What we know for sure is that you have a zero chance to get JA even on her deathbed. At best, you'll end up with a homely, overweight woman who makes 30k/year. At worst, keep living alone in your mom's basement in an old rancher. |
That might very well be the case; however, it is totally delusional to say that a 43 yo JA is much more beautiful than a 23 yo JA. Only delusional women, yourself included, think that way. |
Different people, different desires. I’m glad my wife and I have a traditional gender role marriage. I can go all in on my career and I know the house and children are taken care of. In return, she has my credit card. |
Aren't there studies that show that the "easiest" path in terms of happiness and avoiding divorce is when the woman makes close to the same as the man but very slightly less? |
She's had some work done since she was 23, and I think she looks better now. Better nose, still flawless skin, still great body. |
Some women want just that to live their life and raise their family in peace with a loving loyal partner who got their back but doesn't meddle in how they keep their world. They don't even care about a credit card or sharing equal number of chores. |
oh my god lol |
Regardless, at 43 she looks WAAY better than an average American woman in mid 20s. |
Yep, they aren't stupid. But the answer is that it really depends on how the guy chooses to live his life. You have a lot of options if you are single and are at a point in your life that you have freedom (not necessarily rich). I couldn't care less about someone's education or salary, but it would probably be a factor if I was in the market for someone to start a family with. |
I dated a guy for a few months who, when dumping me, cited several reasons for doing so. One of them was that he had kids to put through college and that my job was not good/stable enough, or something to that effect. I am not sure if he meant, he wanted a woman who could contribute to college for his kids, or if he just thought I needed a man to support me, or what. I was confused and did not pursue questioning him all that, but when I thought about it, it seemed he was saying I did not make enough money.
What he did not know was that I have a trust fund in the eight million dollar range. I was choosing to live a lifestyle my job could support (lawyer position that required JD but did not pay much). But I am the trustee of my trust and free to spend from my trust if I want. I just don't make that obvious with my lifestyle. |
This is total BS as you cannot be trustee and sole beneficiary. |
Because you're not an insecure loser and actually wanted an equal partner. |
I dated someone once who had teenage kids, and it became clear to me that he wanted help with their college and his other obligations to them. In talks about marriage, he suggested I could stop contributing to my 401k once we got married because he had plenty in his for both of us. I laughed my way out of that relationship. It was weird because if I'm being honest, I was kind of into him because he was an "established" older man and I find the idea intriguing, but once I dug in a little, he was living pay check to paycheck to pay child support, alimony, kid's expenses, college for the older one and upcoming college for the younger ones, and looked at me like I was another paycheck to support him and his kids. I'm glad we had those talks before getting married, as it saved a lot of pain, and it helped me realize how stupid it was to date an older divorced dude with kids. Man, was I naive. |
Clearly, you know nothing about trust and estate law. Yes, I am the trustee and during my lifetime I am the sole beneficiary. I am allowed to spend the money on my health, education, maintenance, and support. And I have the right to leave the trust to whoever I want as long as they are either a charity or descendants of my grandparents. |
Wow, yeah, lots of red flags there. Any chance his first initial was C? |