T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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153.1 | | NEBVAX::BELFORTE | Steven's BEST half | Tue Dec 23 1986 16:06 | 8 |
| Hum????? Are you sure???
My mother was 5 yrs older than my second stepfather, and I am
6 1/2 yrs older than my husband. Olivia Newton John is 15 (?) yrs
older than her husband (just saw this in the newspaper). There
are a lot of us "older women/younger husbands" out here.
M-L
|
153.2 | And another generalization bites the dust, I hope | NY1MM::LEIGH | But why New York? | Tue Dec 23 1986 16:40 | 9 |
| Here's another couple that doesn't match the generalization stated in .0.
Mabel and I were married when I was 21 ("...it was a very good year..."
and she was 24.
Why do women do this, you ask? Well, why not? The social gulf created
by 3 years' difference may be huge at 18, but it grows steadily smaller.
Bob
|
153.3 | cultural mores | ADVAX::ENO | Bright Eyes | Tue Dec 23 1986 16:46 | 18 |
| My vague impression is that this is a cultural thing based on two
reasons:
1. Men were generally older when they married because they needed
time to establish themselves financially before taking on the added
responsibilities of a family.
2. Women were married younger because those were their prime
childbearing years.
So, a man in his thirties (solid, fiscally responsible) would marry
a woman in her teens/twenties (young and fertile).
My husband is five years older than me. Folk wisdom (I come from
a matriarchial family) is that women mature faster than men and
that's why we marry men several years older than we are.
Gloria
|
153.4 | not in my family | FDCV13::SANDSTROM | | Wed Dec 24 1986 09:09 | 13 |
|
Hmmm, no one told my family that....
...I'm 2 yrs older than my husband,
...my sister is 2 yrs older than her husband,
...my brother is 2+ yrs younger than his SO,
...and my mother is 10 yrs older than her husband!
I guess we're bending the rules! ;-) ;-) ;-)
Conni
Happy Holidays!
|
153.5 | A note of intrest | STING::BARBER | | Wed Dec 24 1986 11:14 | 8 |
| I don't claim to have a good answer to this but Ill buy the
reasons in .3. One interesting note of interest, according to
the statistics I read a year or so ago the older woman, younger
man relationship / marriage has the best success rate via the
people polled and the fact that it has the lowest divorce rate
of all combinations. There must be something to it.
Bob B
|
153.6 | ramblings | CLT::BUTENHOF | Approachable Systems | Wed Dec 24 1986 11:32 | 26 |
| My mother is 4 years older than my father. I believe that my
mother's mother was also several years older than her husband,
though I don't remember for sure (his age, unfortunately, has
been irrelevant for over 20 years now).
Barbara is 4� years younger than me, but it's not like I was
looking for someone younger. We just met and that's how things
were. In fact, my fantasy "ideal mate" was always exactly the
same age as me, ever since I was a little kid.
I said I wasn't looking for someone younger... Barbara *was*
looking for someone older. She felt that boys/men her own age
were too immature. By that time (she was 19), I suspect that
was almost 100% untrue... but it *is* true that most girls
mature earlier than most boys, and so it's likely that there was
a foundation for this bias in her earlier teenage years.
Experience suggests that her attitude is fairly common among
teenage girls, and may conceivably be the basis for the
traditional age differences... particularly back when people
married as young teenagers. Even though things were pretty much
male controlled back then, it's likely that a 17 year old boy
might have preferred to marry a young 13 year old rather than a
15 or 16 year old who might be more mature than he... :-)
/dave
|
153.7 | More ramblings | APEHUB::STHILAIRE | | Mon Dec 29 1986 11:52 | 14 |
|
My grandmother was only 15 when she married my grandfather who was
then 30 (a widower with 2 kids) and they went on to have 10 kids
of their own! I tend to think Grandma was nuts, but I guess there
weren't many options open for a young woman in Nova Scotia in the
year 1900!
My father was 12 yrs. older than my mother, and my ex-husband was
3 yrs. older than me, but it's a tradition that is rapidly changing
(thank God)! *Some* men can get to be "old f**ts" at such an early
age it's no wonder older women want young men!
Lorna
|
153.8 | Younger Guys | FDCV13::KNORR | | Mon Dec 29 1986 16:02 | 8 |
| Hear Hear .7 I agree that older guys do become " old f**ts"!!!
