by LUCY ORMONDE
About a month ago I was alone. And I was struggling.
I found out I needed to have a small operation on my back, and when I couldn’t get an appointment in Sydney (where I live) I decided to travel back to Melbourne (where I’m from.) I’ll usually use any excuse to get back to my ‘hood, but this time it made sense – mum would be able to drive me to and from the appointment and the clinic I’d go to already had my records on file.
The operation itself was no big deal. I’d never had anything cut into me before, but it was over in less than an hour and in the nurse’s own words, I was “almost too relaxed”.
But it was what happened after that shook me.
I spent the next couple of days hanging out at Mum’s place, lying on my stomach with the TV remote, a stack of books and my laptop within reach. Mum fussed over me (like all mothers do).
My besties dropped in for cups of tea and made the most of a rare succession of days where there were no distractions, no people to meet and no places to be. For a moment it felt like I was 10 years old again and home from school with tonsillitis; a mix of vulnerability and comfort all at once.
And then suddenly it’s Monday morning and I’m on the 6am flight to Sydney. I’m curled up in the corner of my seat in the second back row, and I’m crying into the hood of my oversized made-for-a-Melbourne-winter jacket. The air hostess asks me what’s wrong… and I have nothing.
How do I tell someone the reason I’m sobbing is because I’ve just realised I need someone to change the dressing on my stitches and I don’t know who to ask? I’ve realised that I don’t have anyone to ask. That I’m alone. That I’m not that close to anyone in this city.
I have people in my life - three gorgeous roommates, some distant relatives in the hills district and the most nurturing, beautiful group of work colleagues a girl could ask for. But I can’t exactly ask them to “spell check this news story and check the wound on my back,” can I?
That’s why I felt alone. And it seems ridiculous. The cabin crew called for an “arm doors and cross check” and it suddenly hit me that everyone on my speed dial list lives in another state. Everyone I turn to when something’s going wrong, the people I call when I need a cuddle, the relatives and friends who drop everything when I need to talk…. they’re all an hour’s flight away.
It’s a funny thing, being alone and living away from your people. A maze of emotions. Some days meeting new people and making new friends is like a drug you can’t get enough of. But other days – the days you’re vulnerable - it’s easy to fall in a heap. When you’ve known people forever you don’t mind burdening then with your problems from time to time, because you know you’d do the same for them and you’ve done it a million times in the past.
It’s the same feeling when you’ve got a ridiculously funny story to share. There’s a weird moment when something’s happened and you’re not sure whether your new friends will find it as funny as you do.
There’s fear they’ll look at you blankly while you’re almost rolling on the floor laughing. You know how they’re going to react. You know they’re not going to ask stupid questions; that they’re never going to judge.
But villages take time to build and those speed dial-esque friendships take time to form. So in the meantime, I buy an industrial sized packet of tissues on the way to the office. I turn up to work like nothing’s wrong. And when someone (read: everyone) sees those puffy plane eyes and asks if something’s wrong, I answer “damn hay fever”.
And they all know I’m lying.
Have you ever felt alone or isolated? How did you cope?







Comments
174 Comments so far
Loneliness is obviously an important topic to a lot of people!
I love having three of four good gfs. I’ve found it’s harder to make friends in a new place when you’re older, self employed and living with your partner (rather than in a share situation). Doh!
I’m soooo frightened of losing my partner and being totally alone and ending up wearing the same pantyhouse two or three months in a row. Now I nag him constantly about stopping smoking. He is sick of my whinging.
I did make a couple of interesting gfs who seemed cool but they turned out to be nasty narcissists, I was pretty upset over that! When you’re vulnerable, you’re prey to some types of people, unfortunately.
I really feel I should have more friends after being here seven years and that I’m failing the test.
But I guess that even though it’s been a very difficult experience on lots of levels, I AM becoming a little wiser (and I bloody needed to).
Good luck to us all!
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Lucy, your story seems to resonate with everyone. It’s not a great space to be in at all and I have only just accepted that’s how I’m feeling and it’s hard. So hard. I moved back to Sydney after living OS for 6 years. While I have amazing family and friends, the friendships aren’t the same. I can’t ‘go home’ twice. Feeling misplaced is what I’m struggling with the most. It’s tough when friends/bf say “you’ll be fine, you have no problems making friends etc etc” when it’s just not like that. I feel so numb and in limbo. But I’m saying I have hay fever, constantly.
