Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I thought this was going to be about her supporting him, and being worried about him dumping her after he finished school/residency (which happened to a family member). But it's about her . . . having sex with him? Your alternative is for them to break up because . . . he is in medical school? Generations of mothers just gave you the side eye.
No, you're right, that is the concern. She's being used as a booty call until he inevitably meets someone at his large university, whether that's soon or 3 or 4 years from now and he only reveals it when he dashes off to a residency.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I was long distance with my boyfriend at 23.
He paid for half my train/flight tickets but I always went to him because guess what! I loved where he lived better. It was my decision to do it that way.
We ended up getting engaged, then I moved to him, and I was married by 25. I’m so glad my parents weren’t up in my business about this and recognized me for the adult I was at that age.
We’ve been married 18 years.
If the med student is paying for half the tickets like then boyfriend was, then it's different. If Op's DD is paying for the tickets on her own, it's a racket
Anonymous wrote:I was long distance with my boyfriend at 23.
He paid for half my train/flight tickets but I always went to him because guess what! I loved where he lived better. It was my decision to do it that way.
We ended up getting engaged, then I moved to him, and I was married by 25. I’m so glad my parents weren’t up in my business about this and recognized me for the adult I was at that age.
We’ve been married 18 years.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I thought this was going to be about her supporting him, and being worried about him dumping her after he finished school/residency (which happened to a family member). But it's about her . . . having sex with him? Your alternative is for them to break up because . . . he is in medical school? Generations of mothers just gave you the side eye.
No, you're right, that is the concern. She's being used as a booty call until he inevitably meets someone at his large university, whether that's soon or 3 or 4 years from now and he only reveals it when he dashes off to a residency.
You know he could probably find a more convenient booty call if he wanted to, right? One that lives in town. And he could always meet someone else, even if your daughter moved there and moved in.
OP, if you have concerns, you can express them gently, once. Ask her if she’s happy in the relationship and getting her needs met (and no, I’m not talking about sex). Tell her you feel the effort to keep the relationship going seems to be one sided and you don’t want to see her get hurt. She can take your feelings into consideration, or not.
But be careful in how you voice the concerns and be aware she may share the conversation with the boyfriend. If they do stay together and marry, you may forget, but he may not. I will never have anything more than a civil/polite relationship with my in laws because of crappy things they said about my character when my now husband and I were dating in our twenties.
More convenient than a pretty young woman who lives 1,000 miles away flying to him, paying for the flights, having sex for a couple of days, and then flying away? No, it actually does not get any more convenient than that.
Anonymous wrote:It’s very weird you’re so fixated on her having sex. She’s 23 with a career, not a child. And guess what, she probably quite enjoys having sex with him.
Maybe he is using her, maybe he isn’t. Early 20s are for going through those experiences and figuring things out. MYOB and let her live her life.
Anonymous wrote:
It appears that this young man is not showing the requisite amount of reciprocal effort or intention and this coupled with the whole male doctor-philanderer / eager RNs around every corner trope is causing the unease. Not likely that someone working on a Ph.D. in the humanities would elicit such a maternal response.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Your post does seem odd OP. If all a guy wanted was sex, he could go to any bar + tell people he was in med school. You have to have more faith in your dd and back off. What will be--- will be.
Yeah, that’s kinda her whole point- she is worried he is super eligible.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'd be more concerned about the money she is pouring into this for flights than the sex. That is very young to meet your forever person.
If financially independent, the money isn't Mom's business, either.
I met my "forever person" (really? I'm not a rescue pit bull) at 23, by the way.
Then I'm sure you're well aware that it's unusual.
No it’s not most people meet their forever person before they are 25.
Well…most people meet their first spouse before 25, perhaps. Forever is a long time, especially if you start that young.
Anonymous wrote:OP, what is your daughters career? Is she in some low paying pink collar field where she needs to marry the “right” guy in order to have a basic middle class life in many places? I am the breadwinner in our family, and always made enough to live comfortably so my spouse was just that, someone I loved and did “plane trip” material with.
If you are invested because you see your daughter setting up her life career wise as needed a breadwinner DH, then this becomes a financial decision as well as relationship.