That's one of the main reasons my SO is 7 years younger then
I am. Older men that were married were always hung up on how
their ex-wifes were taking them to the cleaners and ones that
weren't married were always hung up on the fact that women were
trying to trap them. So I picked a younger guy that's never been
married and doesn't have anything against it. By the way I'm 33
and divorced Russ is 26 (I'm glad I found him).
|
153.9 | | BLIMP::ANDY_LESLIE | wishes you a Happy 1987 | Wed Dec 31 1986 17:50 | 5 |
|
I find the proportion of old farts to real people to be equal between
men and women of any age.
Some grow out of it, too, don't forget.
|
153.10 | Darwin at Work | GRECO::ANDERSON | | Sun Jan 04 1987 20:30 | 13 |
| This is a male speaking.
I think the generalization may have been the case in years gone
by for the reasons mentioned in other replys. I don't think that
it holds now. In my case, with the usual sprinkling of exception,
I have tended to find myself paired with "older" women, anywhere
from a few months to as much as 7+ years. This has not been by
design but, I believe a function of the selection process (oh how
terribly Darwinian!).
I have found that friends, male and female, seem to have a
predisposition for a + or - age variance. I have tried to psyche
this one out and have yet to formulate a suitable opinion.
|
153.12 | Not for me! | CADSYS::RICHARDSON | | Mon Jan 05 1987 18:14 | 19 |
| I was about a year older than my first husband, and I am almost
three years older than Paul is. Most of our friends vary from five
years younger than I am to about 8 years older.
One of my old friends married a man who is her father's age, which
I always thought was pretty strange (though he is a NICE "older
gentleman", and is very good to her). He has a daughter from his
first marriage who is almost my friend's age, and he is retired
already (of course; she is almost 34, and he is 65 or so). Soon
after their marriage, she nursed him while he recovered from a heart
attack! Then again, she always dated men who were much, much older
than we were (college men in high school; men in their fifties in
college...). I don't know why. I guess there are some attractions
to much older men, especially if a woman is not especially serious
about "making her own way in the world" (as I am!); marry someone
who already owns a house, has accumulated enough money to live
comfortably on, has leisure time.... Still, it's not for me!
/Charlotte
|
153.13 | age unknown | ATODLO::BACOT | | Thu Jan 08 1987 21:43 | 51 |
| RE: .12> " .... Still its not for me!"
What's not for you???
I am 17 years younger than my SO.
My father was 18 years older than his wife when she died
at age 38. There was only 10 years difference between our ages.
Oddly enough my father had bypass surgery shortly after they were married
and she 'nursed him while he recovered', and then he 'nursed her' while she
died of cancer.
My mother is 15 or so years older than her SO.
I don't consider it "pretty strange", why is it strange to fall in
love with someone who is not in your age group -
By the way, I am quite serious about "making my own way in the world",
as was my fathers wife, as are the women I know that have
married/lived with men who are 10+ years older than they are.
These are women who have careers, or who have started families
with these 'NICE older gentlemen, or both.
As for the men who are starting, sometimes second, families in
their 40's and 50's, I applaud them. I have seen them, doubtful yet joyful
and as scared and as enchanted as any 'young' father could be.
As for assuming that a man who is older "owns a house, has accumulated
enough money to live comfortably on, has leisure time.....",
It does not hold true in my case, nor in my father's case,
nor does it hold true for any of the couples that I know, in fact
some of these 'older gentlemen' are quite heavily burdened financially
with previous obligations, child support, tuition, helping the kids,
etc. As a generalization it is, at best, unfair and like many
generalizations, it is also thoughtless.
It seems to me that you are severly limiting yourself when the people
you love, or choose as your friends must fall within certain guidelines
as to age. If you set guidelines as to age do you also restrict
your associations with people who differ from you in other ways
such as income, interests, religion, ethnic background, etc.
Perhaps we would do better if we judged the individual on their
own merits rather than the superficial ones we contrive for ourselves,
or worse, are contrived for us.
On the original note .0
I can not say why other women live with/marry men older than themselves,
as for myself; we met, we became friends, we fell in love, and are
still friends and still in love 6 years later.