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I’m moving to Sydney at the end of the month and stumbled across this post.
How did you find your footing Lucy? I can’t even find a sharehouse (at least not one that means I don’t have to share a room with five other people)!
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Hi Laura, I understand how you feel about not wanting to share a house or room with many other people, as for finding a sharehouse or flat try looking on gumtree sydney, i have always found people to share with, some good some not so good. My girlfreind could not fit in here in sydney, she was from Iowa in the US, I was all she had and making freinds for her was difficult, so much so she felt she did not fit in here in Sydney, although she loved it in the UK and in Germany where we had limited freinds but the ones we knew were very good
I hope you found what your looking for! Even that share room lol
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Lucy – thank you, thank you, THANK YOU for this beautiful piece. You’ve captured my feelings and made me feel less like a lonely dork, shovelling Cadbury popping-chocolate into my gob whilst trying to stay afloat, and more like a girl with legitimate feelings with too much on her plate.
Let me give you some background: I moved to Perth to live with my boyfriend of almost 2 years. He was accepted to medical school in WA and so had to move to study. I gave it a year of long distance and then decided to move over too! For the most part, we were great. We had a big group of mutual friends, we went to brunch on Sundays and we loved each other like crazy people. But, after a year and a half, we started cracking. I felt like he didn’t make enough time for me, and he felt like I didn’t understand his uni commitments.
So we split.
Let me tell you that being over 4000km’s away from your friends and family is made all the more difficult when your ‘person’ and a lot of your ‘mutual’ friends disappear overnight. It sucks big-time. Like you Lucy, I had work friends, who were and are still fantastic, but it’s not the same. You need a solid support network to hold you up when times get tough. I was recently promoted so full-time work was hectic, I was (and still am) studying a Masters full time, and at that stage I was gearing up to complete an international volunteering placement. And whilst that all sounds very exciting, boy was I down in the dumps. Sad sad sad and lonely. Stress and loneliness are not good friends at all. To top that all off – I missed out on a place in medical school for next year, effectively shattering my ideal little world.
So – I’ve decided to move back to my home state of QLD to ground myself before I take on my next big plan. This is the best thing for me right now, being back where the world isn’t upside down. Don’t get me wrong – I love Perth and have made some very special friends, but right now I need to just BE and not have to worry about being on my own. I’ve made the decision that’ll let me get back on my feet and regain my confidence to tackle my next challenge.
I’m so inspired by your strength and determination and I really hope you feel better soon. Being dealt a blow and feeling crappy when you’re far away from loved ones can be so challenging – keep your head up. And until things are better – I think your doctor would prescribe a few extra trips to Melbourne
Thinking of you xxxx
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I found myself alone in California 16 years ago. I’d moved there for ‘love’ but it didn’t work out. It was a difficult culture to break into, because although everyone was superficially ‘friendly’, no one had time for friendships. I ended up living there for 13 years – met my husband and started a family. But it was such a strange culture after the ‘easiness’ of living in Adelaide, making friends and just being natural. There is a saying ‘you can never go home again’ – and I have found it to be true. ‘Home’ is a feeling, a state of mind.
But isn’t it sad that we can never go home again? Or have a real feeling of being part of a loving community. It seems to me that over the years we have isolated ourselves more and more. Getting caught up in the ‘rat race’, treating relationships as another disposable product, finding less time for our families and the children we so desperately wanted. I really wish things will change. I hope we can all slow down and start to live a meaningful life filled with loving relationships.
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Lucy you made me want to fly from London to Sydney immediately and a little tear ran down my face! Know what you mean about missing friends, would kill for a catch up with tea and cakes and all the girls as we used to in your front room! Miss you and hope you’re okay xxx
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I’m generally very content and happy with my own company. Time spent alone has never been an issue for me, instead I relish each and every opportunity I get as my job requires me to be very social and interact with a large number of people daily, which I can find exhausting as I’m quite an introvert.
The saddest moment of my life so far was when I was going through a tough time with my then-husband. I had moved to his country for work (which was how we met) and the marriage had definitely deteriorated to the point of no return. However, as part of the court system of this country, we were ordered to attend a marriage conselling session with a court-appointed marriage/family counsellor before we could be divorced. The guy we had spoke no english, thus a transalator was brought in to translate on my behalf although my husband spoke fluent english, I think they thought it was best to have a neutral person there.
