Yeah. For me it was before my 30s even, but it's less to do with a specific age and more to do with the fact that as an introvert you sooner or later realise pretending to be an extrovert isn't worth the energy and effort.
This comment reflects such a weird mentality that I see sometimes, conflating being social with being extroverted. The two go hand in hand, but they are not the same. I love having time with myself reading or playing games, but I am consistently at my overall happiest when that time is punctuated with going out and socializing with friends or occasionally meeting new people. Never going out doesn't make a person introverted, it just means they are antisocial.
Yeah, I've realized that you can't really put people as easily into the "introvert" and "extrovert" buckets, because it entirely depends on the day.
I can be a social butterfly one day, hyper productive the next, then want to watch reality TV and not leave the couch another. It just depends on the vibe of how I'm feeling
When you're disabled and going out you get tired of watching people avoid you. They see you, you smile they look away quickly when they see your arm crutches.
Had a lady talk to me for a good hour while I was sitting in a booth. We were having a good conversation getting to know each other. Then I go to get up and grab my Crutches from under the table. She awkwardly tells me she needs to use the restroom and i never see her again.
In your 20s you try, in your 30s you get depressed, in your 40s you accept.
I don't have enough space, good enough acoustics, enough money, distance from my neighbours or appropriate zoning to let bands play in my house on a regular basis. So alas, I must leave my house once and a while.
Edit: And the people outside my house make way better tacos than I do, though this can be worked on.
I still want to share those with other people, just without the randoms at bars, music clubs etc.
Kinda hard to meet people while avoiding public transport (it sucks, and especially on weekend evenings) if you don't have a car and live too far apart for cycling, though. Driving a car and having a drink don't mix well anyway ...
I wanna meet up with people and have a deep and pleasant chat, the rest I can compromise on. Honestly, I haven't felt the allure of loud noises and bright lights in a decade...
When I was living in a bedroom at my parents' house, going out was hugely desirable.
When I lived in a single-bedroom flat during university, I could finally invite people without my parents' supervision, and I used that a lot, but the tiny flat with no decent equipment wasn't great for inviting people over. Now I got space and a projector and a play room for the kids, so of course it's easier and more freedom to invite people over than to go out where I have to constantly watch out that the kids aren't bothering anyone.
"Not wanting to go out" anymore is the most pessimistic way to view it. There's just better, more fulfilling things to do other than the things other people have suggested that we should be doing with our time and money.
Mid 40s.. I'm in taipei exploring both culture and hikes.. 2 months ago in Norway. Last time I watched tv was 1.5 months ago. But I did had tacos right before coming to taipei. I agree on the tacos.
it's not that I don't want to go out, there's just nowhere to go for people in mid 30, at least around where I live. Also been suffering from social anxiety most of my life and only recently got it under control with meds which made me crave social interactions more than ever.