I wasn't interested in his age, he could have been 17 or 70 -
I wasn't interested in his ethnic background either, Arabian or
Eskimo and so on.
Maybe the question should be, why do we love, what is the attraction,
what draws us to the people who are our friends/lovers/SOs?
and more, what keeps us together through tragedy and prosperity?
Why? -Why Not-
Angela
|
153.14 | [Win Some, Lose Some] | VAXUUM::DYER | Spot the Difference | Mon Jan 26 1987 01:52 | 9 |
| .7> *Some* men can get to be "old f**ts" at such an early age . . .
Your "some" qualifier (and the added emphasis) is much appreciated.
.8> I agree that older guys do become "old f**ts"!!!
Your lack of a "some" qualifier is not appreciated.
<_Jym_>
|
153.15 | Experience wanted. | ULTRA::GUGEL | Simplicity is Elegance | Tue Mar 10 1987 14:48 | 23 |
| I've recently been thinking about this topic again. (The last recent
reply in the independence topic caused me to write this). The reason
that I have always dated older men is simply that those men I've met
who are younger than I or my age are too *immature* for me. This
has held true throughout my entire adult life and I am only 27 years
old. *Maybe* this will change as I get into my 30s and 40s.
I don't agree about the older men I've known being "old f**ts" either.
None of the older men I've associated with have this prolem.
They're more experienced with relationships and people and the world
and know how to treat a woman much better than inexperienced, younger men.
On the whole, they've been (or at least acted) more intelligent,
better mannered, less dependent, and they no longer have a need to "prove"
their "manhood" the way *a lot* of young, immature guys do.
I have a 62-year old (platonic) male friend who is a really wonderful
man. Sure, he grew up with the same sexism that all men of his
age did, but he sure tries harder and sure is *nicer* than *a lot* of
brash, younger men I've met who are still trying to prove their "manhood".
Just one woman's experience.
-Ellen
|
153.16 | | JETSAM::REZUCHA | | Thu Apr 09 1987 17:48 | 47 |
| Benjamin Franklin's 8 reasons to marry an older woman.
1) Because they have more Knowledge of the world, and their Minds are
better stored with Observations; their Conversation is more improving,
and more lastly agreeable.
2) Because when Women cease to be handsome, they study to be good. To
maintain their Influence over Men, they supply the Diminution of
Beauty by an Augmentation of Utility. They learn to do a thousand
services, small and great, and are the most tender and useful of all
Friends when you are sick. Thus they continue to be amiable. And hence
there is hardly such a thing to be found as an old Woman who is not
a good woman.
3) Because there is no hazard of children, which irregularly produced
may be attended with much inconvenience.
4) Because through more Experience they are more prudent and discreet
in conducting an Intrigue to prevent Suspicion. The Commerce with
them is therefore safer with regard to your reputation; and with
regard to theirs, if the Affairs should happen to be known,
considerate People might be rather inclined to excuse an old Woman,
who would kindly take care of a young Man, form his manners by
her good Councils, and prevent his ruining his Health and Fortune
among mercenary Prostitutes.
5) Because in every Animal that walks upright, the Deficiency of
the Fluids that fill the muscles appears first in the highest
part. The face grows lank and wrinkled; then the neck; then
the breast and arms; the lower parts continuing to the last
as plump as ever; so that covering all above with a basket, and
regarding only what is below the girdle, it is impossible of two
woman to know an old one from a young one. And as in the dark all
cats are gray, the pleasure of corporal enjoyment with an old
woman is at least equal and frequently superior; every knack
being by practice capable of improvement.
6) Because the sin is less. The debauching of a virgin may be her ruin,
and make her life unhappy.
7) Because the compunction is less. The having made a young girl
miserable may give you frequent bitter reflections; none of
which can attend making an old woman happy.
8) Because they are so grateful!!!
Source: Advice to a young man (Philadelphia, June 25, 1745)
|
153.17 | why the flack??? | USMRW1::REDICK | Tracy | Tue May 05 1987 23:17 | 15 |
|
My best friend is 19 her husband-to-be is 28.
I'm also 19 and my male-friend is 31.
The flack we have to take on the age issue is incredible. The looks,
the gasps, the lectures...what is the BIG deal anyway. By the way
are there any mothers out there that would oppose the conditions
above if applied to their daughter. Our parents are having a fit.
