/éire/ - /eire/

Why is there such a desire for Inda to go lads? And now of all times?

I speak to them a few times online but I only really meet them in person at christmas now. I work in Cork and work weekends so the times I'm off and they're off never overlap. When I'm back in Limerick its midweek and they're busy. If I want to go out for a drink with them I need to take 2 days off work which isn't practical.
a-at least I have my internet friends

Because he said he would and uncertainty of leadership is bad for the country.

Why not? I don't think you should end up in a situation where you're completely distanced from them and have no recourse if you want to pick back up the relationships.

I was wondering since I don't have any if my expectations of how normal people socialize once they complete education and find employment were unrealistic. I guess most people socialize to some extent with their work colleagues though. Is it difficult to cope without being able to see them or is knowing that they're at least there enough?

Why don't you guys speak Irish?

I'd say normal people either live with their friends or move in with their partner by the time they're working full time. A lot make new friends at work but I'm not that social so it hasn't really happened to me. I've been invited out for drinks a couple of times as a courtesy but I think it'd be awkward.

>Is it difficult to cope without being able to see them or is knowing that they're at least there enough?
It's not difficult but it makes me a bit anxious for the future to think that my social life is winding down to a degree and that I'm not meeting new people or making new friends. Being by myself is fine now but I don't know if I'll always feel that way. Even if I was always more on the outside of those circles I liked having social circles in school and college and the comforts from it.

That's genuinely how it sounded like on radio 4

...

that was a hard few hours

imagine when Sup Forums goes down for good

Are we back?