I agree. I'm mid 40s and looking for a man in the first half of his 50s. |
Yes, exactly. Single, successful men in their early to mid 40s are not looking for an average looking woman (by your own description) who is their own age. Average looking women your age who are with ultra successful men have probably been with them for many years. Further, many successful men are happy to "date down" (quotes because "dating down" is all in the eye of the beholder). Many men in the demographic you're describing would be more interested in dating a gorgeous Starbucks barista who, say, has a degree in art history and really enjoys sex. What women think men want is sometimes different from what men actually find appealing. Successful, professional men have their pick. |
| OP, you might be a nice person, but sound a little bit full of yourself. In my field (accounting), you can meet people of the opposite sex at continuing educations workshops and the various professional group meetings. Everybody who attends is not a super duper superstar like your target, but there should be a reasonable number of go-getters. |
| Take up golf. |
| Those men date much younger women. |
Your DH wanted arm candy, not an intellectual equal. That's certainly one type of successful guy. |
| Have your friends' husbands introduce you to their friends. |
| In "Pretty Woman," Julia Roberts' character met a very successful professional man. You should do what she did, and see what happens. |
I'm a successful, professional man in my 50s. If I were single, I admit that I would be more interested in dating a gorgeous Starbucks barista who, say, has a degree in art history and really enjoys sex. And if she enjoys sex with me, I'd even forego the degree in art history. |
Yeah. Most successful and accomplished men are probably surrounded by aggressive go-getters all day long. They'd probably prefer their personal life not be dominated by the same. Who wants to relax and unwind with another person who is consumed by success? |
Would you marry her though? |
Who wants to marry someone with whom you can't carry on an intellectual discussion? |
The conversation between a phd scientist and a barista is no different, just background noise until pound town |
Just because someone is not an "accomplished professional" does not mean that she is incapable of an intellectual conversation. Was Socrates an accomplished professional? By DCUM standards, he was a "loser." There are plenty of intelligent people who simply aren't that driven, career wise. |
Intellectual discussion? Why do you equate professional success with general intelligence? Sure it often goes hand in hand but you'd be foolish to dismiss someone as stupid or shallow just because they don't strive for the executive suite. And anyway, what husband and wife really sit around having "intellectual" discussions? I'd rather marry someone who made me laugh than someone who sat around pretentiously discussing Bayes' Theorem. |