Where are the younger men anyway??? I barely know any that are
my age...and I'm in college full-time days...I still don't meet
any...
...tracy...
|
153.18 | What *do* you see in her? | ULTRA::ZURKO | UI:Where the rubber meets the road | Wed May 06 1987 09:45 | 11 |
| re: .17
When I was 18 I dated a guy who was 29, and now I'm married to a man
who's ten years older then me. When I was 18, my folks freaked out about
this guy because: all he could possibly want from me was sex! How
insulting. But there it was; the Puritan mind at work. At the time I
was not articulate enough to say 1) there's more to me than a body folks,
and 2) I want him for some fun and games too.
I would guess that your folks are coming from the same place mine were.
Mez
|
153.19 | old auntie advice | RAINBO::IANNUZZO | Catherine T. | Wed May 06 1987 10:30 | 78 |
| re: .17
I'm a mother, (34), with a precocious 11 year old daughter. If
she ever took to dating older men, I'd pack her off to a convent (:}).
When I was 18, I married a man 28. I was an intelligent
and articulate young person, got along well with people older than
me, and didn't at the time think that the age business mattered
very much at all. What is hard to realize at the moment, is that
you are still developmentally an embryonic human being.
One might be able to score perfect 800's on the college boards,
discourse eloquently on philosophy, and have a plan for fixing
the injustices of the world, and still not really know who
and what you are as a human being on your own. Your mind and
interests may outstrip many men your own age (men are
generally slower at emotional development than women), but there
are ways in which you are still very young and undeveloped.
There are several especial dangers here. You are at an age
when a person should be experimenting with various kinds of
relationships. What you gain from this is a clearer of sense
of what the possibilities are for your life: how you can
respond to/be responding to by different types of people.
As long as there is no permanent commitment, one can write
it off as a learning experience. This is more likely to
happen with partners your own age, since they are also going
through the same kind of experimentation and development.
The temptation to commit yourself to more than you are ready
for is much greater with an older man. The potential for
an unequal balance of power is very, very high. "Power"
in this context does not mean bossing someone around or
being an obvious tyrant. What is does mean is that the
terms, tone, and development of the relationship is far
more likely to be set by one partner and just absorbed
by the other. When you are at an age where you should
be sorting out a sense of your own identity, you may find
that identity being handed to you by someone else.
Because of cultural conditioning, there is an inequality
of power in most man/woman relationships. Even in relationships
that are considered to be very modern and sensitive, the
woman tends to do more adjusting to suit the man than otherwise.
There is an even greater imbalance of power in an older/younger
relationships. As an older man, he is more likely to have a
core sense of himself that is stronger than yours.
It can be flattering to feel that an older and more experienced
person considers you his equal in choosing you for a partner.
This can tempt you to surrender much of the responsibility
for your own personal development. It's something you may
not notice for 10 years, but it causes a kind of emotional
retardation and lack of confidence in yourself.
What is more probably on your parents' minds is what are his
motivations? Why would a 31 year old go out with a 19 year old?
More often than not, the man wants a pliable, undeveloped
partner. This can be because he is not secure enough to
have a relationship with a more mature, well-defined person
his own age. The relationship is very often exploitive.
A few years ago, most parents would have considered the
possibility of sexual exploitation the most alarming aspect
of such a connection. I consider the subtle emotional exploitation,
which can prevent you from developing as your own person,
to be far more damaging in the long run.
I can't overstate the case. I also know, that just like me at
the same age, you will probably consider it all a lot of nonsense.
I'm sure you'll probably feel that your man is different, that
your relationship is something different. sigh. Everyone has
to live their own life, make their own mistakes, and come to
their own conclusions. I hope your experience isn't as painful
as mine was, and growing up doesn't cost you as much. I've
been divorced for 9 years, the sole support of two kids (13 & 11),
and it's been no easy task starting to do the work at 26 that I
should have been doing at 18.
I probably sound like an insufferable 105-year old auntie.
Sorry if I've overdone the free advice...
|
153.20 | | DONJON::SCHREINER | Go ahead, make me PURRR... | Wed May 06 1987 11:17 | 25 |
| re: .19
I couldn't have said it better myself!! I was/am in exactly the
same situation.