Despite their best intentions, the counsellor who was male and very traditional, sided with my ex husband’s point of view and could not understand why I could no longer be part of an abusive relationship while the transalator who was also male clearly was of the same opinion and in fact barely transalated anything I said, and was fidgeting the entire time. In fact, several times he even added his own advice and opinion telling me to just keep quiet and “do as your husband says”.
There has never been a moment in my entire life when I have felt more alone and vulnerable than at that point, 25 years old, sitting in a roomful of 3men who could not care less about my wellbeing or safety, but had in fact made up their mind as to whose side they were on (and it wasnt mine!), in a foreign country away from any support system or family, trying to keep my marriage together or at least get off the crazy trainwreck that our marriage had become. I was scared, confused, numb and most scaringly resigned to the fact that this was my life. I had been broken down for so long and had such low self-esteem that I was starting to question my own judgement. The memory of how alone I felt that day has haunted me ever since and to this day, I get panicky whenever I get flashbacks of that time.
When I finally got out, I promised myself that no day in my future was ever going to be worse or lonelier than that day, and although I still live in the same country for work and some memories or flashbacks of the past often make their way into my present, I try to focus on the good things in life and be grateful that I have freedom and the power to make my own choices in life.
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Yes… I hear you Lucy.. I moved to Sydney almost four years ago from overseas. I live with my wonderful husband who has family in Sydney. I have a couple of cousins here too, lovely work colleagues, and a great bunch of friends who organise social outings at weekends, BUT I miss my besties from back home (on the other side of the world), and I miss my sisters who I used to be in almost daily contact with, and no matter how much I love life here and how busy I can be I still have my lonely moments.. I just miss having girlfriends I can meet up with at a moment’s notice to go shopping or watch X Factor with or go for a run with and I miss meeting my sister for a glass of wine and a goss after work. My friends here are great but we don’t have the history, the back stories and the foundations that I have with my friends back home who have been hanging out with me since my first day in Uni!
I wonder if I’ll ever have that in Sydney and a little sad part of me thinks I just might not, and maybe my new friends, this fabulous city and the sunny days will just have to make up for it!
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Lucy this story is magnificent. It captures exactly that strange feeling of being surrounded by great people but not having anyone nearby to be really intimate, real, scared, happy, sad, whatever with. Thank you so much for putting into words something I’ve been trying to express for a couple of years now.
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Hi Lucy, I can SO relate to how you feel.
I moved from Sydney to Washington, DC two months ago with my husband, our 22-month-old daughter and our one-eyed pug. I’m so excited to have the opportunity to live in the US, but I’ve been feeling the pinch of loneliness a lot this past week. We’ve just moved into a new house that is almost completely empty (the stuff we shipped from Australia doesn’t arrive until next month), hubby is already overseas on his first work trip, and I hardly know anyone in this town. Strangely enough, I wrote about my own experience of loneliness just yesterday (http://ladytam-tam.com/main/page_blog.html).
It’s so comforting to read your post and all of the supportive, candid comments from MM readers. Thanks for sharing!
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Lucy I’ve had similar surgeries to you, where they’ve cut open a spot down on my lower back and I’ve had to have the dressing changed every day. Had it done twice, once at age 20 and once at age 35. Both times I was living on my own and the hospital organised for community nurses to come to my house each day to do it for me. So there are facilities for that.
Having said that, yeah I was in hospital last week for my hysterectomy, and it was 2 hours away from home. While the girl next to me had visitors all day every day, I had none, except for my wonderful husband who stayed the whole time and put up with terrible hospital accommodation to do so. I counted my lucky stars I had him for this surgery. And each night when he left it was a pretty lonely time, and I counted the hours before seeing him again.
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I have has several a similar experiences.
My only family is my invalid mother & my disabled sister who live on the outskirts of Melbourne & when I have had to have surgery there is no way they could be of any assistance.
The most mortifying experience was about 10 years ago when I had to have day surgery for endometriosis. The surgery had been cancelled on two occasions due to nurses strikes, so by the third admission date I had not organised someone to pick me up when I the hospital confirmed my admittance a week before. They told me unless I was able to give them a name within 24hrs they would have to refer me to social services. they made me feel like a pariah. How can you NOT have someone to pick you up & be with you for 12hours following surgery?
