Anonymous wrote:I can respect their worth as an individual while simultaneously acknowledging their worth to me, as a partner.
A partner who I have to help support financially so that they can keep up with my lifestyle is not a valuable asset to me as a partner, as I am not looking to marry. I am looking to date and travel and share half a life (my non kid life) with a partner. If they cannot do that due to financial limitations, they will be less valuable to me as a partner, if not less intrinsically valuable as a human.
Anonymous wrote:Gosh what happened to finding a guy who
has a great sense of humor
loves the outdoors
is great with kids
can cook
all this income bracket crap and height business makes me think you're completely unrealistic and highly superficial.
I can see why you're divorced, honestly.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not the Op but I have similar standards. The issue when you are a financially successful woman is that I want an equal. If I want to go to the Bahamas for the long weekend. I want my partner to be able to do the same. If I want to go to NYC for the weekend, again I want someone to do those things with. I don’t expect anyone to pay for me and I don’t want to pay for anyone else. If you can’t afford to go, I’m still going. Guys I’ve dated have gotten pissy that I’m not willing to pay their way.
I don’t want anymore kids either. That requirement gets easier to meet as you get older. OP, I didn’t date anyone for the last 7 yrs. I focused on my kids and my career. I’m 50 now. I recently started dating a man with 2 grown, out of college kids. He’s financially secure, doesn’t want more kids, and is 6’4. They’re out there but you may have to wait.
Don’t lower your standards but also don’t expect to strike gold right away. While you wait, focus on you and your kids.
DP.
Agree - it is normal for a successful, high earning woman to expect her partner to earn as well or better the she does.
Why would any woman accept, let alone respect, a low income guy?
it is normal for a successful, high earning woman to expect her partner to earn as well or better the she does.
Why would any woman accept, let alone respect, a low income guy?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP I don’t think there’s *anything* wrong with your income target, and people who think men making $250k+ are rolling in smoking hot options are delusional.
I agree you’re most likely to meet nice boyfriends in your social circle though, and they will be other recent divorcés.
You forgot to add the qualifier: “in this area.”
A man making more than $250k/ yr is a real catch in some parts of the country.
Anonymous wrote:If you don’t need to be supported, your partner does not need to make 250k. This sounds like more like you are not attracted to men who make less money than you.
Anonymous wrote:The problem is, the men who will pass all of your demanding filters have increasingly demanding filters of their own. They are probably looking for a woman that is either more laid back / less demanding, or one that doesn't have children