Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP - do you realize that a man who is ready to throw millions to your feet after a year of dating when he has other dependents and business interests likely has very poor judgement and is too quick to fall in love? Those quickly falling also tend to quickly fall out.
He is allowing the head between his legs lead his thinking, not the head on his shoulders. That’s bad, and also shows him as not particular involved father. He has no idea how hard is to launch teenagers because he’s not in the game !
Is ex wife doing all the job with kids ? Why did they divorce ? She must be fairly young . It’s a red flag
Idk she knows a lot about his finances and his plans to provide for her for 1.5 years in. Sounds like he knows what to say to attract younger women.
“Too quick to fall in love” is an optimistic take. He is a wealthy old lawyer who has been through the love, family, divorce thing already. This man is detailing all his future plans to give OP access to his money because he knows that’s his draw. As of now, it’s all just talk
I was also surprised that he spilled all this information about his net worth to his GF. Too much detail.
OP - be honest - would you be so much in love with him if he was a fellow PhD student in a shared apartment?
This.
I think this has to be a troll. No woman getting her PhD would seriously consider just throwing it all away for money from this old guy. And if so, OP must not be too committed to her degree.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP - do you realize that a man who is ready to throw millions to your feet after a year of dating when he has other dependents and business interests likely has very poor judgement and is too quick to fall in love? Those quickly falling also tend to quickly fall out.
He is allowing the head between his legs lead his thinking, not the head on his shoulders. That’s bad, and also shows him as not particular involved father. He has no idea how hard is to launch teenagers because he’s not in the game !
Is ex wife doing all the job with kids ? Why did they divorce ? She must be fairly young . It’s a red flag
Idk she knows a lot about his finances and his plans to provide for her for 1.5 years in. Sounds like he knows what to say to attract younger women.
“Too quick to fall in love” is an optimistic take. He is a wealthy old lawyer who has been through the love, family, divorce thing already. This man is detailing all his future plans to give OP access to his money because he knows that’s his draw. As of now, it’s all just talk
I was also surprised that he spilled all this information about his net worth to his GF. Too much detail.
OP - be honest - would you be so much in love with him if he was a fellow PhD student in a shared apartment?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP - do you realize that a man who is ready to throw millions to your feet after a year of dating when he has other dependents and business interests likely has very poor judgement and is too quick to fall in love? Those quickly falling also tend to quickly fall out.
He is allowing the head between his legs lead his thinking, not the head on his shoulders. That’s bad, and also shows him as not particular involved father. He has no idea how hard is to launch teenagers because he’s not in the game !
Is ex wife doing all the job with kids ? Why did they divorce ? She must be fairly young . It’s a red flag
Idk she knows a lot about his finances and his plans to provide for her for 1.5 years in. Sounds like he knows what to say to attract younger women.
“Too quick to fall in love” is an optimistic take. He is a wealthy old lawyer who has been through the love, family, divorce thing already. This man is detailing all his future plans to give OP access to his money because he knows that’s his draw. As of now, it’s all just talk
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My dad and his wife (she's wife #3) have a 15-year gap. It was totally fine for a while! She got a lot in the "deal"-- US citizenship for herself and her tween son, and he adopted and very much parented her son including through some difficult post-college failure-to-launch and substance use years. (Which my dad was super unhappy about, but he did it). Anyway, now she's 65 and he's 80, and though he's really quite healthy for 80, he can't do anywhere near the activity level that he used to do. She travels without him for maybe 10-12 weeks a year, since he's not willing/able to do much traveling anymore. He's already had one heart attack, but it won't be the last.
She never really made friends of her own in the area, and his friend group sort of tolerates her but they and their same-age wives don't really see her as a peer. (This is of course more complex because she's of a different culture too). Now that his friends are aging, dying, and/or moving away, she's pretty socially isolated. It's no fun being the healthier spouse long-term and it's even less fun being the youngest/healthiest person in a friend group with everyone asking you to help them with their crises. Her son married but isn't having children, so my kids are the only grandkids and while she is very nice to my kids, I know it just isn't the same and it makes her sad.
Most of all, nobody has that much sympathy for her. The age gap is exactly as big as it was on the day they met, and everything has played out exactly as one would expect re: their health. So what did she think was going to happen?
