Anonymous wrote:I'm a 42 year old man, dating a woman who's 49. It's getting serious. I'm really into her. She takes care of herself, is in good shape, looks great, and has a high libido. (I think all the same applies to me). But I keep thinking about what will happen in 5 years, 10 years, 15 years. Will she suddenly age quickly, lose her libido, etc., while I'm still fit and active for an extended period? I know eventually I'll be old and have a lower libido, too, and then we'll probably be back in sync, but there will presumably be a lag -- potentially for many years. Have people been through this? How'd it work out?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Men age more slowly than women overall, about 15 years behind them, so her at 50 will be about the same as you at 65 years old, give or take depending on your genetics and health.
So take that into account. If you have a great relationship, just have some realistic expectations about how her body will change in her 50s and 60s.
Prove your stats, please.
Why is that men die 5 years earlier than women on average?
Because women do the emotional and mental labor. Men are happier when they are married. Women are happier when they are not married. Bc many of us have to take care of an emotionally immature man who relies on his wife to manage things he deems unimportant.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Men age more slowly than women overall, about 15 years behind them, so her at 50 will be about the same as you at 65 years old, give or take depending on your genetics and health.
So take that into account. If you have a great relationship, just have some realistic expectations about how her body will change in her 50s and 60s.
Prove your stats, please.
Why is that men die 5 years earlier than women on average?
Anonymous wrote:My husband dumped me when I turned 50 – for someone 35. I was 5 years older. Worked out well for him.
Anonymous wrote:I'm a 42 year old man, dating a woman who's 49. It's getting serious. I'm really into her. She takes care of herself, is in good shape, looks great, and has a high libido. (I think all the same applies to me). But I keep thinking about what will happen in 5 years, 10 years, 15 years. Will she suddenly age quickly, lose her libido, etc., while I'm still fit and active for an extended period? I know eventually I'll be old and have a lower libido, too, and then we'll probably be back in sync, but there will presumably be a lag -- potentially for many years. Have people been through this? How'd it work out?
Anonymous wrote:OP here. Reading all the comments with interest. Apart from mismatched aging, I don't have concerns. We have a strong, open, supportive emotional connection, we find each other interesting to talk to, we laugh together, we have common interests, our kids are similar ages, we both want long-term companionship, etc. I don't want these thoughts about aging to corrupt an otherwise beautiful relationship, but on the other hand, I don't want to stay in this now and increase our commitment if it's foreseeably doomed. If we broke up, I'm sure I could "do" younger, but there's a lot of risk there --- no guarantee I would find all the other pieces with someone else and no guarantee that younger woman would age well at all.
Anonymous wrote:You’ve only just started dating. Why would you even want to get serious? I mean be with her while it rocks your boat but don’t commingle assets.
I hope you have kids already? Cause she isn’t gonna give you any so one less reason to think about what happens in 10 years. Also don’t live together and the question is moot. I don’t understand why someone thinks 10 years ahead if no kids or finances are involved.
I am a 49yo woman fwiw.