Anonymous wrote:Well, my situation is a little different because I was always on the fence about having kids.
But I am single and childless now at 46 and my only regret is all the stress I felt about trying to partner up in my twenties and thirties.
Yes, I would have preferred to be in a great marriage by now. But the truth is, many marriages aren’t that great. Some women get lucky but a lot wind up in unfair marriages where they not only work outside all the home but also manage most of the household tasks as well. Many of my married friends with kids seem exhausted and complainy and frustrated with their husbands.
You know who marriage tends to be good for? Men. Marriage is usually a very good deal for men these days. They get a wife who not only brings in income most of the time by also bears their children and does most of the work in raising them.
Yet society asks as if being a single and childless woman is tragic. It’s not. I think that narrative exists largely because some men want to stigmatize women who are single and childless because it makes other women feel like they need to buy into this system of marriage that is so good for men. And I think some married women like to put down single childless women in order to justify their often hellish and exhausting lives.
So basically I agree with the above poster that marriage is over rated.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My friend divorced at 37 and met a wonderful man at 38 and married at 39. It is not too late.
You may need to lower your standards.
Yup. Shoot for someone that is at least 2-3 levels below you. If you are a 7 on the attractiveness scale, shoot for a 4 that fits the rest of your criteria.
Anonymous wrote:My friend divorced at 37 and met a wonderful man at 38 and married at 39. It is not too late.
You may need to lower your standards.
Anonymous wrote:Marriage is overrated.
Anonymous wrote:If you really want to get married you need to make dating your full time job starting now. Get on the apps, ask all friends/family/coworkers to set you up, essentially try to go on 4-5 dates a week with new people. You'll probably need to make compromises and date people you previously "screened out", but just meet as many people as you can with the hope that something will stick. At your age the goal should be marriage and you should be clear about that with perspectives as not to waste your time.
If the goal is motherhood that's a different path, but recognize that dating as a single parent is not easy and most likely won't happen during the first few years unless you have a lot of local family nearby to help out.