - short guys looking for girlfriends, unattractive/aging women looking for husbands, etc."

So...people like you? you sound really judgemental man.

Since you have no friends(so nothing to hold you where you are, right?), and apparently a good source of income, I'd advise you to go remote, travel, try digital nomadism, go to meetups, meet other travelers, maybe try coworking spaces? hacker houses/airbnbs with people from lots of different places?


👤 csomar
Okay, I'm in my thirties now too. I'll give it a shot.

1. Get a hobby, travel, volunteer, all that crap: No. That will not solve the inherent issue and as a result you'll still be lonely and unsatisfied.

2. Therapy: lol. Just no.

3. Religion, Pet, Marriage: Will make you more miserable. Now, not only you are lonely, but also have obligations (taking your dog pop).

Here is what you wrote:

> my neighbors from above, probably college students, are having a party of their lifetime, laughing, kicking and screaming

-> Fair enough.

> I was broke, renting a big flat with a bunch of roommates, but young, healthy, and full of enthusiasm (and booze).

-> That's nostalgia for a previous era. Nothing suggests you'll like that lifestyle now.

> I thought my life would only get better. And I made a good career, but in the process, steadily drifted off into isolation.

-> An important part that everyone here is missing. Let's tag this as "Exhibit 1".

> they're all full of lonely developers and other socially awkward people - short guys looking for girlfriends, unattractive/aging women looking for husbands, etc.

-> Everyone here is blaming (and judging you for judging others). Attractiveness is relative, blahblabla. Nope. Old tech people are both unattractive and boring, that's for both sexes (or all sexes). That's reality. You can sugarcoat it in your brain, but that doesn't create "boobs" or make a man stylish.

> All the "normal" people I knew in the past are now changing diapers and working to pay off their mortgages, which I guess is a kind of consolation.

-> Marriage is basically that. A process to make you forget, just like religion. It doesn't give you a meaning, it just makes you busy so you don't think about it.

> Doing things by myself is boring and depressing, and getting into a group of "normal" friends, of both genders, to hang out and laugh with, seems like an impossible goal.

-> Exhibit "2".

> In case someone has any advice beyond finding a hobby, going to therapy, approaching random strangers, it would be greatly appreciated.

-> You have no interests in any hobby (otherwise you'll be doing it) and please don't creep strangers.

> On the other hand, I feel that finding a non-coding job would be ultimately the best way to find new social groups, and get out of the apathy

-> No.

==

Okay. Take Exhibit 1: You had an idea, growing up, of where you wanted to be in the future. You thought that by building a good paying career, you'll have the lifestyle you "deserve". You succeeded in part I (career) and now are surprised that life is not as exciting and rewarding as it should be. You are in "deception" mode. It's like paying for a very expensive car to only find out that it doesn't work.

Take Exhibit 2: You are boring. You don't even like yourself (spending time alone). Of course, people are not going to like you.

So how do you fix this. First one, you should accept your situation. You are deceived but nobody promised you the moon if you did build a career. That was your own thinking. You need to get over it and realize that the time has gone and you should move on.

Second, you should become interesting yourself. Surprise: You might be interesting already without you recognizing it. Do you have an inherent interest in finance, politics, geography, history, music? You can strike a conversation about these topics for 2-3 hours and still talk about nothing.

Here is the last bit: The place, time and circumstance doesn't matter. You only need one friend with whom you share an interest in one of these topics. You share a beer/coffee once or twice a week. You discuss the latest rate hike, stock bubble or why Hitler lost the war. Now, suddenly, reading a book is interesting because you are building ideas for your next talk/discussion with this hypothetical friend. Bonus point if this friend challenges your ideas, do some research himself or is hard to convince in an intellectually stimulating way. Topics like finance are good because there is always something "new" happening in the market. So the discussion carries on.

There is nothing magical about life. Neither there is an end goal by itself. Your brain is just torturing you. You can "run away" by traveling to far away lands to forget about your deception, cold weather and problems. Or you can have have a beer a couple times a week. Second choice seems easier to me and you'll still have your finances in order. You can always travel later, but then you'll make a more informed choice and avoid another "deception".


👤 getup8
I just started working at “scale-up” (~400 people) company with a dev team of 50 or so, mostly men, in their late 20s to 30s, mostly without kids yet. They have great camaraderie at work, even over remote channels, and often get beers after work, play ping pong, video games, etc. It’s not super cliquey, and if you try at all, you’ll be integrated into at least some of the fun. Anyway, I guess what I’m saying is, maybe consider joining a fun company with a good culture that’s not remote. Often a great way to meet friends, or at least good people to spend time with after work.

👤 Klonoar
You sound like a person who envisions a life they should have, feels they deserve that life, and are frustrated they don't have it - then judge everyone you wind up interacting with as you try to fix it.

My advice: get over yourself, you're your own worst enemy.

You might not love the people you meet at those meetups, for instance, but if you auto-reject everyone you meet you'll never wind up meeting people via those second or third tier connections. Nothing is saying you have to want to be best friends or date those people you decry, but you're cutting yourself off from potential groups of people that you could be introduced to. You're your own worst enemy here.

Getting a dog or traveling, as others here have said, probably won't fix it - a dog can't help you better yourself, and traveling might hide the issue but you'll still be the same ineffective blocked off "you" wherever you go. Work on yourself more.


👤 throwawayvibes
I got into miniature painting. First just figures to play games with, but then moved to busts and larger (75mm) display pieces. I pretty much have dedicated myself to these at one point. I still go out to local gaming stores to enjoy games with people, made friends that way to hang with, but what brought real peace to my mind is practicing art on a daily basis.