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Worries about inclusion in friend group

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  • #458794
    JB
    Participant

    I recently graduated from a full-time MBA program, and I’m struggling with something that feels bigger than the actual situation.

    Growing up and throughout much of my adult life, I often struggled with feelings of inclusion and belonging. Even when I had friends, I frequently found myself wondering where I stood with people and whether I was as included as I hoped I was.

    Before business school, one of my recurring frustrations was that my community never felt as large as I wanted it to be. I often felt like other people had bigger friend groups, stronger social networks, and fuller social calendars. It sometimes seemed like everyone else was constantly attending weddings, reunions, birthday trips, and major life events while I was more often on the outside looking in. Whether that perception was fully accurate or not, it became a story I carried with me for a long time.

    The past two years in business school were different. For the first time in a long time, I felt like I found the community I had always wanted. I built close friendships, traveled with people, celebrated milestones together, and genuinely felt connected. In many ways, these two years as an adult felt like the college experience I never really had. There was a sense of community, friendship, spontaneity, and shared experiences that I had always wanted but never fully felt before.

    Importantly, when I say “community,” I don’t mean one single friend group. I was fortunate to build relationships across many different circles and communities during business school. However, like most people, there were also smaller, tighter-knit friend groups within that larger community.

    I just graduated and moved away a few days ago, and saying goodbye was surprisingly emotional.

    Here’s where I’m struggling.

    One of my friends from one of those closer friend groups is getting married next year. It’s a destination wedding. I care about this friend a lot and would genuinely love to be there. The problem is that I don’t know whether I’m invited.

    What’s difficult is that I knew from the beginning of the MBA program that this wedding would eventually happen. In some ways, it has existed in the background of these two years the entire time. Now that graduation has happened and the wedding is becoming more real, I find myself thinking about it constantly.

    The wedding is still about eight months away, which is part of what makes this so difficult. It’s far enough away that I don’t have answers, but close enough that it feels real. I’m stuck in a long period of uncertainty.

    Some people seem to know more details than I do. I’ve heard bits and pieces of wedding conversations. I’ve heard that not everyone from our broader community will be invited. Formal invitations apparently haven’t gone out yet, but I find myself analyzing every comment, every conversation, and every clue trying to determine whether I’m included.

    What makes this harder is that after graduation, many members of this particular friend group—including the person getting married and his fiancée—will be living in the same city when we start our full-time jobs. Because of that, the wedding feels like more than just a wedding. I worry that it may be a signal about where I stand in this group going forward.

    I also recognize that weddings are expensive and that no one can invite every person they care about. I don’t believe anyone is obligated to invite me. At the same time, if the roles were reversed and it were my wedding, I know without hesitation that I would want this person there. I think that’s part of why the uncertainty and possibility of not being included hurts so much.

    Another thing I keep doing is replaying the last two years in my head. I find myself thinking about all the ways I could have become just a little closer to this friend and his fiancée. I think about conversations I could have initiated, events I could have attended, moments where I could have invested a little more. I don’t know if any of those things would have changed anything, but my mind keeps returning to them.

    The fear isn’t that I won’t be included in the broader community that I built during business school. I know I have many meaningful friendships and relationships that will continue.

    The fear is much more specific: that everyone else in this particular friend group will be invited and I won’t be.

    I realize that’s my anxiety talking, and I know there are many possible outcomes. But emotionally, that’s the fear that keeps showing up.

    The more I reflect on it, the more I realize that what I’m really asking is not:

    “Am I invited to a wedding?”

    What I’m really asking is:

    “Did I matter as much to this group as I thought I did?”

    “Am I truly part of this group?”

    “Do I belong?”

    Part of me realizes that even if I am invited, these deeper fears won’t magically disappear. Another part of me feels like not being invited would confirm insecurities I’ve carried for years.

    I recently got home after graduation and found myself praying hard to be included. At the same time, I recognize that I have no control over the outcome and that the uncertainty is consuming a lot of emotional energy.

    I think what’s making this especially difficult is that I can remember wanting invitations before, but I can’t remember the last time I wanted one this badly.

    Has anyone else experienced something similar—where a specific invitation, event, or decision became tied to much deeper feelings about belonging, acceptance, and self-worth?

    How did you cope with the uncertainty without constantly searching for clues, replaying the past, or seeking reassurance?

    Thank you for reading.

    #459144
    ScottyDye
    Participant

    Well I can start this by stating you’re valid in what you feel. Being left out of a friend group for something like a wedding is not something to bat an eye at. You’re feeling the natural emotions and responses anyone would have in a similar situation. The most I could ask for a situation like this is recognizing what is happening, and if these people are truly there for me like I am for them. You could almost turn it into a test within yourself. Are these people who they say they are, for me, or not. You must be young because you talk about university. I wouldn’t throw the baby out with the bath water just yet, but figure out what these people are all about. You could not be invited to the wedding, but with apology you could make a great friendship, or you could be invited to the wedding, and the friendship fade in minute time. Whatever happens, you’re going to be okay and become wiser in the process.

    Just a dude living life.

    #459146
    anita
    Participant

    Hello JB 🙂

    “The fear is much more specific: that everyone else in this particular friend group will be invited and I won’t be.”- this is a raw wound, one I can so very much relate to.

    In my life, particularly as a teenager, I chronically felt EX-cluded. The idea of being IN-cluded would have been a dream come true.

    Nothing would have been more Elating than Belonging, a WoW!!!

    Not even graduating from a full-time MBA program can match that longing-to-be-included?

    It’s close to midnight here. I, a stranger who can relate, I think, would like to explore this further with you in the morning, if you would like that?

    🌿 Anita

    #459153
    anita
    Participant

    Good morning, JB 🙂

    “I just graduated and moved away a few days ago, and saying goodbye was surprisingly emotional”-

    It’s no wonder you felt very emotional saying goodbye to the first community you felt genuinely connected to (the last two years of business school).

    Business school being over and moving away from a community where one felt genuinely connected to is a huge change and would feel destabilizing for anyone.

    There’s something else that crossed my mind as I read your original post this morning: some friendships groups are specific to a time and place and they don’t carry on beyond.

    When business school ended, even before it ended, maybe everyone experienced a sense of loss, a difficulty saying goodbye. To make it easier, people may emotionally detach from the friends specific to the time and place, so to make it easier to move on to the next phase of life.

    They may attach to the people who are now available to them. If you don’t have people close to you now, in the place you moved to only a few days ago, it’s no wonder you miss the last people you were close to.

    Does this resonate, JB?

    🌿🌿🌿 Anita

    #459156
    Alessa
    Participant

    Hi JB

    You have a great level of self awareness. 🩵

    Hmm destination weddings are tricky because a lot of people can’t necessarily attend at the drop of a hat. 8 months and still no invitations given out is cutting it pretty fine, especially in this economy. Most of the destination weddings I’ve heard of have been very small purely for that reason. So don’t worry if you’re not invited. It would be very awkward going to a very intimate immediate family wedding and not many other people showing up.

    Who knows what will happen, just one possibility of many.

    I don’t think adult friendship groups work the same way as high school ones. I don’t think it would indicate your social standing in a group.

    You seem like a warm, feeling and caring person. 🩵

    It sounds like you’ve put a lot into these friendships. Sometimes people do let you down, but you learn to put the level of effort put in with you. I don’t think anything would reflect on your worth as a person in a worst case scenario. That being said, I do hope that you get that invitation. I think you know you deserve it. 😊

    I’m really glad that you’re doing really well as an adult and the past social difficulties are behind you. You’ve built a wonderful life for yourself. 🩵

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