Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm 21 years older than my wife. Not a problem for us. Often a problem for people we meet though. They always want to project their own assumptions onto our relationship. It is fun sometimes for us when people assume I'm loaded and she is only a gold digger/trophy wife.
Sure she got to move into a established home with a man that has a stable career so she didn't have to endure the lean years but she has a lot less emotional baggage and is almost always optimistic and upbeat which is a major benefit over being married to someone that is pessimistic and grumpy.
The only real downside I see the latter-in-life issues.
There is no downside for you. All the downside is for her.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm 21 years older than my wife. Not a problem for us. Often a problem for people we meet though. They always want to project their own assumptions onto our relationship. It is fun sometimes for us when people assume I'm loaded and she is only a gold digger/trophy wife.
Sure she got to move into a established home with a man that has a stable career so she didn't have to endure the lean years but she has a lot less emotional baggage and is almost always optimistic and upbeat which is a major benefit over being married to someone that is pessimistic and grumpy.
The only real downside I see the latter-in-life issues.
There is no downside for you. All the downside is for her.
Anonymous wrote:I'm 21 years older than my wife. Not a problem for us. Often a problem for people we meet though. They always want to project their own assumptions onto our relationship. It is fun sometimes for us when people assume I'm loaded and she is only a gold digger/trophy wife.
Sure she got to move into a established home with a man that has a stable career so she didn't have to endure the lean years but she has a lot less emotional baggage and is almost always optimistic and upbeat which is a major benefit over being married to someone that is pessimistic and grumpy.
The only real downside I see the latter-in-life issues.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's not a big deal now but when you hit 50 and older he is going to be a old man.
20 years of happy marriage is more than most have these days.
But I wouldnt marry someone that much older unless there was enough money to hire care, if needed.
I'm a PP with an older spouse. We have hundreds of thousands of dollars in long-term care insurance and life-insurance in addition to standard investments. Peace of mind to help us enjoy the decades we do have before one of us, likely him, needs assistance.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's not a big deal now but when you hit 50 and older he is going to be a old man.
20 years of happy marriage is more than most have these days.
But I wouldnt marry someone that much older unless there was enough money to hire care, if needed.
Anonymous wrote:It's not a big deal now but when you hit 50 and older he is going to be a old man.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:He's far too old. Unless you want babies with health issues
I was older than op, my hubby was older than op's guy, and our child is beautifully healthy.
Where do you get this misinfo pp?
Just because you dodged a bullet doesn't mean that science is wrong.
singledadmclean wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am a child of parents with that sort of age difference. The advice I transmit to you from my mother is Do Not Marry Him. They've been married forever. My mom is a sprightly 72 now. My dad is a frail late eighties. Here is what mom had to say:
- know that if you marry him, you will live by his age and by his timeline. You will do things that men his age want to do.
- initially he will try to act young and do young things to please you, but as he grows comfortable, he will revert to his natural behavior, which goes with his age.
- because of the above, you will age prematurely. That is, if you are 30, you will live like a 42-year old.
- by way of a personal anecdote, my dad now requires close supervision and care, and cannot live alone. Mom is going strong and would love more than anything to be with her grandchildren (and adult children), but unfortunately cannot leave dad on his own to stay with us. She resents that very much and says he makes her live an old life.
Short summary: this age gap is fine in the beginning but a very bad deal for the young woman (good deal for the guy, though).
Lesson learned: don't marry a resentful woman. Who is going to care for her when she is in her late 80s and can't live alone?
Anonymous wrote:
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/article-2587223/Whos-daddy-And-old-Children-born-older-fathers-likely-ugly-live-longer.html
So there is no "turning of the tables" because there were no tables to be turned
Anonymous wrote:I am a child of parents with that sort of age difference. The advice I transmit to you from my mother is Do Not Marry Him. They've been married forever. My mom is a sprightly 72 now. My dad is a frail late eighties. Here is what mom had to say:
- know that if you marry him, you will live by his age and by his timeline. You will do things that men his age want to do.
- initially he will try to act young and do young things to please you, but as he grows comfortable, he will revert to his natural behavior, which goes with his age.
- because of the above, you will age prematurely. That is, if you are 30, you will live like a 42-year old.
- by way of a personal anecdote, my dad now requires close supervision and care, and cannot live alone. Mom is going strong and would love more than anything to be with her grandchildren (and adult children), but unfortunately cannot leave dad on his own to stay with us. She resents that very much and says he makes her live an old life.
Short summary: this age gap is fine in the beginning but a very bad deal for the young woman (good deal for the guy, though).