Anonymous wrote:Women here are all so negative and there is bias against men on this forum, especially older divorced men. You don’t know this guy and why he and his ex-wife got a divorce.
A 19yr gap doesn’t guarantee having to be his caretaker. Some people have 25-30 year age differences and good marriages. She can always divorce later if caretaking becomes an issue that she doesn’t want to deal with. She and her kids will be all set money wise.
It sounds like
1. You love each other
2. He has money
3. You’ll have money soon
4. You both want kids
5. You don’t have an issue with his age
Then, yes, everything will be OK.
Anonymous wrote:Yes it can work. He may have learned a ton and grew. My uncle married my aunt after a 10 year relationship and kids were 15 and 14. They have been married for 35 years. He was in his 40s and my aunt in her late 20's. My uncle has been an amazing presence in my life. I think the age gap works best because most men want to get it right. Be open and don't let other women's stories dissuade you.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:He been divorced for eight years (been together 1.5), he has two kids who are 17 & 14, and he does want kids with me.
A divorced dad pushing 50 with kids who are only about a decade younger than you and are teens at that.
OP, this man is getting a lot out of you -- the physical, someone he can control because you have much less life and relationship experience than he does, a fresh uterus, a new sucker to do the lion's share of caring for his next set of kids. He's also getting a soon-to-be nurse and caretaker who will not be in the position to receive care from him because he's going to predecease you if your marriage even lasts that long.
What TANGIBLE benefits are YOU getting out of being with an old man with this much baggage? (No, having your ego boosted about how mature you are while also being so much better looking than women his age isn't a benefit. Those manipulative compliments will dry up once he has you trapped with marriage and a baby.)
Do you even really know why his first marriage ended? Believing his self-serving version of events does not count as "knowledge."
I don't think you're going to listen because if you had the insight to know what a TRAIN WRECK you are signing up for, you wouldn't be here asking if there's any way your relationship makes sense. Just bookmark this thread and return to it WHEN your life goes off the rails thanks to this man. You were warned.
Anonymous wrote:He been divorced for eight years (been together 1.5), he has two kids who are 17 & 14, and he does want kids with me.
Anonymous wrote:OP, is there anything you can hear from friends and internet strangers that will actually change your mind, or are you going to have to learn and understand through pain and suffering? This is an overwhelmingly bad deal for you - no one should marry a man who is 19 years old and has 2 kids already. No circumstances justify this kind of sacrifice on your part. You will trade the most beautiful parts of marriage (the honeymoon phase with no kids where you get to just enjoy each other as a couple - you need the goodwill from that time to carry you through the harder days ahead) and the experience of being a first time parent together for stepkids and a husband so old he could be your father. Sorry in advance for the life you are choosing.
Anonymous wrote:My sister did this. She had to nurse him through Parkinson's, which killed him. I'd take a hard pass. Are you expecting to be geographically mobile in order to put your degree to use? You probably will put your education on the backburner if his money is always around as a cushion.
Anonymous wrote:Have not read all the posts but I’d say consider this so seriously. I am married to a man 15 years older and now that he is over 70, it is a struggle. He has gotten sick, cranky and no get up and go. But I’m at the stage where I want to travel and hang out doing things and am limited because of his health. I love him but it is hard. We have very little in common, somehow are similar interests went in different directions. My dh had been married before me but had no children. We have one in college and she sees the major differences with him.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:He been divorced for eight years (been together 1.5), he has two kids who are 17 & 14, and he does want kids with me.
Oh god OP. HELL NO.
Anonymous wrote:OP, I say this kindly as someone who dated older for most of my 20s and who was engaged to someone 11 years older -- don't do this.
Partnering with someone significantly puts you at a disadvantage -- they earn more and they are more established in their career, so your mobility is limited. When there is a choice about where to go in the relationship, when you do the math, you will always lose out -- because you earn less and have less time invested in a career. It's unfair in a way that is very subtle, and I didn't realize the dynamic until it was too late.
I have really encouraged my DD to partner with someone much closer to her age.
Also, as a divorced parent of 2, it's a huge red flag that your partner already has 2 older kids - does he have full 50% custody? Does he take care of 50% of the parenting load?
I really think you should get into individual therapy and consider why you are willing to accept such a limited future life for yourself in the name of "love". It's a huge romanticization and de-rationalization of one of the most important decisions you will make in your life.