Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Depends on age and gender
Does it? Maybe gender. Maybe women are generally less interested than hookups than are men.
But it seems people of all ages have hoe phases post divorce.
Age and gender definitely matter. Pickings are slim for 55+ divorced women. Men that age—the world is their oyster.
That's kind of a ridiculous statement. Age ratios favor men over 55, but dating is certainly much harder for them than when they were younger. The dating pool is dramatically smaller as you get older for both men and women, and both men and women face partners with "baggage "as they get older – kids, health issues, financial issues, ex spouses etc.
I know several men 55+ who got divorced and they all talked about how difficult dating was as they approached 60, and how hard it was to find someone to have a long-term relationship with. (They're all still single) No comparison to when they were 30, 40....
Men die younger. There’s a glut of old women
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Every single one of my 50s male friends/colleagues had a new wife within 3 years of their divorce. I would characterize the new wife as on average 10 years younger, and nicer, thinner, and prettier than their ex-wife.
Why weren’t these fortysomething women already married if they were such catches?
Yeah exactly. I do not know many gorgeous women in their late 30s and 40s who want to marry a divorced man with kids in his 50s…
They probably have baggage- kids and exes and looking for $

Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I was the one who asked about successful second marriages. Seems like at least on DCUM there’s no hope if you have kids or want to live together. But I don’t see how you can have the same sense of commitment without those things. It just wouldn’t feel the same to me in terms of feeling secure, but I do have some anxious attachment.
Living together often kills the romance.
Yep. If I ever find myself single again, I would not cohabitate again. Ideal scenario is living a walkable distance from each other.
Have you experienced this?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I was the one who asked about successful second marriages. Seems like at least on DCUM there’s no hope if you have kids or want to live together. But I don’t see how you can have the same sense of commitment without those things. It just wouldn’t feel the same to me in terms of feeling secure, but I do have some anxious attachment.
Living together often kills the romance.
Yep. If I ever find myself single again, I would not cohabitate again. Ideal scenario is living a walkable distance from each other.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I was the one who asked about successful second marriages. Seems like at least on DCUM there’s no hope if you have kids or want to live together. But I don’t see how you can have the same sense of commitment without those things. It just wouldn’t feel the same to me in terms of feeling secure, but I do have some anxious attachment.
Living together often kills the romance.
Anonymous wrote:Late 40s male
Over four years since D
Two kids
I don’t have a 5+year post D LTR but I do have what seems is a healthy LTR
We are not trying to merge our lives. Each have separate lives. Meet up 1-3 times a week. Go on some trips together. But maintain our own separate households. Own friend circles. Own things we like to do and don’t need each other to participate lol.
And very limited familial interactions
Still each others emergency contacts 🖤
Anonymous wrote:The key to a successful LTR post divorce is not to blend families. I’ve been with my partner for six years. We do not live together and he has met my kids but not involved in their daily lives. Once kids out of house we plan to cohabitate.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Every single one of my 50s male friends/colleagues had a new wife within 3 years of their divorce. I would characterize the new wife as on average 10 years younger, and nicer, thinner, and prettier than their ex-wife.
Why weren’t these fortysomething women already married if they were such catches?
Yeah exactly. I do not know many gorgeous women in their late 30s and 40s who want to marry a divorced man with kids in his 50s…
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Every single one of my 50s male friends/colleagues had a new wife within 3 years of their divorce. I would characterize the new wife as on average 10 years younger, and nicer, thinner, and prettier than their ex-wife.
Why weren’t these fortysomething women already married if they were such catches?
Anonymous wrote:Every single one of my 50s male friends/colleagues had a new wife within 3 years of their divorce. I would characterize the new wife as on average 10 years younger, and nicer, thinner, and prettier than their ex-wife.
Anonymous wrote:Every single one of my 50s male friends/colleagues had a new wife within 3 years of their divorce. I would characterize the new wife as on average 10 years younger, and nicer, thinner, and prettier than their ex-wife.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Depends on age and gender
Does it? Maybe gender. Maybe women are generally less interested than hookups than are men.
But it seems people of all ages have hoe phases post divorce.
Age and gender definitely matter. Pickings are slim for 55+ divorced women. Men that age—the world is their oyster.
That's kind of a ridiculous statement. Age ratios favor men over 55, but dating is certainly much harder for them than when they were younger. The dating pool is dramatically smaller as you get older for both men and women, and both men and women face partners with "baggage "as they get older – kids, health issues, financial issues, ex spouses etc.
I know several men 55+ who got divorced and they all talked about how difficult dating was as they approached 60, and how hard it was to find someone to have a long-term relationship with. (They're all still single) No comparison to when they were 30, 40....