Vivienne wrote:
4) Find like minds. If nobody's interested in talking about art in your current social circle, go join an art club, or get an art gallery membership. You'll find people there who are also seeking to find people to talk about art with.[b]
Vivienne, you make such great points, and I think this is the best. I find forums online to discuss my favorite topics, and I have joined groups in the past, though face to face groups don't appeal to me as much as connecting online.
My parents didn't understand all my interests, though my mom encouraged anything that seemed like "study" - even if it wasn't a topic that interested her. But she also involved us in her creative and other interests from the time we were little, so we learned to keep these things reciprocal.
If someone never shows any interest in what I love, though, and I can't find any interest in myself for what they love, I just basically don't connect with them as much. This is true of my brother and me. We're just 180 degrees from each other in interests, so the gap has widened as we've gotten into middle age. My sister and I still keep in touch because there are shared things like books and spiritual interests.
My husband and I have very different types of interest in the same things: cooking, music, politics. We also have interests that the other doesn't share at all. There was a time when he thought we had to share everything. So it turns out he's interested in the science of cooking and I'm more interested in simpler cooking and in pleasures related to food. But I give him a modicum of attention when he talks food chemistry, with the clear message that this isn't really me, but because cooking is an interest we share, I'm willing to listen for a while.
I've found it's easier to share interests that the other at least finds practical.
But if the topic or the depth doesn't appeal to the other, we've learned to leave it alone. Really this kind of need gets in the way of good relationships. Enjoy it for yourself, and allow others the freedom to not be interested, to enjoy their lives the way they wish.