I tried to explain that when you organise a friend to pick you up & stay with them overnight, because you live alone & then your surgery is cancelled multiple times, you put off asking until the last minute.
I felt completely alone as i had no family to assist & I felt I could not burden married friends with their own families, another friend who had offered was away. In the end a wonderful couple from church, both doctors, I had known for about 15 years offered to have me & a co worker picked me up from hospital, not once, but after three surgeries.
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I am going “home” to France after 8 long years and two children. I want it to be a home-coming.
I am also spending $15K and all our annual leave for the year, which will mean vacation care for the kids for all of next year, no other holidays until Xmas 2013.
But my always-happy-to-see-me grandparents (with big houses) have now all died.
My cousins, aunts and uncles are letting me know that they don’t know what they’re doing for Xmas, they can’t take time off cos they’re saving up their annual leave to go skiing later, that I can stay at their place for two days (not the week I requested.)
I am devastated.
All my family are in France (except for one parent in Sydney), I consider it my birthplace and “real home”. But it’s obviously not.
I am alone with my new family in Australia.
Alone.
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Oh Camille. This sounds very hard.
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Thanks.
I’m trying to lower my expectations and take control of the situation by deciding to take a road trip in new places in France- but unfortunately, this will mean more money spent as we’ll now be paying for accommodation.
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Wow. Thanks for writing this post Lucy. It is incredibly brave and honest. I moved to Sydney by myself too and felt the same sadness at realising I am alone and there is no one to come at 3am or to take care of me when I’m sick. Now my mum lives here but I still don’t have super close friends and really miss that ease and comfort of a long friendship and being able to rely on each other. It IS very lonely and isolating not having that and very difficult being your own support network. Sometimes I worry about what would happen if I didn’t have my family and I crave friendships that are as close and loyal as family.
We are all so connected through Facebook, Twitter etc these days but often lack depth in relationships. I feel this is a significant contributor to the rise of depression/anxiety in the western world. It is especially difficult for international/exchange students and those who have relocated for work. I hope to find people soon that I can connect with on a deeper level and build a great friendship where we become like family.
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Lucy, loved your post. I related so much and was comforted by it and all of the comments associated.
I recently returned home from an international trip with my sister and a good friend, both of whom still live in the area we grew up in while I moved to Atlanta a year ago. When they boarded their plane to head to my old home I just felt so alone. I cried the whole flight to Atlanta and felt the sting a little more when one of a very few friends backed out on picking me up from the airport. I’ve been putting myself out there more and more (from joining a kickball league to an online dating site), but none of it has brought any great friendships or dates yet.
I’ve been encouraged by folks who say the first year they lived in a new place was the hardest and I’ve finally gotten past that point. It takes time, but I believe it will get better. Still, nice to know and remember I’m not alone in my loneliness.
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Life is funny really, I’ve recently returned to my hometown after living overseas for 5 years and I’m feeling isolated and out of sorts. A lot can change in 5 years, quite a few of my old friends aren’t living here anymore and I’ve drifted apart from a lot of the friends who are still living here. I’m sure it will get easier over time, but at the moment I’m wondering what I’m doing here to be honest
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I lived away from my family and friends for two years trying to explore the world and become more independent. I became extremely homesick and lonely but at first I felt too proud and ashamed to move back home.. When I finally did, everyone had moved in with their lives and I didn’t fit in to my old friendships and my family smothered me! I am still trying to find out where I fit and how to find that peace within. Thank you for sharing your story xx
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I went overseas for a year, and by the time I moved back to Sydney, all my family had moved to various other countries (we’re expats, so it was bound to happen). The worst part of coming back was not going back ‘home’, but having to start out alone in a new home. I couldn’t afford to live in the same suburb as before, so I was also somewhat isolated from friends I had before I went away. I was able to make a great friend in my housemate, and I have gained the confidence to do things on my own. It is depressing when something great or terrible or otherwise noteworthy happens and I have to wait until my family wakes up on the other side of the world. I deal with my loneliness by not dwelling on how it used to be when my family was here, but instead I made a ‘family’ in great friends.
