Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Last year I dated a PhD astrophysicist Cambridge grad, polyglot (5 languages) and Mensa member. I was a single mom with a state school humanities Bachelors and had been a SAHM for many years. He said I was the most sophisticated woman he'd ever dated and often said things about how I was out of his league. I'm not sure if it was his own insecurity or not, there were some signs of that (why did he need to be in Mensa, for example?) We met on an app and started off chatting about books and music - I was an advanced classical pianist and had read more literature than him, which he admired. He thought I was gorgeous and had a fantastic body. I was intimidated because his previous girlfriends were a doctor and a vet. But he said at least that I was more interesting and not "basic". Whatever that means.
It didn't work out and in hindsight I found him both snobbish and insecure, maybe they go together?
Forgot to say that in hindsight I also thought he was a moron, in terms of relationships, communication and EQ. A PhD and prestigious job only gets you so far in life.
Anonymous wrote:Thank you all, for talking me down. The information just really threw me for a loop and I couldn't find my way towards processing it. I appreciate all your perspectives.
Anonymous wrote:Are you kidding? Grab him!!
Anonymous wrote:MIT grad here. Most MIT folks I know are smart, but also realize there are a lot of different ways to be smart, and therefore aren’t snobby about it. Especially since most people who go to MIT get there and realize they aren’t the smartest person in the room. There are some prestigious schools where this mindset isn’t common, however.
Another thing to not let it worry you is that you’ve been dating for a while and only just found this out. If he thought it was a a big deal, he would have mentioned it early on!
I would recommend against bragging about him to friends and family - he might feel differently about it - but I hate it when my husband brings up my educational background in situations that aren’t relevant, which are 99.9% of all social situations.
Anonymous wrote:Last year I dated a PhD astrophysicist Cambridge grad, polyglot (5 languages) and Mensa member. I was a single mom with a state school humanities Bachelors and had been a SAHM for many years. He said I was the most sophisticated woman he'd ever dated and often said things about how I was out of his league. I'm not sure if it was his own insecurity or not, there were some signs of that (why did he need to be in Mensa, for example?) We met on an app and started off chatting about books and music - I was an advanced classical pianist and had read more literature than him, which he admired. He thought I was gorgeous and had a fantastic body. I was intimidated because his previous girlfriends were a doctor and a vet. But he said at least that I was more interesting and not "basic". Whatever that means.
It didn't work out and in hindsight I found him both snobbish and insecure, maybe they go together?
Anonymous wrote:We only started dating at the beginning of November, and between holidays, family, travel, etc., haven't gotten to spend much time together. I just found out he's got a mechanical engineering degree from MIT. I ... have a bachelors degree from a middle of the road college, in a more simple major. I'm not stupid, but not on his level. This is really throwing my confidence. Advice?