I married at 20 to a man almost 8 years older than myself. At the
time I got married I couldn't understand all the grief about the
age difference. It didn't seem like there was an age difference
at all!! As time progressed, and I started to mature and understand
myself, I began to realize that I was just a "puppet", that I was
being manipulated. What was worse yet, was my lack of self-esteam
and self worth. I was always being told I was getting "old" and
I would need to be "traded-in for a younger model", all the typical
stuff!! I began to realize how immature he was and how controlled
I felt.
I am divorced now, and two years later am still discovering myself,
something I should have done lots earlier.
I'm not saying that it's going to be this way for everyone, but
just be aware of the warning signs....and don't be afraid to be
who you are right now!! I know I waited too long.
cin
|
153.21 | sometimes it's just the opposite of .19 | ULTRA::GUGEL | Spring is for rock-climbing | Wed May 06 1987 11:20 | 17 |
| Catherine's reply reminded me of a friend of mine, male, then aged
22 who started going with a 14-year-old girl (whom I met and acted
and looked more like 17 or 18). They stayed together exclusively
for about 3 years, until she went off to college. (To be fair to
Kevin, he did not know how old she was until after he became attached
to her).
All along, people kept telling Kevin that he shouldn't be hanging
around with someone so young. They were *soooo* worried about Mandy.
*I*, on the other hand, was more worried about Kevin, knowing him as
I did then. He was very devoted to her and loved her very much and
it showed. I told him that she would drop him someday because she was
young and needed other experiences and relationships before settling
permanently on one person. I was right that time. It took Kevin
a long time to get over her.
-Ellen
|
153.22 | What WAS that book ? | ARMORY::CHARBONND | | Wed May 06 1987 12:01 | 16 |
| A few years back, a friend recommended a book to me, I can't
remember the name of it. Written by a woman, can't remember her
name either, with input from many friends. The book attempted
to categorize men into 20+ types based on how they related
to women. The type that stuck in my head most was called
"The Doe Stalker", the older guy who only chases younger women.
In part it stuck because the description fitted an acquaintance
tp a tee. Since the author was located in Ca. and I'm in Mass.
i wondered "How did she meet HIM ?" There are many men who need
younger womens adulation to make them feel young and virile.
Also, they have difficulty relating to women their own age.
IF this is the case, then the previous examples are more
evidence that the scenario is too often true. If the older
partner is not experiencing growth in their life, they
might seek to stifle that of their younger partner.
|
153.23 | The birth certificate is not a good judge of age | HPSCAD::WALL | I see the middle kingdom... | Wed May 06 1987 12:59 | 18 |
|
It seems that life experience, not age, is the key.
I cite the example of my parents. My dad is nine years older than
my mom. However, when they married:
My dad was 34, and had arrived at the stage in his life when he
felt he wanted to settle down.
My mom had already been married once, and subsequently widowed.
Mind age, not body age, is the key.
I realize I'm not making any profound statements, here. I'm just
trying to give a rationale for why it sometimes works, and why it
sometimes doesn't.
DFW
|
153.24 | life experience does take time | COLORS::IANNUZZO | Catherine T. | Thu May 07 1987 10:47 | 14 |
| re: .23
Mind and EMOTIONAL DEVELOPMENT age is definitely the key,
rather than body age. However, I think it's a pretty safe
bet that a 19 year old cannot possibly have had the life
experience of a 30 year old, unless maybe she's been living
on the street in Beirut or something. At 34, there are some
parts of me that feel about 45 in terms of life experience,
some parts that are about 25, and others that are about 12.
I've know people chronologically older than me that feel
younger, and some that are chronologically younger but feel
older. The possibilities are endless, but sheer practicality
would indicate that the younger a person is, the less likely
the field for life and self-experience.
|
153.25 | my heart belongs to daddy | IMAGIN::KOLBE | Mudluscious and puddle-wonderfull | Thu May 07 1987 16:09 | 12 |
| I would think the biggest worry in a relationship where one partner
is much older than the other is the generation gap. Imagine when
you are in your prime and your love is like an old parent instead
of a spouse.
