Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why are people talking only about women marrying much older men? What about women marrying men 3, 5, 7 yrs younger?
I know of three married couples in which the man's younger: in one, he's six years younger; in another, he's three years younger; in a third, he's five years younger. (All high SES, in case you're asking.)
In each case (even 3-- that's hardly a thing!), the woman was asked why she'd date/marry a younger guy. The answer was always the same: he asked. All the marriages are still intact. If you think you can make it work, go for it!
Anonymous wrote:Wondering about this now. I'm 30 and he's 24 and it seems like a huge age difference.
That said, I really like guys 2-3 years younger.
Anonymous wrote:Why are people talking only about women marrying much older men? What about women marrying men 3, 5, 7 yrs younger?
Anonymous wrote:I think that older folks should avoid dating anyone under 25 because you do a lot of growing up and learning between college and age 25. It's not a hard-and-fast rule, but I would think less of a 40-year-old friend of mine who pursued a 23-year-old. (either sex.) I would wonder what the hell they had in common, and assume the older person was immature or had bad motives.
After the age of about 27 or 28, I don't think it matters much. I have guy friends who married women 15 years younger, and I have female friends who married men 8 years younger. It's fine.
I personally tend to stick pretty close to my own age when dating. I have several younger brothers so I tend to feel sort of big-sister-ish/maternal toward guys who are more than a few years younger than me. And I'm kind of a young 41-year-old in terms of my active lifestyle and my musical tastes (which skew young), so guys who are more than a few years older than me sometimes feel too old. I've crossed the 50-year-old age line a couple of times and had a hard time relating.
Anonymous wrote:Why are people talking only about women marrying much older men? What about women marrying men 3, 5, 7 yrs younger?
Anonymous wrote:The age difference doesn't matter for the two adults involved. The half plus seven rule is about the point where you cross over from a couple people questioning the relationship to a lot of people questioning it. Of course, over time your friends will accept the relationship as they see the months and years go by.
But the big thing is that we are just talking about generic social acceptance. The numbers mean nothing to the two adults in particular. (couples of the age, race and socioeconomic background break up all the time)