Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm 32, no kids, never been married. My BF (38) jokes with me that he could date a 1k/hour lawyer, however, he found women like that always compete with him. Men, to a certain extent, don't care about your job. Have a job that pays your bills and isn't embarrassing, beyond that if they also make money they just find it annoying.
Uh, your BF is a sexist douche. To your bolded, women like that do not "always compete with him". All women making over $150k a year are not competing with your BF as a core personality trait. Your BF is imaging that women ALL these women are competing with him because he has regressive ideas about women.
Hope you have fun being a mommy.
Interesting how you make an assumption about my salary. Also interesting how you make assumptions about the people he's dated.
You said your BF thinks ALL women making a lot of money are competing with him. Since he is with you, I'm assuming he does not think you are like this. Ergo, you don't make much money and he looks forward to you being a mommy. It's pretty straight forward. Check in with us in 10 years.
Anonymous wrote:I am a professional (think Finance/Law/CPA) and my salary varies but never less the mid-six figures. I am 45 and divorced with two teen sons (1 in college and 1 in high school). I have a beach house and a nice primary home, my DCs went/go to private school. I don’t bring up my career or my beach house or the private school but I sense some hesitancy from some guys when they figure it out. I know the answer is to find someone who doesn’t care but I wonder if I am being ruled out in the early stages before they get to know me because of it. Thanks
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am a professional (think Finance/Law/CPA) and my salary varies but never less the mid-six figures. I am 45 and divorced with two teen sons (1 in college and 1 in high school). I have a beach house and a nice primary home, my DCs went/go to private school. I don’t bring up my career or my beach house or the private school but I sense some hesitancy from some guys when they figure it out. I know the answer is to find someone who doesn’t care but I wonder if I am being ruled out in the early stages before they get to know me because of it. Thanks
OP, unlike most of the other PPs, I am a man. Moreover, I am a divorced man age 55, and I am seeking out women just like you online (age 45-55 who have graduate degrees). I do see women like you who clearly earn more than me (I.e. women who have MDs or are law partners or VPs). I love my job as a contractor and am happy with how much I make (~$180k). My concern would be that you are looking for a similar high-earner type of man (another VP or law partner type) and would not be satisfied with a guy who makes “respectable money” but less than you.
So yes it is possible guys are ruling you out at an early stage. Call it insecurity if you like.
Don’t know what you can do about it though.
Yet she made time to make a dating profile so... I know all I neeed to know about you and how you treat and value women based on your name calling.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It sounds like you need hobbies so that you can be more interesting as a person. They also might be looking for someone with a bit more culture. Read books you are interested in; attend lectures; go down rabbit holes where you learn more about Frida Kahlo. Be curious about the world. I also have a poor opinion of anyone who admits to having a beach house. This post made me realize I have stereotypes about the level of intelligence of those people. They are either old money in which case it isn't there fault a great someone bought a house. But if they bought a house, I give a side eye.
Oh. I have hobbies. I enjoy travel very much (and often the beaten path). I also enjoy hiking, swimming, boogie boarding, gardening and baking. I am currently learning Italian and like to read biographies but my current book is Untamed. Before Covid I also enjoyed theater and have taken Improv classes. I didn’t mean to make it sound like my career and beach house was it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am a professional (think Finance/Law/CPA) and my salary varies but never less the mid-six figures. I am 45 and divorced with two teen sons (1 in college and 1 in high school). I have a beach house and a nice primary home, my DCs went/go to private school. I don’t bring up my career or my beach house or the private school but I sense some hesitancy from some guys when they figure it out. I know the answer is to find someone who doesn’t care but I wonder if I am being ruled out in the early stages before they get to know me because of it. Thanks
Man here: in general, men don’t view your career or income as a primary consideration when choosing who to date, it doesn’t affect that nearly as much as other things, including physical attractiveness, sexuality, and personality. It is a canard that men are somehow “threatened” by this. The major confusion, I think, is that many women expect it to be a positive and it isn’t, and they interpret that as it being a negative factor, which it really isn’t.
Several caveats: if your career is sufficiently intense and demanding, some men will wonder if you actually have sufficient time and energy for a relationship on top of that. Men are also aware that a great many women have a strong preference to date men with higher status than themselves, so may exercise some caution in light of that.
Last week I saw the profile of a smoking hot blonde who is a single mom and an MD and I thought do you really have time to date?
You mean does she have time to be at my beck and call and baby me? You would be correct that she doesn't. Men say they want all in, what they mean is she does ALL the work, and sleeps with him with a smile on her face.
