Have you, during the lockdown times, ever actually invited one of them over by saying someting like "Hey, want to hang out for a bit?", without adding comments like 'this is really destroying me', or 'this lockdown really sucks', i.e., without any negative undertone?
Yes.
I would say that the main problem here is that I contact people to see if they're OK, and they've all got partners or close friends that they're bubbling with and ~bonding~ to or are literally vacaying in Hawaii. They're flourishing in their careers! Getting promoted! blah blah blah. They have to ask how/what I'm doing, and I basically go: "Oh, you know ... same old." It doesn't matter if I'm trying to be depressing or not. I just don't have anything "Instagrammable" to share.
The problem from my side is that I don't have anything that anyone else envies under the present circumstances.
I guess what this feels like is that I'm getting the bad end of the stick in an evolving class system. I suddenly have nothing that others value. Socially, my broad (international!) professional contacts are no longer impressive; what matters is that I don't have a bubble-buddy I'm eating brunch with every week, or romantic partner, and that I can't live with my family for whatever reason. My parents don't have running water and my 92-year-old grandma doesn't have a functioning heating system. I shouldn't move in with them anyway -- they're all abusive and dysfunctional LOL. My apartment doesn't allow furry pets.
I don't have a car (can't nip away to the mountains to self-isolate in Yosemite or whatever) and no one is impressed with my pandemic fish when they all have brand-new kittens, LOL. I used to be heavily reliant on public transportation and local programs at free and reduced prices that are no longer available. I'm in my first year of remote grad school and I'm not meeting professors and doing exciting research, I'm doing Zoom class without the benefit of an academic library or study group and spent literally my entire second stimulus check on a single order of textbooks. A lot of my friends are suddenly something like wealthy and they've forgotten how, earlier in the pandemic, they were looking at being downsized at their jobs; or they were crying all day every weekend about the massive loss of life, and I was desperately trying to comfort them. The democrats are back in power and their class solidarity has vanished like an old fart.
Part of this of course is that many of my friends are teachers, so they got vaccinated early, their entire social circles are vaccinated, and they're back to working in person.
And of course, part of the reason why I'm not out globe-trotting is that I don't have the money to do it -- before this started I had just received an invitation to teach in China, which would have been a big friggin' deal for me -- but mainly because I don't want to spread disease.
Anyway, thank you all. I'll keep the thread open to keep working through this but immediate actions that suggest themselves include 1. not reaching out as often to my friends who are ~killing it~ and spending more time with the people who are being fairly reasonable during the pandemic 2. trying to find something nice for myself that I won't share with others 3. keeping a diary and maybe 4. not trying to help others who already have more resources than me, regardless of how they are feeling, since most of the people I've tried to be nice to this year have developed a case of chronic backstabbing disease.
I'm thinking something like bookbinding or origami, or writing homoerotic fanfiction about aliens (nice for myself, and definitely not going to share under my real name, LOL).
PS: My fish are named Marzipan and Nectarine. The big one (Marzipan) really likes steamed broccoli! The little one isn't as smart but his tail is bigger, so I guess that makes up for his lack of food-related intellect.
I have three snails too, who are collectively named Handsome Beloved.