The best thing about it is that they truly love each other and get along. For me, it's great, because she's my dad's primary caregiver and she does a terrific job. I don't know if she regrets it or not.
Sounds like your mother in law is smart and caring woman. She ensured that she gets something of real value from her second husband and not actually for the money. She's in for stability, father figure for her son, family life. He took care of her son, gave her green card with her likely being from a less fortunate country. She loves him back and cares for him and your kids. It's not like she ran producing new set of kids and fighting with you over inheritance because she's not after your dad's money. It's a fair partnership, although she will be miserable when your dad dies.
OP is in a different situation. I don't see any future for a partnership forming there.
Anonymous wrote:My dad and his wife (she's wife #3) have a 15-year gap. It was totally fine for a while! She got a lot in the "deal"-- US citizenship for herself and her tween son, and he adopted and very much parented her son including through some difficult post-college failure-to-launch and substance use years. (Which my dad was super unhappy about, but he did it). Anyway, now she's 65 and he's 80, and though he's really quite healthy for 80, he can't do anywhere near the activity level that he used to do. She travels without him for maybe 10-12 weeks a year, since he's not willing/able to do much traveling anymore. He's already had one heart attack, but it won't be the last.
She never really made friends of her own in the area, and his friend group sort of tolerates her but they and their same-age wives don't really see her as a peer. (This is of course more complex because she's of a different culture too). Now that his friends are aging, dying, and/or moving away, she's pretty socially isolated. It's no fun being the healthier spouse long-term and it's even less fun being the youngest/healthiest person in a friend group with everyone asking you to help them with their crises. Her son married but isn't having children, so my kids are the only grandkids and while she is very nice to my kids, I know it just isn't the same and it makes her sad.
Most of all, nobody has that much sympathy for her. The age gap is exactly as big as it was on the day they met, and everything has played out exactly as one would expect re: their health. So what did she think was going to happen?
The best thing about it is that they truly love each other and get along. For me, it's great, because she's my dad's primary caregiver and she does a terrific job. I don't know if she regrets it or not.
Anonymous wrote:OP - do you realize that a man who is ready to throw millions to your feet after a year of dating when he has other dependents and business interests likely has very poor judgement and is too quick to fall in love? Those quickly falling also tend to quickly fall out.
He is allowing the head between his legs lead his thinking, not the head on his shoulders. That’s bad, and also shows him as not particular involved father. He has no idea how hard is to launch teenagers because he’s not in the game !
Is ex wife doing all the job with kids ? Why did they divorce ? She must be fairly young . It’s a red flag
Anonymous wrote:OP: We’ve only been dating a year and a half. I came here to hear both the good and the bad of a long term big age difference marriage to help me think things through as he was ready before I was in thinking about next steps, not because any decision about the future is imminent, I’m in no rush.
I’ve read everything and I hear the concerns. I very much appreciate the wisdom & knowledge of many of the older women here who’ve shared their experiences. Right now, we’re just enjoying each other’s company and thinking far into the future—not making decisions under pressure. Whatever decision (at minimum a year from now) I ultimately make for me and my future kids, I’ll be sure to own.
I misspoke earlier about the prenup, — he’s promised me money from his assets in the trust, not just the prenup. The prenup he’s promised is actually more generous than a typical marital equality split. But, I’m also working on building my own career and don’t plan on relying on a spouse in the future.
Anonymous wrote:OP: We’ve only been dating a year and a half. I came here to hear both the good and the bad of a long term big age difference marriage to help me think things through as he was ready before I was in thinking about next steps, not because any decision about the future is imminent, I’m in no rush.
I’ve read everything and I hear the concerns. I very much appreciate the wisdom & knowledge of many of the older women here who’ve shared their experiences. Right now, we’re just enjoying each other’s company and thinking far into the future—not making decisions under pressure. Whatever decision (at minimum a year from now) I ultimately make for me and my future kids, I’ll be sure to own.
I misspoke earlier about the prenup, — he’s promised me money from his assets in the trust, not just the prenup. The prenup he’s promised is actually more generous than a typical marital equality split. But, I’m also working on building my own career and don’t plan on relying on a spouse in the future.