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I didn’t leave my home town, but all my friends did. I’m not much into going out and “making friends”, I’m just not that type of person, so when I lost my best friend a couple of years back, well let’s just say I now have nobody in my life who I can talk to about everything and nothing. I have family around me constantly and I’m fine but it does get lonely. But hey if mr right would get his shit together and come for me….!!!!!
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I recently got a fantastic promotion with a company I love, in a discipline I adore. I wasn’t looking to move, but I couldn’t say no to the opportunity. So here I am, alone, in a foreign Country. I didn’t have much time to think about what I would be leaving behind and to be honest, I’m still trying not to think about it. Sure, Im in touch regularly with my family and friends, but like you, Lucy, I dread the moment when I realise there is no one to help with the little things….constructing Ikea furniture for example. The first bout of homelessness came the other day when a hot guy entered the office and I had no one to giggle with! But I’m philosophical about it. Everything happens for a reason and there will be a day soon when I can introduce my new friends with my old. And that’s exciting!
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I moved from a country town to the city with my man. I have lots of family in my new town however I didn’t grow up with them and they continue on with their lives as if I’m not here. I don’t get invites from them even tho I have invited them over time and time again.
I left my country town excited because I wasn’t just leaving my close family and friends for no one I had family where I was going….. I don’t feel that anymore I moved away to no friends and no real family and with a partner doing fifo it was a very lonely hard time for me.
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I’ve spent 3 weeks away from my husband and realized he is my ‘ village’ never felt so lonely before.
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I felt exactly like this living on the Gold Coast. My dad died and i chose to stay on the Gold Coast away from all family and friends. Awful decision….I moved back because at that time I needed the support
We all feel like this Luce xo
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Oh Lucy thank you for this article it was everything that I needed to validate they way I felt. My bestie and I are both avid followers of MM and she sent me this link specifically as 9 months ago I moved from North Queensland to Sydney for work.
I moved for a new challenge, put myself out of my comfort zone, better work opportunities and because it was ‘my time’. I knew it would be hard but the crushing loneliness you mentioned was more of a struggle than I had expected. I like some of the other replies have mentioned, didn’t feel like I could admit I felt lonely to anyone and that i would be a sign of weakness.
I have family a few hours away and friends a few hours north, but nobody local.
Thank goodness for a girl at work who took the time to invite me to dinner etc so at least now I have ‘a’ local friend.
My two closest friends were interstate before I moved so that wasn’t as much my personal struggle, just that feeling of being disconnected simultaneously to both your new life and old life. Then going home and realizing that time didn’t stand still just because you chose to move away.
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Ill be your friend. Where in Sydney are you?
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I moved from Melbourne to Brisbane for a job in my 20s with 2 small children. My then bf (now husband) was still in Melbourne finishing up a work contract and I knew no one except a male friend from melbourne a few years younger than me, my daycare lady and my new colleagues. I got severe tonsillitis 3 weeks into my new job. It was awful. I don’t remember most of those few days, except I forgot to tell my male friend I was sick and he was coming to visit. I sat in the lounge that night with one drink and he was so pumped to see an old friend that it took him hours to realise I wasn’t well.
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My alone moment was being in the labour ward the night before giving birth.
Knowing that I was going to have my son the next day and have no one there with me just made me a stronger person.
I knew at the time that my situation wasn’t ideal but I had no other choice. So instead of allowing it to upset me I just soldiered on and did what I needed to do.
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I have moved cities twice and I reckon it takes 18 months – 18 months to have friends that you can ask to remove an unwanted rodent, pick you up from the car service place or the airport etc etc… I remember thinking if I fell and broke my leg how long would it take before someone noticed…. Good news is, it gets better!
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I have felt this way, but my reality is that the first time I put myself out there and ask for help: Could you help me carry this huge Ikea flat pack inside? Would you mind helping me out by holding the ladder while I clean my gutters? Can I borrow your X,Y or Z? and offer: oh you are moving this weekend? What can I do to help? Clean? bring lunch? Take the kids? It is making these requests, or offers that often cement a new “speed-dial” relationship, as you move it from having a coffee and a chat, or taking about home at work, to actually showing some vulnerability, and willingness to reciprocate!
Feeling alone is a horrid scary stomach churning emotion, but it can only be fixed by putting in the work…
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I have moved many times and had to make new friends, it isn’t easy and it takes time and effort . Talk to people at work, join a book group or another social group. See if there is a clinical nurse at a nearbye medical centre to change the dressing. Good luck!
