Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Also, I don’t own because I moved to DC 3 years ago and I am not sure whether I’ll be staying and because it’s so damn expensive. With condo fees, interest, and taxes, you need it to be a longer term plan to stay.
PP here. You don’t have ties here and think the area is too expensive to live long term. I remember making mom friends and if someone hinted that they weren’t sure they would stay in the area, I would still be cordial but I wouldn’t invest more time in that relationship than someone that had ties to the area and was likely to stay. So it’s possible it is straight up the money, but it may also be that unless you made more money you would be unlikely to stay here. What you do does sound very interesting but when I try to think do I have any friends that would date this guy I say no. Not because of the salary but because 80% either have kids or would want kids. The other 20% are either beyond wanting kids or for medical reasons can’t have kids BUT as another poster said they worked hard to get where they are in their career and wouldn’t pick up and leave to follow a guy.
+1
This is your answer.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here
I am definitely misunderstood on here. I’m not Peter Pan or whatever that means. I have a career and interests, but I understand that people will immediately attack you if you don’t want kids as some sort of lost individual. I remember when I told my mom that I don’t want kids and she questioned why I got married. Fair point. But not all of us kid free people want to screw around all day and do nothing with our lives.
I study more languages, I help refugees settle in the states, i attend lectures and philosophical discussions. And it’s not like I don’t spend frivolously. I love to travel all over, and I would love a companion that enjoys that as well. Traveling by yourself isn’t that easy sometimes.
I understand that finding a person that doesn’t want kids or doesn’t already have them in my age group is a tough sell, but I certainly have felt that there is an expectation of more money when you’re 35 and single.
Also, I don’t own because I moved to DC 3 years ago and I am not sure whether I’ll be staying and because it’s so damn expensive. With condo fees, interest, and taxes, you need it to be a longer term plan to stay.
OP, you aren't misunderstood. You just disagree with how people assess you. You came to the site designed for parents, yes with many different sections, but parents nevertheless. In this environment, a man who does not want children is unattractive. And I believe you are finding out that this is in fact the case in real life - that most women who look for LTR in your age bracket include children in the picture of life they want to achieve. Your decision not to procreate makes you unattractive to them. This is not something you can argue with.
You can always target women in the 40+ bracket who may have wanted children earlier but by now life hasn't worked out that way, and children aren't possible anymore. That type of woman may have wanted children very much but ended up not having them for whatever reason, and is now making peace with the reality that she won't. That type of woman may be amenable to looking at the bright side of not having children - more freedom, more money, more spontaneity, etc. Women in their thirties mostly do want to have children so they will not find you attractive for that reason. Make peace with this.
Anonymous wrote:OP here
I am definitely misunderstood on here. I’m not Peter Pan or whatever that means. I have a career and interests, but I understand that people will immediately attack you if you don’t want kids as some sort of lost individual. I remember when I told my mom that I don’t want kids and she questioned why I got married. Fair point. But not all of us kid free people want to screw around all day and do nothing with our lives.
I study more languages, I help refugees settle in the states, i attend lectures and philosophical discussions. And it’s not like I don’t spend frivolously. I love to travel all over, and I would love a companion that enjoys that as well. Traveling by yourself isn’t that easy sometimes.
I understand that finding a person that doesn’t want kids or doesn’t already have them in my age group is a tough sell, but I certainly have felt that there is an expectation of more money when you’re 35 and single.
Also, I don’t own because I moved to DC 3 years ago and I am not sure whether I’ll be staying and because it’s so damn expensive. With condo fees, interest, and taxes, you need it to be a longer term plan to stay.
Anonymous wrote:OP here
I am definitely misunderstood on here. I’m not Peter Pan or whatever that means. I have a career and interests, but I understand that people will immediately attack you if you don’t want kids as some sort of lost individual. I remember when I told my mom that I don’t want kids and she questioned why I got married. Fair point. But not all of us kid free people want to screw around all day and do nothing with our lives.
I study more languages, I help refugees settle in the states, i attend lectures and philosophical discussions. And it’s not like I don’t spend frivolously. I love to travel all over, and I would love a companion that enjoys that as well. Traveling by yourself isn’t that easy sometimes.
I understand that finding a person that doesn’t want kids or doesn’t already have them in my age group is a tough sell, but I certainly have felt that there is an expectation of more money when you’re 35 and single.
Also, I don’t own because I moved to DC 3 years ago and I am not sure whether I’ll be staying and because it’s so damn expensive. With condo fees, interest, and taxes, you need it to be a longer term plan to stay.
Anonymous wrote:Kids is the dealbreaker - not salary. Unless you are going for divorcees who already have 2-3 children.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Also, I don’t own because I moved to DC 3 years ago and I am not sure whether I’ll be staying and because it’s so damn expensive. With condo fees, interest, and taxes, you need it to be a longer term plan to stay.
