Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have a friend who is 53 and getting a divorce and he is in fantastic physical shape and has a very young, playful attitude (although he has a very serious job, so he's not a perpetual child). He is currently dating a 30-year old. While I can understand the attraction, I am shocked that she wants to have multiple kids with someone who is going to be in his 70's when their first kid would graduate from high school. She has A LOT of issues, so there's that, but I also think she's just not seeing beyond the here and now. I think in 5 years if they're still together she'll be shocked at how old he seems.
When Melania met Trump, she was 28 and he was 52. She was 35 and he was 59 when they got married. He is now old at 80 and they are still married. Their son is fine. What are you talking about?
If only could have Melania's life.

Anonymous wrote:Of course. I dated a 53 year old man when I was 19. He was attractive and wealthy, but I didn’t date him for his money. We met at a club in NYC, hit it off immediately, and started seeing each other.
He treated me extremely well. He was very respectul, and chill. We traveled, went to nice events and genuinely had fun. Yes, he bought me expensive gifts (jewelry, bags, etc.) that I kept after we broke up.
Beyond that, he actually made my life better. He encouraged me, helped me mature, introduced me to people, and even helped me network my way into an internship that mattered for my career.
I enjoyed his company, felt taken care of, and we did have genuine love for each other.
Anonymous wrote:Older men can women of all ages.
Data suggests that men who divorce are significantly more likely to remarry younger women compared to their first marriages. These studies show a rise in younger partners in second marriages.
Women also tend to choose older partners when remarrying.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Keep in mind that young women are also growing tired of young men. A lifetime of cheep dopamine has ruined young men. Whether its scrolling, video games or pron, their motivation to do anything other than seek cheep dopamine is very limited. Layer in vaping or weed and they can barely find the motivation to change out of their pajamas much less create a career with a liveable salary, commit to a relationship, want to support a family or even learn some interesting skill like music or foreign languages.
Older guys at least grew up in an analog era where you had hobbies that produced real interests and skills.
Maybe learn how to spell first. My 19yo son speaks 3 languages fluently. Yes, they learn differently but it doesn't mean young men have little to offer. A young mid 20s man making an early professional salary > early 40s man with 2 kids from a prior marriage making 500K salary.
Congrats on your son. I’m sure you’re aware he’s outstanding. That said, there’s only so many like him and women are competing for him (unless he’s under 6’ and stays earning a young professional salary too long). When they can’t find someone great like him one of the alternatives to fill the time are older guys. That way they can go on nice dates and have sex while they wait for guys like your son to reach an acceptable level of income.
A short guy is 100x better than an old guy! Gross.
I guess all these old men trying to date much younger women don’t understand it’s not just gross. It’s inherently predatory. Being a mom to 19 yo son, I know how much young men and women struggle with socialization, body image, finding their place in life. Know how trusting and naive they are. I would hate to see some old woman trying to insert herself in my sons life under a pretext of “temporary financial help”, or sexually perverting him.
Old men think that older women are somehow envious of them dating these young women. In reality I feel bad for these women who waste their time on some perv who is damaging her for life.
They know that, but they are takers.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Of course. I dated a 53 year old man when I was 19. He was attractive and wealthy, but I didn’t date him for his money. We met at a club in NYC, hit it off immediately, and started seeing each other.
He treated me extremely well. He was very respectul, and chill. We traveled, went to nice events and genuinely had fun. Yes, he bought me expensive gifts (jewelry, bags, etc.) that I kept after we broke up.
Beyond that, he actually made my life better. He encouraged me, helped me mature, introduced me to people, and even helped me network my way into an internship that mattered for my career.
I enjoyed his company, felt taken care of, and we did have genuine love for each other.
But you didn't date him for his money? This is one of the more extreme examples of a lack of self-awareness I've seen recently.
