Anonymous wrote:You haven’t mentioned love??!! The bond created by building a family together?
Why only the concern about women as a body??
You are scarily one dimensional.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You don't look as old to each other as you do to others.
I am stunned when I see a photo of DH. So much older than the man I photographed!
I've always heard that this is the benefit of a very long relationship. Your spouse is the only one on earth who can still see the decades younger version of you.
I still see the younger version of DH but he still has qualities that I fell in love with- his eyes, his smile
Anonymous wrote:You haven’t mentioned love??!! The bond created by building a family together?
Why only the concern about women as a body??
You are scarily one dimensional.
Anonymous wrote:You just choose to see them as they were 20 years ago.
Anonymous wrote:I think you generally click like you did when you were 25. It's one of the good things about marriage.
But if you divorce and go on to new partners, now you are really seeing a 50 year old body. And you didn't know them when they were 25. So that's different. There's no long term context. I can see why a lot of divorced men and women go young as they move on.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We’ve both stayed in excellent physical shape. And I’m not averse to some nip n’ tuck. I got a mommy makeover at 45 and a lower bleph at 50.
Are you happy with the results?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You don't look as old to each other as you do to others.
I am stunned when I see a photo of DH. So much older than the man I photographed!
I've always heard that this is the benefit of a very long relationship. Your spouse is the only one on earth who can still see the decades younger version of you.
Anonymous wrote:We’ve both stayed in excellent physical shape. And I’m not averse to some nip n’ tuck. I got a mommy makeover at 45 and a lower bleph at 50.