Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Plenty of women, including women in high earning professions, don't care about salary (as long as you're financially responsible) and are either childfree by choice or ambivalent about children. It's the women that you're going after/attracting.
The fact that he's renting at 35 would also be a turn-off for me. He just sounds like someone who doesn't want anything that might tie him down, doesn't want financial pressures or obligations. He wants a companion who just wants to do her thing which is his thing.
His posts sound like an easy-breezy, low-maintenance guy, but I'm guessing by date 3 most women are discovering someone who doesn't just "know what he does and doesn't want," but is also not interested in anything out of his wheelhouse.
So, you're eliminating all women who want or have kids, you are renting, you say nothing about plans for the future ... This is not the profile of someone most women want. Sorry. The "hang-out-and-have-fun" phase runs its course for most of us, and when we look toward doing it again in retirement, it's not in a rented DC apartment.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP there are a few things you can do you up your economic profile without switching careers.
First, buy a condo. You can afford one if you can afford 1700/month in rent. Get on the property ladder. At $90K, you actually qualify for middle-income assisted home buying programs through the DC government. Check out this posting, it runs down your options: https://dc.urbanturf.com/articles/blog/first-timer_primer_a_rundown_of_dcs_home_buyer_assistance_programs/7974
You can use NACA or CityFirst to get yourself into a solid apartment and build a financial future for yourself. That will be attractive to women. I'd actually recommend buying a 2BR and renting out the second bedroom. The tax benefits are massive, you can either do a full time roommate or AirBnB. Plus, owning a home means that a woman can one day move in with you.
Second, get a side-hustle. Be a bartender, start an online freelance gig (copy writing, editing, test prep, tutoring, whatever), or start a small biz. It doesn't have to pay a ton, but extra cash is extra cash. A good first year goal is to earn enough to full fund your 401K ($18K pre-tax).
Both of these are attainable by this time next year. Good luck!
I don't know, condos can be difficult to offload and I would be way more open to dating a 35 year old man who rents than one who has a roommate in a condo... I don't think a roommate would be a good look at all.
Really? I think home ownership would make OP appear more financially secure and stable and getting a roommate to help pay down the mortgage would make OP appear smart. But then again, I'm almost 40 so maybe that's dated thinking.
I'm 40 as well so I don't think it's that. I prize privacy and independence, and a 35 year old with a roommate would be a tough sell. I also don't see the lack of ownership as a negative, I don't think it's right for every circumstance and as a single man who isn't looking to have children I wouldn't really expect him to own.
I guess I look at it as a tenant/landlord situation, not a roommate. In any case, OP is nowhere near there, so we've digressed!

Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP there are a few things you can do you up your economic profile without switching careers.
First, buy a condo. You can afford one if you can afford 1700/month in rent. Get on the property ladder. At $90K, you actually qualify for middle-income assisted home buying programs through the DC government. Check out this posting, it runs down your options: https://dc.urbanturf.com/articles/blog/first-timer_primer_a_rundown_of_dcs_home_buyer_assistance_programs/7974
You can use NACA or CityFirst to get yourself into a solid apartment and build a financial future for yourself. That will be attractive to women. I'd actually recommend buying a 2BR and renting out the second bedroom. The tax benefits are massive, you can either do a full time roommate or AirBnB. Plus, owning a home means that a woman can one day move in with you.
Second, get a side-hustle. Be a bartender, start an online freelance gig (copy writing, editing, test prep, tutoring, whatever), or start a small biz. It doesn't have to pay a ton, but extra cash is extra cash. A good first year goal is to earn enough to full fund your 401K ($18K pre-tax).
Both of these are attainable by this time next year. Good luck!
I don't know, condos can be difficult to offload and I would be way more open to dating a 35 year old man who rents than one who has a roommate in a condo... I don't think a roommate would be a good look at all.
Really? I think home ownership would make OP appear more financially secure and stable and getting a roommate to help pay down the mortgage would make OP appear smart. But then again, I'm almost 40 so maybe that's dated thinking.
I'm 40 as well so I don't think it's that. I prize privacy and independence, and a 35 year old with a roommate would be a tough sell. I also don't see the lack of ownership as a negative, I don't think it's right for every circumstance and as a single man who isn't looking to have children I wouldn't really expect him to own.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP there are a few things you can do you up your economic profile without switching careers.
First, buy a condo. You can afford one if you can afford 1700/month in rent. Get on the property ladder. At $90K, you actually qualify for middle-income assisted home buying programs through the DC government. Check out this posting, it runs down your options: https://dc.urbanturf.com/articles/blog/first-timer_primer_a_rundown_of_dcs_home_buyer_assistance_programs/7974
You can use NACA or CityFirst to get yourself into a solid apartment and build a financial future for yourself. That will be attractive to women. I'd actually recommend buying a 2BR and renting out the second bedroom. The tax benefits are massive, you can either do a full time roommate or AirBnB. Plus, owning a home means that a woman can one day move in with you.
