Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I know woman in there 20s that can have much more intellectual conversations than most woman in their 40s. And I know woman in their 40's that can put most 20 somethings to shame in the bedroom.
Stop trying to paint picture based on the ages of ADULTS, paint a picture of individuals.
Eh. They are having sex. They are having “intellectual” conversations but without the understanding of life experience, like you would do with your kids. I have intellectual conversations with my 11 year old, but they are not the conversations of an equal with an equal understanding of ideals vs reality. Is it intellectual sure. Is it the same? No.
That said, a man can feel that fatherly feelings put him more in control of the relationship, but a woman does not ever want to be a mother to another person and this is why women typically don’t seriously date younger men.
This is the PP. In my experience the younger person has significantly more power in the relationships. They’re the young, fun, (more) attractive one. And I have a great career, but they fully expect to have a great career soon as well.
The only power I wield is knowing I won’t be sad when the relationship ends because I’m 100 percent confident I’ll meet someone else.
The power to walk away without feeling in a relationship is very powerful. Also you have power in the form of money, not just potential money. Our society had deemed money the most powerful thing. If you are defining attractiveness as being powerful, then I get your point. If you define caring, emotional
closeness or money as being powerful then I would say you have the power.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’ve dated 20s and 40s (my age). They ALL watch the same stupid Netflix shows (doctors, lawyers, employee at one of the three letter agencies, teachers, nurses, it doesn’t matter).
Conversation about art, music, politics, books we read, movies, is otherwise very similar from my side regardless of the age.
At some point they always get bored and move on and then I meet someone else. Usually I’m somewhat of a secret from her friends but sometimes they really want me to meet them. The longest shelf life of any of these relationships for me has been five months.
This response nailed it. It probably isn’t going to be a long term relationship where you get married but that doesn’t mean you can’t connect, have great conversations and good times with someone. Also, the boa constrictor known as “life” has strangled off most of the fun and imagination of older people. Its nice to get a younger perspective. The last thing I would say is not to underestimate young women. I think someone said it above, talk about individuals, not generations. This is accurate because you date a person, not a generation.
The boa constrictor known as “life” is a great line, gonna use it!
Anonymous wrote:I know woman in there 20s that can have much more intellectual conversations than most woman in their 40s. And I know woman in their 40's that can put most 20 somethings to shame in the bedroom.
Stop trying to paint picture based on the ages of ADULTS, paint a picture of individuals.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I know woman in there 20s that can have much more intellectual conversations than most woman in their 40s. And I know woman in their 40's that can put most 20 somethings to shame in the bedroom.
Stop trying to paint picture based on the ages of ADULTS, paint a picture of individuals.
Eh. They are having sex. They are having “intellectual” conversations but without the understanding of life experience, like you would do with your kids. I have intellectual conversations with my 11 year old, but they are not the conversations of an equal with an equal understanding of ideals vs reality. Is it intellectual sure. Is it the same? No.
That said, a man can feel that fatherly feelings put him more in control of the relationship, but a woman does not ever want to be a mother to another person and this is why women typically don’t seriously date younger men.
This is the PP. In my experience the younger person has significantly more power in the relationships. They’re the young, fun, (more) attractive one. And I have a great career, but they fully expect to have a great career soon as well.
The only power I wield is knowing I won’t be sad when the relationship ends because I’m 100 percent confident I’ll meet someone else.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I know woman in there 20s that can have much more intellectual conversations than most woman in their 40s. And I know woman in their 40's that can put most 20 somethings to shame in the bedroom.
Stop trying to paint picture based on the ages of ADULTS, paint a picture of individuals.
Eh. They are having sex. They are having “intellectual” conversations but without the understanding of life experience, like you would do with your kids. I have intellectual conversations with my 11 year old, but they are not the conversations of an equal with an equal understanding of ideals vs reality. Is it intellectual sure. Is it the same? No.
That said, a man can feel that fatherly feelings put him more in control of the relationship, but a woman does not ever want to be a mother to another person and this is why women typically don’t seriously date younger men.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’ve dated 20s and 40s (my age). They ALL watch the same stupid Netflix shows (doctors, lawyers, employee at one of the three letter agencies, teachers, nurses, it doesn’t matter).
Conversation about art, music, politics, books we read, movies, is otherwise very similar from my side regardless of the age.
At some point they always get bored and move on and then I meet someone else. Usually I’m somewhat of a secret from her friends but sometimes they really want me to meet them. The longest shelf life of any of these relationships for me has been five months.
This response nailed it. It probably isn’t going to be a long term relationship where you get married but that doesn’t mean you can’t connect, have great conversations and good times with someone. Also, the boa constrictor known as “life” has strangled off most of the fun and imagination of older people. Its nice to get a younger perspective. The last thing I would say is not to underestimate young women. I think someone said it above, talk about individuals, not generations. This is accurate because you date a person, not a generation.
Anonymous wrote:I’ve dated 20s and 40s (my age). They ALL watch the same stupid Netflix shows (doctors, lawyers, employee at one of the three letter agencies, teachers, nurses, it doesn’t matter).
Conversation about art, music, politics, books we read, movies, is otherwise very similar from my side regardless of the age.
At some point they always get bored and move on and then I meet someone else. Usually I’m somewhat of a secret from her friends but sometimes they really want me to meet them. The longest shelf life of any of these relationships for me has been five months.
Anonymous wrote:I know woman in there 20s that can have much more intellectual conversations than most woman in their 40s. And I know woman in their 40's that can put most 20 somethings to shame in the bedroom.
Stop trying to paint picture based on the ages of ADULTS, paint a picture of individuals.