PP here. You don’t have ties here and think the area is too expensive to live long term. I remember making mom friends and if someone hinted that they weren’t sure they would stay in the area, I would still be cordial but I wouldn’t invest more time in that relationship than someone that had ties to the area and was likely to stay. So it’s possible it is straight up the money, but it may also be that unless you made more money you would be unlikely to stay here. What you do does sound very interesting but when I try to think do I have any friends that would date this guy I say no. Not because of the salary but because 80% either have kids or would want kids. The other 20% are either beyond wanting kids or for medical reasons can’t have kids BUT as another poster said they worked hard to get where they are in their career and wouldn’t pick up and leave to follow a guy.
+1
This is your answer.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Also, I don’t own because I moved to DC 3 years ago and I am not sure whether I’ll be staying and because it’s so damn expensive. With condo fees, interest, and taxes, you need it to be a longer term plan to stay.
PP here. You don’t have ties here and think the area is too expensive to live long term. I remember making mom friends and if someone hinted that they weren’t sure they would stay in the area, I would still be cordial but I wouldn’t invest more time in that relationship than someone that had ties to the area and was likely to stay. So it’s possible it is straight up the money, but it may also be that unless you made more money you would be unlikely to stay here. What you do does sound very interesting but when I try to think do I have any friends that would date this guy I say no. Not because of the salary but because 80% either have kids or would want kids. The other 20% are either beyond wanting kids or for medical reasons can’t have kids BUT as another poster said they worked hard to get where they are in their career and wouldn’t pick up and leave to follow a guy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:women in the DMV area are the most difficult to date because they are money hungry. During 1st date in the area I was always peppered with questions intended to figure out how much money I earned.
I eventually found a great person online who lived out of the area and we did the long distance thing until our work situations allowed us to move together and get married.
I'm a little older than you and earn a little more as a fed in my second career. I do not think I could have found a woman in DC that would have been a fit because the money-hungry aspect is only one facet of the DC female syndrome. There was one woman who was a doctor in MD I met who didn't appear to have the syndrome but there were other issue.
Also, if you are on this forum asking this question then you have totally been whipped by the whole DC mentality.
+1 DC is the worst of both worlds OP!
Even women in NYC (much more expensive than DC) are much more willing to live in a railroad flat in Brooklyn with their BF in marketing until they are both in their mid to late 30s. DC breeds a strange expectation syndrome probably having to do with the southern set that moves here looking for the Prince Charming they had back in Athens but suddenly discovers he needs to make 400k a year to own a house here.
Anonymous wrote:Also, I don’t own because I moved to DC 3 years ago and I am not sure whether I’ll be staying and because it’s so damn expensive. With condo fees, interest, and taxes, you need it to be a longer term plan to stay.
Anonymous wrote:I am 35 year old male and work as a reporter in the city making 90K. I don't see myself ever making some of the figures touted on this forum. I don't have trouble getting dates. I am a decent looking guy with an athletic build and interesting background. But the stumbling block always seems to be women looking for a LTR that are not happy with the income I make. I get by alright in DC and don't have a roommate and pay about 1700 for a 1 bedroom. With other overhead expenses, that doesn't leave much for frivolous spending.
I don't usually date younger women and I am looking for something meaningful and I don't want kids. The kids aspect of course has some women turned off, but that is usually revealed early on. I don't want to mislead anyone.
The reason i state is that my last relationship floundered after 6 months when she, a person making about the same salary, was wondering (mentioned it like 1000 times) how i can boost my salary.
Anonymous wrote:women in the DMV area are the most difficult to date because they are money hungry. During 1st date in the area I was always peppered with questions intended to figure out how much money I earned.
I eventually found a great person online who lived out of the area and we did the long distance thing until our work situations allowed us to move together and get married.
I'm a little older than you and earn a little more as a fed in my second career. I do not think I could have found a woman in DC that would have been a fit because the money-hungry aspect is only one facet of the DC female syndrome. There was one woman who was a doctor in MD I met who didn't appear to have the syndrome but there were other issue.
Also, if you are on this forum asking this question then you have totally been whipped by the whole DC mentality.
Anonymous wrote:I am 35 year old male and work as a reporter in the city making 90K. I don't see myself ever making some of the figures touted on this forum. I don't have trouble getting dates. I am a decent looking guy with an athletic build and interesting background. But the stumbling block always seems to be women looking for a LTR that are not happy with the income I make. I get by alright in DC and don't have a roommate and pay about 1700 for a 1 bedroom. With other overhead expenses, that doesn't leave much for frivolous spending.
I don't usually date younger women and I am looking for something meaningful and I don't want kids. The kids aspect of course has some women turned off, but that is usually revealed early on. I don't want to mislead anyone.
The reason i state is that my last relationship floundered after 6 months when she, a person making about the same salary, was wondering (mentioned it like 1000 times) how i can boost my salary.