I didn’t know he was rich the night I met him, and he wasn’t flashy with his wealth, so I didn’t know about it until after we starsted dating. He was a good guy, I would’ve been attracted to him, whether he was wealthy or not.
Really? Because most women, even fifty-something women, find broke 53-year-old men to be un-f-able. And most women who are willing to date a man almost old enough to be their grandfather will have no issue admitting they're in it for the money, because otherwise, gross. Sounds like you're a troll.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Of course. I dated a 53 year old man when I was 19. He was attractive and wealthy, but I didn’t date him for his money. We met at a club in NYC, hit it off immediately, and started seeing each other.
He treated me extremely well. He was very respectul, and chill. We traveled, went to nice events and genuinely had fun. Yes, he bought me expensive gifts (jewelry, bags, etc.) that I kept after we broke up.
Beyond that, he actually made my life better. He encouraged me, helped me mature, introduced me to people, and even helped me network my way into an internship that mattered for my career.
I enjoyed his company, felt taken care of, and we did have genuine love for each other.
But you didn't date him for his money? This is one of the more extreme examples of a lack of self-awareness I've seen recently.
I didn’t know he was rich the night I met him, and he wasn’t flashy with his wealth, so I didn’t know about it until after we starsted dating. He was a good guy, I would’ve been attracted to him, whether he was wealthy or not.
Of course you didn’t know at first, but quickly realized it when he took you to a 5* restaurant and showed his place. 19 is crazy early to ho yourself out for bags and connections. Such a cheap commonly used explanation !
Maybe you would have done even better in life if you focused on your education instead. All these “connections” is just a noise and if you go into LTR with such type you’ll quickly realize it
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have a friend who is 53 and getting a divorce and he is in fantastic physical shape and has a very young, playful attitude (although he has a very serious job, so he's not a perpetual child). He is currently dating a 30-year old. While I can understand the attraction, I am shocked that she wants to have multiple kids with someone who is going to be in his 70's when their first kid would graduate from high school. She has A LOT of issues, so there's that, but I also think she's just not seeing beyond the here and now. I think in 5 years if they're still together she'll be shocked at how old he seems.
When Melania met Trump, she was 28 and he was 52. She was 35 and he was 59 when they got married. He is now old at 80 and they are still married. Their son is fine. What are you talking about?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Of course. I dated a 53 year old man when I was 19. He was attractive and wealthy, but I didn’t date him for his money. We met at a club in NYC, hit it off immediately, and started seeing each other.
He treated me extremely well. He was very respectul, and chill. We traveled, went to nice events and genuinely had fun. Yes, he bought me expensive gifts (jewelry, bags, etc.) that I kept after we broke up.
Beyond that, he actually made my life better. He encouraged me, helped me mature, introduced me to people, and even helped me network my way into an internship that mattered for my career.
I enjoyed his company, felt taken care of, and we did have genuine love for each other.
But you didn't date him for his money? This is one of the more extreme examples of a lack of self-awareness I've seen recently.
I didn’t know he was rich the night I met him, and he wasn’t flashy with his wealth, so I didn’t know about it until after we starsted dating. He was a good guy, I would’ve been attracted to him, whether he was wealthy or not.
Anonymous wrote:I have a friend who is 53 and getting a divorce and he is in fantastic physical shape and has a very young, playful attitude (although he has a very serious job, so he's not a perpetual child). He is currently dating a 30-year old. While I can understand the attraction, I am shocked that she wants to have multiple kids with someone who is going to be in his 70's when their first kid would graduate from high school. She has A LOT of issues, so there's that, but I also think she's just not seeing beyond the here and now. I think in 5 years if they're still together she'll be shocked at how old he seems.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Of course. I dated a 53 year old man when I was 19. He was attractive and wealthy, but I didn’t date him for his money. We met at a club in NYC, hit it off immediately, and started seeing each other.
He treated me extremely well. He was very respectul, and chill. We traveled, went to nice events and genuinely had fun. Yes, he bought me expensive gifts (jewelry, bags, etc.) that I kept after we broke up.