My husband is about 6 months younger than me (a fact he loves to
tease me about) but there have been times when I wish I had married
an older guy who would take care of me like a father. But if I had
I doubt I would have matured as fast and maybe I wouldn't have matured
at all! As everyone else pointed out though each relationship is
unique to itself. liesl
|
153.26 | on younger men... | COLORS::IANNUZZO | Catherine T. | Thu May 07 1987 17:33 | 10 |
| re: .25
I was in a relationship with a younger man (4 years younger), after my
marriage to a man 10 years older (see a previous reply for THAT story).
I found the relationship very liberating. It was a little scary to
realize that he couldn't take care of me. We could never be more or
less than equals, and it gave me a lot of room to grow. That
he was bisexual helped a great deal too, since he didn't tend
toward a particulary traditional male role, and that left me
even more space to develop. All in all, a valuable experience.
|
153.27 | | SUPER::HENDRICKS | Not another learning experience! | Fri May 08 1987 09:08 | 11 |
| I've almost always been in relationships with wide age gaps ranging
from 26 years older to 13 years younger.
When I was in my 20's, the gaps seemed bigger. Now that I am in my
30's, I feel very little age gap with someone in their 40's. When
I dated someone who was 23 a couple of years ago, though, I really
felt the difference!
My theory is that things begin to even out after 30. The main
difference for me now is earning power and energy level, and those
two things really depend on the individual.
|
153.28 | Course, we only ever see the "public" relationship... | RDGE00::SADAT | Socrates... GOO-OOO-OOL!! BraSILLL!! | Fri May 22 1987 09:38 | 5 |
| Well two prominent couples who have a large age gap seem to be doing OK. The
establishment therefore have given the green light...! I refer of course to
Mrs. Thatcher & Dennis, and the Prince & Princess of Wales.
Tarik.
|
153.29 | <-And another generalization bites the dust-> | RUTLND::GREGORY | | Thu Jul 30 1987 14:36 | 16 |
| RESPONDING TO NOTE 153.2
<- And ANOTHER generalization bites the dust! ->
This may be irrelevant but does show now adays as Bob
stated in note 153.2," The social gulf is steadily growing
smaller". At the age 19, i've dated for 3 months a lady
43 years of age, reasons for the departure from the relationship
was that she wanted me to stay home and keep house, cook, clean,
wash, care for the kids and ect. ect., and I wanted to aquire my
own identity, make my own goals and all the manly duties men do
to achieve their personal awareness. With that in the clear and
understanding between the both, now are very very close friends.
Sorry to say that the noter 153.2 did'nt answer the question to
"Why do women do this" but gave a question in return, and even
more sorry to say that I can't answer that question myself.
|
153.30 | TRYING TO ANSWER. | CYBORG::HARRIS | | Fri Jan 08 1988 07:36 | 11 |
| WELL I THINK THE FEMALE WANTS TO BE MORE MATURE. GOING OUT WITH
SOMEONE WHOM IS OLDER MAKES YOU FEEL MORE MATURE. THE OTHER REASON
COULD BE,AND I HOPE THE WOMEN FORGIVE ME FOR SAYING THIS. FOR THE
MONEY. DON'T GET ME WRONG YOU KNOW AND I KNOW THAT ALL WOMEN ARE
NOT LIKE THAT. AS FOR THE MEN I'M NOT TO SURE.MAYBE THEY ARE AFRAID
OF GETTING OLD. IT ALSO COULD BE TO KEEP THE OLD BONES GOING. I
DON'T MEAN THAT IN A SEXUAL WAY. JUST THINGS TO KEEP THEM FROM ROCKING
THE CHAIR. IF I OFFENDED ANYONE I AM SORRY PLEASE LET ME KNOW AND
NEXT TIME I WILL WATCH WHAT I SAY.
D/H
|
153.32 | POP *fizzzzzzz* | BSS::BLAZEK | A new moon, a warm sum... | Sat Jan 09 1988 18:56 | 19 |
| I have always been attracted to older men AND older women (as
friends). They have had more experiences and are *usually*
more interesting than people my own age. (Although I enjoy
*interesting* people of all ages! And at 24, "older" means
people in their 30's. (Which is by no means OLD!!!!!)
My boyfriend is 12 years older than me. I'm not with him for
his money, nor because he *makes* me feel mature (I don't
believe force is at all realistic when it comes to maturity).