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Luce, I feel alone like that all the time, and I have my family and friends around me. For me it is less about being alone *right now* and more about feeling as though I might be alone forever. I am 32 in two weeks and EVERYONE is married, getting married or having babies. I swear I know, literally, 10 or 11 people who have had babies this year already. Yep, my biological clock is ticking and I am single and childless.
I wrote it about tonight actually:
http://www.lucindainthesky.blogspot.com
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I really like your blog.
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Lucinda, I’ve been married for nearly 30 years and sometimes I’ve felt the loneliest I’ve ever felt in my life. From the outside everyones life looks so much better, but there are a hell of a lot of untold stories out there. I’m sure the mothers of the kids you teach don’t all have happy lives.
Focus on making yourself happy and living your life with love and I’m sure you will attract someone worthy of being in your life. Don’t settle.
Your blog is great by the way.
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Thank you guys, you’ve made my day.
Anon58, I do know this. I’ve seen enough stories that have made broad daylight (some which looked nothing short of idyllic in the world of Facebook) to realise things aren’t always as they seem. I guess its just easy and convenient to forget that when you are too busy being perfectionist and hypercritical of yourself.
Thanks again guys
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Hey Lucinda – from where I sit, time is on your side! In my (far too many) years in the wilderness, which consisted of all of my 20s and most of my 30s, I used to try to console myself with the thought that everyone has their own path and their own ‘timeline’, and although the thing I wanted for myself may be now for A, B and C, it wasn’t ‘my’ time.
It happened for me in the 11th hour, and I now have two lovely (exhausting) boys. Despite this, I often catch myself reminiscing on the ‘good old days’ when I had the freedom that you have and that I can only dream of now! Conveniently I have forgotten all the torture that I was also living with of wondering whether I was destined to die alone!
But you’re still young and have it all to come. Good luck!
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Yes I have felt that alone…bringing up my baby away from my family with an absent father. My answer was moving home to raise my little boy with the live and support of my whole family…best thing I ever did. Thanks for sharing – your loneliness is familiar, sad and poetic x
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Oh….Lucy ! If you were in Brissy, not only would my wife and I come around and change your dressing each day ANNNNND cook you your dinner. If you were good….we’d consider some form of adoption.
Hope that your back is better !
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Im feeling quite alone right now. I’m 37 weeks pregnant, my husband works away and doesn’t return back for another 16 days and my in laws are all in Brazil attending the wedding of my husband’s brother and my sister in law.
While many people have put their hands up saying they’ll help with my toddler I’m still not in a friendship with anyone who I’m comfortable enough to rely on 100% and I do feel like I’m inconveniencing everyone.
So I’m keeping my legs crossed tightly for another 16 days and hoping for and willing the best!!
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Totally relate. I’ve lived on the Sunshine Coast for 2 and a half years now, and it’s only recently that I have started feeling like I am getting a bit of a base. A friend from this workplace, another from that one, a few people from my home town, that I have met since being here.
I remember ringing my best friend a few years ago, absolutely bawling my eyes out because I wanted to see Sex and the City and I had no girlfriends to go with.
And what was worse was that all my friend who live away are having babies, (a few onto their second now),so calling them-wouldn’t get a response, have to wait for replies from texts. Still love each other dearly, but it’s a condo every few months rather than a few times a week. It’s so hard….
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Didn’t mean for that to be such a downer….
Just gets me down more than I think maybe.
I did mean to add that I often try to invite the ‘new person’ to things we are doing with mates-If we have invited some friends around to watch the footy I might invite the girl from work and her partner, or we are having drinks at the surf club with one of my boyfriend’s work mates, inviting another friend along.
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I do relate to this. At 19 I moved to Sydney from Canberra knowing virtually no one up here. 4 years later I have people I could ask for help. But it does take time.
In the immediate time, you could probably seek the support of community nurses or a GP to help with the wound on your back.
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I have felt alone all my life , as my birthparents dont acknowledge they had me – im now 48 so no siblings grandparents in our life is lonely.
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So sorry to hear that ladybird X
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Understand you completely.
I’ve pretty much been single all my life up-to the age of 28 when I met now boy.
