Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do you believe a relationship between a 30 year old woman and 50 year old man could actually succeed, assuming everything else is perfect. The man is divorced with almost grown-up children. Careers, interests, and maturity align. Is the age difference just too much??
I’m 62 and don’t believe I else date an 82 year old. I’m done care taking.
This is wise. My 90 year old grandfather's current wife is 70; they married when he was in his early 70s and she was in her early 50s.
She (somehow) feels blindsided by the vast gap in health/ability now that he's declining. She still wants to be an "active senior" and is frustrated.
Watching all that unfold, I'd never date someone more than 10 years older than me, but honestly would feel better with 5 or less.
Anonymous wrote:In general men tend to have more health issues and sooner as they aged compared to women. So any woman dating a man who is 50+ needs to factor that in.
However alcohol seems to have equalized this health trend. The degree to which women are consuming alcohol they should be the one now to worry about someone taking care of them.
Anonymous wrote:It is working for me. He accepts me and treats me with respect. He is present in our relationship. We have an intimate sexual and emotional bond.
It doesn't hurt that he looks 20 years younger, is curious and creative and has the energy of a young man. He's 72 and just retired this year.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There's no doubt your money fever aligns with his fat wallet and bank accounts. Yikes
Again, men age like wine...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The age difference is actually is very good thing. When a spouse is 75 and the other is 55. The younger spouse can actually give loving care to the older spouse if needed.
When you are both the same age, when you are both 75 and one needs care, the other is too old to provide. You’ll both struggle and suffer more.
No. What happens when the younger ones needs care and other one is too old to help? The winner is the older man.
I’m in this situation and it sucks. When you’re young and he’s relatively young it’s fun but not later on.
Still worse when you are both old. No one can support the other. It sucks.
My parents were like that. They were the same age and one couldn’t help the other. It was painful.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The age difference is actually is very good thing. When a spouse is 75 and the other is 55. The younger spouse can actually give loving care to the older spouse if needed.
When you are both the same age, when you are both 75 and one needs care, the other is too old to provide. You’ll both struggle and suffer more.
No. What happens when the younger ones needs care and other one is too old to help? The winner is the older man.
I’m in this situation and it sucks. When you’re young and he’s relatively young it’s fun but not later on.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do you believe a relationship between a 30 year old woman and 50 year old man could actually succeed, assuming everything else is perfect. The man is divorced with almost grown-up children. Careers, interests, and maturity align. Is the age difference just too much??
I think it can work. A 30yo woman should be at the point where she has grown-up interests—she shouldn't be trying to go to a bar every night, etc. It'll be fine. He'll be a better dad than your average 30yo who is still immature and/or grinding hard to be successful, and she'll be a better partner than a woman his own age.
Anonymous wrote:Do you believe a relationship between a 30 year old woman and 50 year old man could actually succeed, assuming everything else is perfect. The man is divorced with almost grown-up children. Careers, interests, and maturity align. Is the age difference just too much??
Anonymous wrote:As my mother would say, 50 is 30 if he’s rich
Anonymous wrote:The age difference is actually is very good thing. When a spouse is 75 and the other is 55. The younger spouse can actually give loving care to the older spouse if needed.
When you are both the same age, when you are both 75 and one needs care, the other is too old to provide. You’ll both struggle and suffer more.