Second, get a side-hustle. Be a bartender, start an online freelance gig (copy writing, editing, test prep, tutoring, whatever), or start a small biz. It doesn't have to pay a ton, but extra cash is extra cash. A good first year goal is to earn enough to full fund your 401K ($18K pre-tax).
Both of these are attainable by this time next year. Good luck!
I don't know, condos can be difficult to offload and I would be way more open to dating a 35 year old man who rents than one who has a roommate in a condo... I don't think a roommate would be a good look at all.
Really? I think home ownership would make OP appear more financially secure and stable and getting a roommate to help pay down the mortgage would make OP appear smart. But then again, I'm almost 40 so maybe that's dated thinking.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This blows my mind. 120k at 38 sounds really good to me. Dh and I together make about 240k. I always thought we were upper middle class but apparently we're just getting by "decently."Anonymous wrote:I’m 38 and make 120. Sometimes that still doesn’t seem like enough. It’s enough for me to have a decent car, decent place to live and allows me to do things like CrossFit, travel and other activities. Sure I’d like to make more but I work to live not live to work and cherish time with my friends.
I’ve been told I don’t make enough...younger women seem ok with what I make but I’m not looking to settle down with a 24 year old
That might be fine if you are expecting dual income even after having kids, but if one parent wants to be sahp or cut back in their career after kids arrive, that may not be enough depending on where you live and the quality of life you want.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP there are a few things you can do you up your economic profile without switching careers.
First, buy a condo. You can afford one if you can afford 1700/month in rent. Get on the property ladder. At $90K, you actually qualify for middle-income assisted home buying programs through the DC government. Check out this posting, it runs down your options: https://dc.urbanturf.com/articles/blog/first-timer_primer_a_rundown_of_dcs_home_buyer_assistance_programs/7974
You can use NACA or CityFirst to get yourself into a solid apartment and build a financial future for yourself. That will be attractive to women. I'd actually recommend buying a 2BR and renting out the second bedroom. The tax benefits are massive, you can either do a full time roommate or AirBnB. Plus, owning a home means that a woman can one day move in with you.
Second, get a side-hustle. Be a bartender, start an online freelance gig (copy writing, editing, test prep, tutoring, whatever), or start a small biz. It doesn't have to pay a ton, but extra cash is extra cash. A good first year goal is to earn enough to full fund your 401K ($18K pre-tax).
Both of these are attainable by this time next year. Good luck!
I don't know, condos can be difficult to offload and I would be way more open to dating a 35 year old man who rents than one who has a roommate in a condo... I don't think a roommate would be a good look at all.
Anonymous wrote:OP there are a few things you can do you up your economic profile without switching careers.
First, buy a condo. You can afford one if you can afford 1700/month in rent. Get on the property ladder. At $90K, you actually qualify for middle-income assisted home buying programs through the DC government. Check out this posting, it runs down your options: https://dc.urbanturf.com/articles/blog/first-timer_primer_a_rundown_of_dcs_home_buyer_assistance_programs/7974
You can use NACA or CityFirst to get yourself into a solid apartment and build a financial future for yourself. That will be attractive to women. I'd actually recommend buying a 2BR and renting out the second bedroom. The tax benefits are massive, you can either do a full time roommate or AirBnB. Plus, owning a home means that a woman can one day move in with you.
Second, get a side-hustle. Be a bartender, start an online freelance gig (copy writing, editing, test prep, tutoring, whatever), or start a small biz. It doesn't have to pay a ton, but extra cash is extra cash. A good first year goal is to earn enough to full fund your 401K ($18K pre-tax).
Both of these are attainable by this time next year. Good luck!
Anonymous wrote:This blows my mind. 120k at 38 sounds really good to me. Dh and I together make about 240k. I always thought we were upper middle class but apparently we're just getting by "decently."Anonymous wrote:I’m 38 and make 120. Sometimes that still doesn’t seem like enough. It’s enough for me to have a decent car, decent place to live and allows me to do things like CrossFit, travel and other activities. Sure I’d like to make more but I work to live not live to work and cherish time with my friends.
I’ve been told I don’t make enough...younger women seem ok with what I make but I’m not looking to settle down with a 24 year old
This blows my mind. 120k at 38 sounds really good to me. Dh and I together make about 240k. I always thought we were upper middle class but apparently we're just getting by "decently."Anonymous wrote:I’m 38 and make 120. Sometimes that still doesn’t seem like enough. It’s enough for me to have a decent car, decent place to live and allows me to do things like CrossFit, travel and other activities. Sure I’d like to make more but I work to live not live to work and cherish time with my friends.
I’ve been told I don’t make enough...younger women seem ok with what I make but I’m not looking to settle down with a 24 year old
Anonymous wrote:OP here.
I have dated in every branch out there. Academics, private, government. The harsh reality is that many want kids...or already have kids, which is also something i am not looking for.
Maybe i do want too much. I want someone fun, doesn't have to be looking like a model, but fit. I am an average looking guy who takes care of himself.
I don't think i want it all. I am not looking for a sugar momma...that would be wanting it all.