How to Get Yourself Back On The Guest List After Divorce

How to Get Yourself Back On The Guest List After Divorce
Lorie Kleiner Eckert

By Lorie Kleiner Eckert | Feb 27th, 2019

Here is something I find surprising as a divorced/single woman: I am not on the guest list for lots of events. Specifically, many parties and outings get labeled as couples’ events, so I am excluded. Such a designation makes no sense to me. In my experience with these occasions, except for brief hellos and good-byes, the women talk to the women and the men talk to the men. So why can’t I be included?

In my own case, 25 years post-divorce, I really don’t think any of my friends see me as a threat to their marriage. I am always dressed in multiple warm layers as opposed to décolleté dresses, so there is no whiff of femme fatale about me. Additionally, my divorce is so far in the past that I have no need to bash men or marriage. My topics of conversation are books, movies, current events, travel, and the like, so I fit right in with the rest of the gang.

The problem as I see it is this: My married friends don’t stop to think about this topic. Therefore, it is up to me to bring it up. I need to inform them that I wish to be included. To gather courage in doing this, remember this fact: people don’t know what you need unless you tell them. With this clear rationale in mind, plainly state your case using these tips:

Remember back in grade school when you did Show ‘N Tell? Well, after telling your friends that you would fit in, boost your message by showing them! Here’s how…

Let’s Party!

Recently, three couples came to my house for dinner on a Saturday night. I chose a prepare-ahead menu so I could be with my guests in the living room as opposed to being with my pots and pans in the kitchen. We schmoozed over appetizers and cocktails for an hour and then we moved to the dining room for the main course. It was perfectly obvious that the table held an odd number of place settings and equally obvious that it worked just fine. We all had a lovely evening.

Not up to hosting a dinner? No problem! Just invite two or three couples over on a Sunday afternoon for wine and appetizers and then visit your local Costco for already-prepared nibbles.

Let’s Go Out for Dinner!

Restaurant outings can be a bit trickier. Lots of men have a macho need to pay for me as a single woman. If I want to dine with couples regularly, I can’t let this happen! Here are strategies to try:

Using these tips, exclusion will be a thing of the past. But please remember this: the give and take of social situations is the same for you as a single person as it was when you were part of a couple. If someone invites you to a party at their home or to an outing, you need to repay the kindness and invite them in return. Through this methodology, congratulations will be in order – you will be back on the guest list once again!

Lorie Kleiner Eckert

Lorie Kleiner Eckert


Lorie Kleiner Eckert thinks of herself as a cheerleader with the message: Life is difficult, but you can do it! Her new book, Love, Loss, and Moving On is available on Amazon.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

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