However, being single for so long, meant that my relationships with my girlfriends were my “relationship”. Add to that, that our lil’ possy have all been friends since high school, well – we know everything there is to know about each other – we even have our own weird language thing.
Furthermore my immediate family are REALLY close – in that kind of, everyone talks at once and NOTHING is sacred kind of way.
So when I moved to Canberra this year to be with the boy, from Sydney – where I’ve only ever lived, well it’s been a tough 6 months at times. Plus my sister had 2 beautifual kids and I’m missing them grow up and babysitting them.
I’m not upset about the move, but building the types of bonds I’ve had with my girls and family, takes several years. It takes going through highs and lows, spits and spats, laughs and changes.
Wish time would hurray the hell up though! (Except not so, as my 30th is FAR TOO CLOSE!).
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Oh Lucy, I am feeling exactly the same right now. It sucks and is so incredibly damn BLEAK.
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Oh Lucy, I really identified with this one. I’ve started afresh about eight times now and there is always that one event at the beginning of a move where I find myself thinking “who can I call if something goes wrong”.
The truth is, there are so many people out there who would love to help you out, you just have to ask. And hey, what a great way to meet new people “Hi, my name’s Lucy – do you mind changing the dressing on my back?”
Gorgeous piece. xx
(4 kids, 20 suitcases and a beagle)
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I know exactly how you feel. I’ve been here for just over a year but had a stroke in April, I’m 40 !!! I have nobody close here except my husband who has a very demanding job. I can’t work until next year probably and feel very very isolated. It’s hard to make friends at my age when you don’t have children either, sucks.
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I know this is a bit off topic, but can I offer my piece of advice for making friends? Say yes, always, every time. If someone asks you to go ten pin bowling, which you hate, say yes. Dinner on the night of you favourite TV show? Say yes. First, you may have fun doing something you don’t like. Second, you only need to say no twice and for people to stop asking you – which means you won’t get asked to something you would like to go to.
Ten years ago I moved back to my home town, but I didn’t know anyone other than my parents. It takes time, I know it is hard, but it does work out.
Also – don’t worry about the age thing. I’m 30, my best friend is 41, the person I’m closest to at work is 60, and one of the people I’m closest to in my sporting team is 19. Age means less in a friendship than in a relationship!
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Lucy! Lets hang out!
We should get all of the fresh Sydneysiders together to create a new tribe for ourselves.
I moved to Sydney nearly 2 years ago and sometimes I still stuggle with feeling alone. Have you ever had that thought of ‘if I vanished or if something happened to me right now, no one would know’. When you are surrounded by your bestest of friends and family, someone always knows where you are. Sadly sometimes this is not the case when you pack up and move away from everyone.
Like Bec, I have found Sydney to be very cliquey. It takes a lot of time and effort to make your way into someone’s tribe.
Anyway, long story short…we should hang out
xx
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Can our tribe have a name?
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I’m in! When and where?
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I swear we aren’t all cliquey in Sydney! Would be happy to welcome you to the city.
I had that exact thought in France – I was very sick and had the thought of ‘If I died, no-one would come and look for me’. Not entirely true, but a horrible thought nonetheless.
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Our tribe can definitely have a name!
yes yes yes!
Lets make this happen! Woo!!
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The Foriegners Unite?
haha oh I don’t know
Im going to get my think on!!
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How about Welcome to Sydney? Something that includes people who currently live here as well as newcomers.
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I thought of another name…The Circle…? Thoughts?
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Yes I am right now, My Husband in the RAAF and left on Monday for pre-deployment training and my Mum and Dad are overseas at the moment, normally all would be fine but we lost our daughter last week and I feel terrible right now… Thank goodness for my son…
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I am so sorry for your loss
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Sending you love and best wishes.
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Gosh I hope this doesn’t sound rude, but if your parents are away, and your husband is going away, who is going to help you deal with your grief so soon after your daughter passed away??? I’m so sorry for your loss.
