Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sigh. I am incredibly envious of so many of you. I think most of you must be a lot younger and objectively significantly better looking than I am.
I do know a few middle aged women who lost some confidence after divorce. They didn't get a lot of attention on the apps or, if they did, they didn't like the men who gave them attention or, if they did, they didn't like the desirable men's failure to commit. Those women sometimes start to feel like something is wrong with them, since they can't find a good man to commit to something serious, or they just feel anxious and fearful all the time. Divorce isn't great for them, even if they end up feeling more physically attractive.
Some women can end up replacing a sexless marriage problem with a whole new set of problems that come with modern dating. Also, if you were fairly popular with boys/men in your teens and twenties, you probably will notice that you don't stand out in a crowd the same way when you're in your fifties. (I actually think women in their forties still get plenty of attention from older and younger men.)
Something similar can happen to men, but I think men who have decent jobs and are height and weight proportional usually end up feeling better about themselves after divorce.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:After a bad marriage brought it down.
I can’t imagine dating to be honest. I need to recover—indefinitely.
Anonymous wrote:After a bad marriage brought it down.
Anonymous wrote:It was eye-opening for me because it gave pretty solid, immediate feedback w/r/t how the market valued and perceived me. Divorced after a ~30-year relationship wherein DW valued me so little at the end that I don't think she imagined anyone else could.
As soon as I started reaching out for connection, I found that an ok-looking, financially comfortable divorced dad who says please and thank you, listens to women when they talk, and is not trying to trick or hurt anyone can do incredibly well in this town.
Anonymous wrote:After a bad marriage brought it down.
Anonymous wrote:My confidence was never a derivative of male attention
Anonymous wrote:Sigh. I am incredibly envious of so many of you. I think most of you must be a lot younger and objectively significantly better looking than I am.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes. Divorced after 25 years of marriage. In the DMV, I had all the dates that I wanted, with a broad range of professional women ranging from my age to 10 years younger than me. Five years after my divorce, I remarried.
How's the second marriage going?
Anonymous wrote:Absolutely yes. My ex was not attracted to me. Plenty of other people are.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Absolutely yes. My ex was not attracted to me. Plenty of other people are.
That's a common mistake many people think.
"Honeymoon period" or getting "strange". It wears off.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't care what men think, so it did not really have an impact.
It did teach me that I am far more attractive then I really knew when I was younger, which is a shame.
I never focused on appearance and did not realize how attractive I am. But because I was never focused on this, my confidence level remains unchanged.
What is a shame about it? You had/have the right attitude. Relying on your appearance for confidence/self esteem is a losing proposition.