Making New Friends
One day you
find yourself in a new town, a strange city, a new job or just
maybe you've got divorced, moved to a new neighborhood and you
want to make new friends. What do you do? What is the best way for
an adult to make new friends? |
Making New Friends
By Skye Thomas
How do we make friends? More importantly if dropped into a new city
or a new job or a new school, how do we go about making a new friends?
Most of us don’t really think about it, but just sort of allow people to
float in and out of our lives without really paying any attention to how
we pull new people into our lives.
Years ago, my son was four years old and starting preschool. He had
been begging to go for about a year and was thrilled that he was finally
there. He had longed to play on their playground. He really loved all of
the noise and commotion of such a large day care center. He was
fascinated by the sight of all those other children running around
laughing and playing. He was so excited to dive in and start hanging out
with those other kids. He was naturally outgoing and energetic, and had
wonderful social skills so I knew he’d get along just fine. I was a bit
surprised when he came up to me after a few weeks and said that he was
really struggling because as ‘the new kid’ he didn’t have any friends.
“How do I get some friends to play with me?”
I told him that every week I would give him a new assignment. I
explained to him that you don’t want to run through these steps too fast
because it makes people nervous and they’ll push you away. You want to
give them time to adjust to you as you go through these steps.
For the first week all he had to do was smile a nice big smile and
say, “Hi!” He needed to walk around saying ‘hi’ to teachers and students
alike. Whoever seemed cool in his opinion. He didn’t have to be a geek
about it and say ‘hi’ to everyone, just those he thought seemed kind of
interesting. This gives people the impression that you’re an upbeat
positive person, but not too pushy. Greet them everyday with a smile on
your face.
For the second week, he had to start adding their names to the
cheerful greeting. When you see someone you like, smile real big and say
“Hi Joey!” or “Hi Suzy!” or “Hi Anthony!” Just start learning their
names and adding it to your hellos. This way they’re already used to
your pleasant greetings and it just personalizes it a bit. Greet them
with a personalized greeting everyday.
For the third week, I told him to give them an honest compliment
along with the greeting. Don’t make it something big and embarrassing,
but something small and comfortable for them to hear you say out loud in
front of others. “Hi Joey! I love your Ninja Turtle T-shirt!” or “Hi
Suzy! I really like the way you color within the lines, looks great!” or
“Hi Anthony! Nice haircut dude!” The key to this step is honesty. You
have to find something you truly like about the person to compliment.
People get an odd feeling and on some level can sense when others are
being fake or insincere with them. Be honest, be upbeat, and personalize
the greeting and the compliment. Again, do it every day. Consistency
really matters. You’re not just making them feel good about themselves,
but creating a public image of yourself as a consistently upbeat
positive person.
For the fourth week, I was going to have him include an invitation to
play with him in with his greetings, but he never got that far. He was
having such a good time with all of his new friends that he never really
bothered with any more lessons. He was very popular and well loved from
that point on.
Every time he’s changed schools or neighborhoods or started going to
a new church or gone away to camp or whatever, he has always used that
same system to make new friends. It’s foolproof and always works for
him. He’s just started high school this year and is incredibly confident
in his ability to make new friends. Now, he simply walks up to
strangers, flashes them his best grin, in a charming and almost clown
like manner he greets them with a big hug, and will tell them he loves
them before he even introduces himself. He just hams it up like a
beloved comedian and delivers whatever silly greeting will make kids
laugh. It’s beautiful to watch him. There isn’t a shy bone in that kids
body!
Can we as adults do the same thing? I know that if I really look at
my own behaviors, the times that friends have seemed a bit scarce were
when I wasn’t doing a lot of reaching out and greeting them. If I wasn’t
personalizing my conversations towards them and I wasn’t handing out the
compliments, then new people didn’t seem to stick around and develop
into friendships. Most people are a lot more insecure and shy then they
let on, and they really feel good when someone else notices them enough
to learn their name and to greet them with a real compliment. It usually
makes them feel comfortable enough to respond and to begin opening up.
It’s a really simple exercise… consistently greet them, personalize
the greeting, and then add a compliment to the greeting, if you aren’t
friends by then, offer an invitation along with the greeting. People
love to feel likeable. This system lets them know that you think they’re
likeable without making you feel like an uncomfortable nerd. It’s slow
enough paced to not be forced, unnatural, or pushy. We humans have funny
little behavioral rules and rituals that we follow instinctively and red
warning flags pop up when someone doesn’t approach us just right. Deep
down, I think we’re still just as skittish and easily spooked away as
the first cavemen. Give them time to check you out. It’s amazing how
beautifully this works.
Copyright 2003, Skye Thomas, Tomorrow’s Edge
About The Author
Skye Thomas began writing books and articles with an everyday
practical approach to spirituality, motivation, and inspiration in 1999
after twenty years of studying spirituality, metaphysics, motivation,
and parenting. More of her articles can be found at
www.tomorrowsedge.net as well as free previews of her books.
skye@tomorrowsedge.net
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