To study a group that directly does not want to be in a group can be a challenge itself. Luckily I happen to have first hand experience. The three main types of outsider are social awkward one, the floater, and the determined outsider(Kelly). I am probably closest to the floater with a little bit of awkward one.
In my experience to be a floater one has to be close enough so that multiple groups know their name but most of them know but not close enough so that when any of them do anything they do not remember to invite them along. So for example the group of soccer kids that I would play will in the fall on the school team would go and do soccer in the sand or an indoor league I would never be invite even after asking to be invite but they would be friendly when they had to like in chemistry class. Floater do not choose to float but often have reason and why they can not commit all their time to one group for me it was usually my parents since my mom was involved in the school system I …show more content…
I recall hearing somewhere as a kid that young adult are struggling to hold a face to face conversation and yes they did blame technology. So smart little me wanted to avoid that thus I then tried to talk to my father for about half an hour once a day. Now I can easily hold conversations with people about 27 or older but when I try to talk to anyone younger it feels awkward. Otherwise Socially awkward outsider people tend to think that their is something wrong with them usually mentally. From my experience the socially awkward people are too different for whoever they are trying to communicate with and they feel so much pressure to relax that they end up doing the opposite so instead of fighting through the awkward moments they will choose flight instead and thus becoming an outsider. They usually want to make friends but feel too much pressure to relax to the point where most friendships are