No, I mean does she have time to see me at all, nitwit.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am a professional (think Finance/Law/CPA) and my salary varies but never less the mid-six figures. I am 45 and divorced with two teen sons (1 in college and 1 in high school). I have a beach house and a nice primary home, my DCs went/go to private school. I don’t bring up my career or my beach house or the private school but I sense some hesitancy from some guys when they figure it out. I know the answer is to find someone who doesn’t care but I wonder if I am being ruled out in the early stages before they get to know me because of it. Thanks
Man here: in general, men don’t view your career or income as a primary consideration when choosing who to date, it doesn’t affect that nearly as much as other things, including physical attractiveness, sexuality, and personality. It is a canard that men are somehow “threatened” by this. The major confusion, I think, is that many women expect it to be a positive and it isn’t, and they interpret that as it being a negative factor, which it really isn’t.
Several caveats: if your career is sufficiently intense and demanding, some men will wonder if you actually have sufficient time and energy for a relationship on top of that. Men are also aware that a great many women have a strong preference to date men with higher status than themselves, so may exercise some caution in light of that.
Last week I saw the profile of a smoking hot blonde who is a single mom and an MD and I thought do you really have time to date?
You mean does she have time to be at my beck and call and baby me? You would be correct that she doesn't. Men say they want all in, what they mean is she does ALL the work, and sleeps with him with a smile on her face.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am a professional (think Finance/Law/CPA) and my salary varies but never less the mid-six figures. I am 45 and divorced with two teen sons (1 in college and 1 in high school). I have a beach house and a nice primary home, my DCs went/go to private school. I don’t bring up my career or my beach house or the private school but I sense some hesitancy from some guys when they figure it out. I know the answer is to find someone who doesn’t care but I wonder if I am being ruled out in the early stages before they get to know me because of it. Thanks
Man here: in general, men don’t view your career or income as a primary consideration when choosing who to date, it doesn’t affect that nearly as much as other things, including physical attractiveness, sexuality, and personality. It is a canard that men are somehow “threatened” by this. The major confusion, I think, is that many women expect it to be a positive and it isn’t, and they interpret that as it being a negative factor, which it really isn’t.
Several caveats: if your career is sufficiently intense and demanding, some men will wonder if you actually have sufficient time and energy for a relationship on top of that. Men are also aware that a great many women have a strong preference to date men with higher status than themselves, so may exercise some caution in light of that.
Last week I saw the profile of a smoking hot blonde who is a single mom and an MD and I thought do you really have time to date?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am a professional (think Finance/Law/CPA) and my salary varies but never less the mid-six figures. I am 45 and divorced with two teen sons (1 in college and 1 in high school). I have a beach house and a nice primary home, my DCs went/go to private school. I don’t bring up my career or my beach house or the private school but I sense some hesitancy from some guys when they figure it out. I know the answer is to find someone who doesn’t care but I wonder if I am being ruled out in the early stages before they get to know me because of it. Thanks
Man here: in general, men don’t view your career or income as a primary consideration when choosing who to date, it doesn’t affect that nearly as much as other things, including physical attractiveness, sexuality, and personality. It is a canard that men are somehow “threatened” by this. The major confusion, I think, is that many women expect it to be a positive and it isn’t, and they interpret that as it being a negative factor, which it really isn’t.
Several caveats: if your career is sufficiently intense and demanding, some men will wonder if you actually have sufficient time and energy for a relationship on top of that. Men are also aware that a great many women have a strong preference to date men with higher status than themselves, so may exercise some caution in light of that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm 32, no kids, never been married. My BF (38) jokes with me that he could date a 1k/hour lawyer, however, he found women like that always compete with him. Men, to a certain extent, don't care about your job. Have a job that pays your bills and isn't embarrassing, beyond that if they also make money they just find it annoying.
Uh, your BF is a sexist douche. To your bolded, women like that do not "always compete with him". All women making over $150k a year are not competing with your BF as a core personality trait. Your BF is imaging that women ALL these women are competing with him because he has regressive ideas about women.
Hope you have fun being a mommy.
Interesting how you make an assumption about my salary. Also interesting how you make assumptions about the people he's dated.
Anonymous wrote:OP said she makes mid six figures. Some PPs took that as 150k, some took it as 500k. I'm curious which is correct.
Also, PP who looks down on beach homes...why?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am a professional (think Finance/Law/CPA) and my salary varies but never less the mid-six figures. I am 45 and divorced with two teen sons (1 in college and 1 in high school). I have a beach house and a nice primary home, my DCs went/go to private school. I don’t bring up my career or my beach house or the private school but I sense some hesitancy from some guys when they figure it out. I know the answer is to find someone who doesn’t care but I wonder if I am being ruled out in the early stages before they get to know me because of it. Thanks
Man here: in general, men don’t view your career or income as a primary consideration when choosing who to date, it doesn’t affect that nearly as much as other things, including physical attractiveness, sexuality, and personality. It is a canard that men are somehow “threatened” by this. The major confusion, I think, is that many women expect it to be a positive and it isn’t, and they interpret that as it being a negative factor, which it really isn’t.
Several caveats: if your career is sufficiently intense and demanding, some men will wonder if you actually have sufficient time and energy for a relationship on top of that. Men are also aware that a great many women have a strong preference to date men with higher status than themselves, so may exercise some caution in light of that.