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Sending you a big cyber hug:-)))
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That was beautiful Lucy and it actually made me tear up a little. I can totally relate, I am from Perth and have been living in Melbourne for the past 4 years, and unfortunately I haven’t been able to find my village in Melbourne as yet (and at this point, I am doubting that I ever will). I love Melbourne, it’s such a great city, as I’m sure you know, but it’s so cold and still doesn’t feel like home. Whenever I come back here after visiting Perth, I feel a little sad, lonely and heavy hearted. I wonder if that ever goes away…
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Oh, Lucy! This makes me sad pandas, and also makes me want to give you a hug. My bestie just moved from Sydders to Melbourne, I think I’ll send this to her because I think you’ve articulated the longing and the mixed feelings and the ambivalnce of moving interstate beautifully… And I hope you’re ok! KL xx
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It’s interesting reading these comments as someone who is contemplating a move (from Sydney to Canberra). The majority of posters are talking about how hard it is, but no one is saying what I’m wondering about…whether it has been worth it and they are happy they made the move????
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Hey Jo Jo
I moved from Canberra to Adelaide a while back and then from Adelaide to Sydney. I had a really mixed experience in that the move to Adelaide was really very tough and I struggled in a similar way to Lucy.
I just missed my friends and family at home SO much – to the point that I never really let myself settle in there. I flew home every few days and never really made Adelaide my home. It never felt like home…
But here in Sydney I have had a great experience. It’s been tough. A new city is always tough at first. I really love it though and can see myself being here for the foreseeable future anyway.
The difference was my mindset. I let myself accept Sydney. I knew it was for the long term and have thrown myself in to making this my home and building a new life. I didn’t do that last time around, I was living in a semi-state of denial about where I was based!
Not sure if that helps… at all. Probably not!
Jamila x
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That’s a great answer Jamila and actually really helps.
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Hey Jojo, I think it depends on what you’re moving for – I came to Sydney for my job. Was it worth it? One thousand times yes. Life is hard sometimes – and I always expected it to be when I moved here – but my job is incredible.
Like lots of commenters have said, I think it just takes time. And in the few weeks since I wrote that post, I can already see things getting so much better
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I moved to Melbourne from London for a man (madness, I know, but i’ve always been an irrationally optimistic person).
It was really hard at first, even though people were as friendly as could be expected. Everyone seemed to have gone to school together *and* still kept in touch – it felt like a country town x10000. It took me about six months to be able to introduce someone to my husband who he didn’t already know in some way.
Nearly 20 years on, I love the place and can’t imagine living anywhere else.. So, YES, it was worth it.
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Ive moved countries a couple of times and Its damn difficult to get to that level of friendship as ana adult but it does happen!
I have some very best buds in NZ, London and Toronto who I miss dearly. and My move to Sydney took years and a divorce before i really made good close mates.
One of those good mates is leaving to go to the USA, and its a sad loss, but great for them. one thing about life nowadays is we move a lot, where the work is, the travel and adventure, the wife to boyfriend. So our people move in and out of our lives.
I reccommend meetup.com as a way to find like minded people to chat to, it gest you out of the house! And remember the people you are chatting to and covering up how you feel probably have their struggles too. So see if they want to go for a coffee and unload a little bit…. you might find they are relived to unload a tiny bit too… and so a friendship is made
( NB I learned this the hard way)
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Oh come on!! As if you can’t relate to this!
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Hugs Lucy, I completely understand. I’ve been there and after 6 years and two babies I still really miss living close to my mum and sisters and best friends. I’ve never made any friends as close and as wonderful as those I left behind in Sydney and sometimes it feels as though it broke my heart to leave them behind. It does get better though so hang in there. Some days I actually feel as though I like being here in my new State and city, even though it is so far away from my family and friends. Thankfully I have my kids and my husband to stop me from feeling all alone in the world…
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I am sure that your roommates or any of the women at MM would change your dressing! Don’t know why you were crying about it!
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OMG really? My impression was that it’s about so much more than just changing a dressing, that was just the trigger. I guess you just totally missed the point.
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I understand why Lucy was so upset to the point of tears. Needing a dressing changed is highly personal and not something I could ask my work colleagues to do. Maybe you don’t feel that way. Everyone’s different, but Lucy’s reaction to feeling lonely is just as valid.
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The hayfever line. Ive used it many a time, and it makes me feel like I’m clever at covering up tears!
But really, people know, they’re not that silly. But sometimes we wish that they were!
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I loved this line. Made the MM office seem more real. They all seem so close and I’m sure they actually are but even with wonderful friends/collegaues you can still feel like this sometimes.
And yep definitely used the hayfever line!
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