a) What are you doing at parties, then? You seem to do something wrong.
b) Go to a party where not everyone drinks, often quite a few persons will drive home so they won’t drink. Alternatively, drive other people home.
c) You can shift your sleep schedule by going to sleep 15 minutes (or more) later each day. It’s a quite simple mechanism, and it works.
d) Simple: attend a dancing course! It’s a simple yet valuable skill, worth the money and the time. Alternatively, you could watch tutorials on youtube.
e) You don’t. You don’t want to tell me that you’re busy with such other things every single evening. If that really is the case, take one of those activities and either let it fall or do it somewhen (I’ll just use this word, I don’t care whether it’s proper English) else.
Now, because that was your true rejection, it’s party time for you. Let your friend take you to a party, and have a good time.
I do have fun at some parties, for example pool staff parties with people I’ve known for years, where all the gossip is relevant to me and I get all the in-jokes. I simply am not extroverted enough to enjoy going to parties where nearly everyone is a stranger, and I have to keep up with my boyfriend’s manic introducing-himself-to-people pace. So the real solution is to track down more parties where I’ll know the people well, but that reduces the number of people I’ll meet, which according to my boyfriend is the point of going to parties.
Your dancing comment is very relevant. I should. I’m currently going swing-dancing once a week, and I should really take a couple of hip-hop classes or something. It would help a lot and I might actually enjoy clubbing then. I do like most of the music they play in clubs.
And no, I’m not busy with things every single evening, but there are an awful lot of days each week when I leave the house first thing in the morning and don’t get home until 9 pm, after having been on my feet or in the pool all day and then biking halfway across the city. Yeah, technically my Saturday nights are free, but I’m exhausted, and when I’m exhausted I get antisocial.
So then I was successful at defying d)? That’s a start, although I realize that I know your life far worse than you do, which is rather obvious. Your day might be to full, but I can’t reliably judge this from afar.
Or for people who work 6 am shifts multiple times per week, and start work at 9 am the rest of the time. I could conceivably stay up til 2 am partying if I stayed up til 2 am every night and didn’t have to get up until 10 every morning, but the real problem is that I can’t get up at 5 am on a Friday morning and be able to stay up late on a Friday night. I could conceivably change this by working fewer opening shifts and more evening shifts, but I like getting up early and then having my evenings at home.
a) What are you doing at parties, then? You seem to do something wrong. b) Go to a party where not everyone drinks, often quite a few persons will drive home so they won’t drink. Alternatively, drive other people home. c) You can shift your sleep schedule by going to sleep 15 minutes (or more) later each day. It’s a quite simple mechanism, and it works. d) Simple: attend a dancing course! It’s a simple yet valuable skill, worth the money and the time. Alternatively, you could watch tutorials on youtube. e) You don’t. You don’t want to tell me that you’re busy with such other things every single evening. If that really is the case, take one of those activities and either let it fall or do it somewhen (I’ll just use this word, I don’t care whether it’s proper English) else.
Now, because that was your true rejection, it’s party time for you. Let your friend take you to a party, and have a good time.
I do have fun at some parties, for example pool staff parties with people I’ve known for years, where all the gossip is relevant to me and I get all the in-jokes. I simply am not extroverted enough to enjoy going to parties where nearly everyone is a stranger, and I have to keep up with my boyfriend’s manic introducing-himself-to-people pace. So the real solution is to track down more parties where I’ll know the people well, but that reduces the number of people I’ll meet, which according to my boyfriend is the point of going to parties.
Your dancing comment is very relevant. I should. I’m currently going swing-dancing once a week, and I should really take a couple of hip-hop classes or something. It would help a lot and I might actually enjoy clubbing then. I do like most of the music they play in clubs.
And no, I’m not busy with things every single evening, but there are an awful lot of days each week when I leave the house first thing in the morning and don’t get home until 9 pm, after having been on my feet or in the pool all day and then biking halfway across the city. Yeah, technically my Saturday nights are free, but I’m exhausted, and when I’m exhausted I get antisocial.
So then I was successful at defying d)? That’s a start, although I realize that I know your life far worse than you do, which is rather obvious. Your day might be to full, but I can’t reliably judge this from afar.
Shifting sleep schedules around by going to sleep later each day does not work for people who are strongly aligned to certain sleep schedules.
Or for people who work 6 am shifts multiple times per week, and start work at 9 am the rest of the time. I could conceivably stay up til 2 am partying if I stayed up til 2 am every night and didn’t have to get up until 10 every morning, but the real problem is that I can’t get up at 5 am on a Friday morning and be able to stay up late on a Friday night. I could conceivably change this by working fewer opening shifts and more evening shifts, but I like getting up early and then having my evenings at home.