Sorry I couldn't find the link but Chase has 1-2 articles on making friends, guy talk, networking and so on.
Ok, I have come on HUGELY in this area in the last 1 months. I was in the exact same position. I "knew" lots of people but never invited out, they rarely returned calls/messages, we were never on bad terms, we'd always have a blast when we saw each other but they were just generally flakey and unreliable.
I can only give MY conclusions so here we go:
- I gave up on "old friends". If I ran into one outside work, at a bar or somewhere else, they'd be all over me asking how I am and saying we must make plans. Especially so in a bar or night setting when they are buzzed it sounds like a great idea. But by the next week when you try to get in touch, they are back to being as flakey as ever. It was a VERY hard pill to swallow at the time but about a year ago I looked back over the past 2-3 years and realized that if I waited around for these people, I would never have a life. These were now acquaintances, if they came to me, we'd talk but it was unlikely or rare and I am no longer centering MY plans around their non-existant contact.
You don't need to fall out with them or burn bridges but generally just cut them out. I'd wait around on a Friday night for a call that never came. Instead I made MY OWN plans, even if it was just for myself to go out. And I followed through.
You can't change them, they moved on to other interests, got in relationships, got other priorities and if they are generally unreliable without even knowing it, they won't change.
- Accept you need to make NEW friends. Make yourself busy CONSTANTLY. I made a google calendar for myself and planned in my entire week. Look for concerts, events, sports, plan a night out with yourself, schedule meetups and just go out. You'll be surprised how tired and rewarded you feel when you are just busy and not in your apartment all day watching TV.
- Seperate Gaming for girls and making friends. Many of the social skills you've learned still apply and will help you. For instance most of the time YOU need to approach and start conversations.
But you need to have a gameplan for a certain activity. Perhaps you decide to go along to a happy hour meetup or something. You need to consciously decide whether tonight you are going out to met women or if you are going out to make friends. I made the mistake early on of using certain events to scope out if there was hot girls and going to meet them while ignoring everyone else. I now see how much it stands out when a new guy comes along, zeroes in on the hot girls and ignores everyone else. If you want to make friends, you need to "butterfly" a little, jump around to making conversations with everyone, be inquisitive and genuinely interested in them. If you're there to meet friends then make that your focus for the night, not gaming girls.
- Where to meet friends? Now this depends on what you like to do or what people you like to be friends with but consciously decide this and figure out where they will be. Meetup.com is good. You don't have to like all of the activities but you can meet some cool people so just go to everything for a few weeks. I love playing sports so I join random sports leagues. Singles leagues and co-ed social leagues are the best, I joined baseball this summer just to learn how to play and it's been a blast and there is a very social side outside of the games. If you are a professional, look for networking groups, if you are a programmer, look for events, shows, presentations which go on around town... find your own niche here but the internet is a great starting point to find events.
- Familiarity breeds friendships. You will never show up to anything and have instant friends. It won't happen. If you go to an event this week, go to another again next week and you become friends with people as you repeatedly meet them. This is why meetup is good because you will see the same faces again without necessarily having to get their contact details the first night.
- Game for guys! Yes, sounds weird right but there's always someone else in your position. See a guy sipping a beer at the bar? Maybe he's new in town or is just like you, he'd love a drinking buddy. There's always the really social guys in any bar... go shit talk with him, he might introduce you to people. Right now my best drinking buddy is a French guy I met in a bar a few months ago. We both went to a Happy Hour thing which turned out to be mainly over-40's so we wound up in conversation as the only 2 20-somethings there, decided to bounce to another bar and got drunk and met some girls.... we've been going out at the weekends ever since.
- YOU have to make the first move. Just like dating, while making friends, people will flake on plans, not everyone is open to making new friends. They have their own group and stick to it. It's nothing personal. It's just the way it is.
When you do meet people you click with, ask them for their number or facebook or whatever... most people especially other guys are often afraid to do it themselves.
- YOU make the plans. This one stumped me for a long time. If I don't have friends, how can I make plans and invite others??? I got this advice a lot and I just didn't get it.
But here is where your contacts come in. You just need to arrange drinks with 1 person. From one of your activities, plan drinks with one other guy who you know is going to show.... now start telling everyone, even people you don't know well or just met...
Don't ask them will thy come, don't make the plans about them or ask where they want to go.
All you do is tell them "I will be at X-bar tomorrow at 9 with my buddy, we're gonna grab drinks, maybe go out to a club, come over!"
This makes it easier on them... some won't come some will but the activity is not on them to decide when and where... it means there is ALREADY a plan and they can also come along, meet new people and do something fun... you'll get way more takers.
The problem when I heard this advice from others is that they always suggest throwing a party at your house which is incredibly hard to do without knowing you have a soild group of people already going. I tend to suggest something like drinks at a bar meaning you literally just need 2 people and then the more the merrier!
- Overall, keep busy and go out alone. I know that sounds like it sucks but it really doesn't. Too much TV makes me feel depressed. Get outside, the sunshine and atmosphere in busy places perks me up no end.
Thats all I have for now, I'll try think of more. Best of luck.