I am with him because he is fascinating, well travelled, wants
to *live* life (rather than just exist) and because he loves me.
And finally, most people my own age prefer Coors Light and
physical appearances over champagne and personality. They
haven't learned to appreciate and *enjoy* the finer things
in life yet!
Carla
|
153.33 | Sad news | CADSYS::RICHARDSON | | Mon Jan 11 1988 12:56 | 11 |
| re my .12
I was sad to learn over the weekend that my old friend's husband
died of a heart attack last week - he was 68; she is almost 35.
They were married for 5 years.
It still seems to me that she sort of - how to say this? - skipped
from young adulthood straight into our parents' generation and the
associated concerns of people in that age group (60's and 70's),
without ever living through the time in between. I'm rambling,
I guess...
|
153.34 | | PARITY::TILLSON | If it don't tilt, fergit it! | Mon Jan 11 1988 16:23 | 28 |
| Charlotte,
I'm so sorry to hear about your friend's husband. Just a comment
on
>from young adulthood straight into our parents' generation and the
>associated concerns of people in that age group (60's and 70's),
Marrying someone closer to her own age would not necessarily mean
that she would not have to face such concerns. Ny husband had
a heart attack at the ripe old age of 34! (As you know, since you
and Paul were so kind to me and drove me into Boston to see him
in the hospital, thanks.) Although we are both young, we also had
to face things that we did not expect to face until we were much
older. And Tom wasn't even the youngest person in the Cardiac
Rehabilitation program. If anyone had told me a couple of years
ago that I would be able to speak with my older relatives about
blood pressure medication, chloresteral counts, and nitroglycerin,
all from personal experience, I would have laughed...
Despite having to live our lives more carefully and thoughtfully
now, I have no regrets about my marriage...in sickness and in health,
and all that. I would not trade what I have gotten out of our
relationship for a relationship where the health wasn't an issue.
I suspect your friend feels the same way.
Rita_whose_shoulders_hurt_bad_because_Tom_can't_shovel_snow_anymore
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153.35 | Age is not important! | WARLRD::CFLETCHER | Short Stuff | Tue Jan 12 1988 14:44 | 19 |
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It's not the age that counts, it the person's maturity.
My ex was about 5 years older that me, and he was/is extremly immature,
and irresponsible.
Rich is a little bit younger that I am, and he is a mature, caring,
person.
Most of our friends are "older" (Mid 30's) than us, because neither
of us like the things that most people our age do, and the the way
that they act.
Bye!
Corinne
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153.36 | Same as .35 "Age is not important!" | FRAGLE::TOLLETTE | | Thu Jan 21 1988 16:37 | 10 |
|
Well, My Girlfriend is younger then her husband-to-be. He is 16
years older than her. She is 24 and He is 40. They had one son who
will be 4 years old. They had been together for about 8 years. They
are happy and wonderful family.
I think, Age is not important. My husband is 4 years older than
me. I am 29 and he is 33. We are happy and have two sons.
Lourdes
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153.37 | If this bothers U, don't delete it, move on. | TSECAD::HEALY | Life is Perfectly Fair. | Tue May 03 1988 16:28 | 10 |
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Because women are MUCH more apt to burn-out living through the
rigors of the single life, and the men who marry young women do
so because they realize this.
MATT
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153.38 | Your prejudices are showing, Lad... | NEXUS::CONLON | | Tue May 03 1988 16:42 | 10 |
| RE: .37
Give it a rest. Single men die younger than any other group
of men or women (married or single.)
Your statement about single women getting burned out more
than single men has no basis whatsoever in fact.
It sounds like a personal prejudice (based on the infamous
old double standard) to me.
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153.39 | | SPMFG1::CHARBONND | generic personal name | Wed May 04 1988 17:27 | 7 |
| RE .37
Given that women generally earn less than men, but incur
the same living expenses, does this surprise you ?
Take a twenty percent pay cut and see if you don't burn out
a bit sooner.
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153.40 | Hot under the collar!! | SPGOGO::DUBOYCE | | Thu May 26 1988 16:08 | 7 |
| Thank you .38!!!!!
Burn out, my foot!!! Listening to .37 and .39 is enough to Burn
me up!!
Enough said for the moment, I'm too warm to say any more now!!
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