Beyond that, he actually made my life better. He encouraged me, helped me mature, introduced me to people, and even helped me network my way into an internship that mattered for my career.
I enjoyed his company, felt taken care of, and we did have genuine love for each other.
But you didn't date him for his money? This is one of the more extreme examples of a lack of self-awareness I've seen recently.
I didn’t know he was rich the night I met him, and he wasn’t flashy with his wealth, so I didn’t know about it until after we starsted dating. He was a good guy, I would’ve been attracted to him, whether he was wealthy or not.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Of course. I dated a 53 year old man when I was 19. He was attractive and wealthy, but I didn’t date him for his money. We met at a club in NYC, hit it off immediately, and started seeing each other.
He treated me extremely well. He was very respectul, and chill. We traveled, went to nice events and genuinely had fun. Yes, he bought me expensive gifts (jewelry, bags, etc.) that I kept after we broke up.
Beyond that, he actually made my life better. He encouraged me, helped me mature, introduced me to people, and even helped me network my way into an internship that mattered for my career.
I enjoyed his company, felt taken care of, and we did have genuine love for each other.
But you didn't date him for his money? This is one of the more extreme examples of a lack of self-awareness I've seen recently.
Anonymous wrote:Yes. I’m 40 so and have since my teens been attracted to men 10-15 years older than I am. My former supervisor I had a huge crush on, he’s 54 now. I also think Andrew Huberman (50) is super attractive.
Of course, I find younger men handsome, but there’s something about the ruggedness of a slightly older man that really gets me going!
(That said, let’s acknowledge that most people just aren’t that attractive, and once the dewiness of youth wears off, especially so.)
Anonymous wrote:Of course. I dated a 53 year old man when I was 19. He was attractive and wealthy, but I didn’t date him for his money. We met at a club in NYC, hit it off immediately, and started seeing each other.
He treated me extremely well. He was very respectul, and chill. We traveled, went to nice events and genuinely had fun. Yes, he bought me expensive gifts (jewelry, bags, etc.) that I kept after we broke up.
Beyond that, he actually made my life better. He encouraged me, helped me mature, introduced me to people, and even helped me network my way into an internship that mattered for my career.
I enjoyed his company, felt taken care of, and we did have genuine love for each other.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Keep in mind that young women are also growing tired of young men. A lifetime of cheep dopamine has ruined young men. Whether its scrolling, video games or pron, their motivation to do anything other than seek cheep dopamine is very limited. Layer in vaping or weed and they can barely find the motivation to change out of their pajamas much less create a career with a liveable salary, commit to a relationship, want to support a family or even learn some interesting skill like music or foreign languages.
Older guys at least grew up in an analog era where you had hobbies that produced real interests and skills.
Maybe learn how to spell first. My 19yo son speaks 3 languages fluently. Yes, they learn differently but it doesn't mean young men have little to offer. A young mid 20s man making an early professional salary > early 40s man with 2 kids from a prior marriage making 500K salary.
Congrats on your son. I’m sure you’re aware he’s outstanding. That said, there’s only so many like him and women are competing for him (unless he’s under 6’ and stays earning a young professional salary too long). When they can’t find someone great like him one of the alternatives to fill the time are older guys. That way they can go on nice dates and have sex while they wait for guys like your son to reach an acceptable level of income.
A short guy is 100x better than an old guy! Gross.
I guess all these old men trying to date much younger women don’t understand it’s not just gross. It’s inherently predatory. Being a mom to 19 yo son, I know how much young men and women struggle with socialization, body image, finding their place in life. Know how trusting and naive they are. I would hate to see some old woman trying to insert herself in my sons life under a pretext of “temporary financial help”, or sexually perverting him.
Old men think that older women are somehow envious of them dating these young women. In reality I feel bad for these women who waste their time on some perv who is damaging her for life.