50yr old - new relationship advice
50yr old - new relationship advice
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Discussion

SuffolkDefender

Original Poster:

281 posts

120 months

Sunday 22nd October 2023
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The initial message was deleted from this topic on 21 May 2024 at 09:36

anonymous-user

78 months

Sunday 22nd October 2023
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How old is she?

SuffolkDefender

Original Poster:

281 posts

120 months

Sunday 22nd October 2023
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45

BoRED S2upid

20,993 posts

264 months

Sunday 22nd October 2023
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Just see how it goes if you ask me stay over two, three, four times a night have a couple of nights apart it’s the best of both worlds.

davek_964

10,791 posts

199 months

Sunday 22nd October 2023
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It sounds like it's fairly early days.

G/f and I are both early 50s. I've spent most of my life living on my own, and when we met we both said fairly quickly that neither of us wanted marriage in the future and it was unlikely we'd live together. That was about 3.5 years ago.

I moved in to hers early this year, we had clearly both changed our mind about marriage and she now wears an engagement ring.

Give it a bit more time.

Vasco

18,009 posts

129 months

Sunday 22nd October 2023
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SuffolkDefender said:
PH folk, your thoughts please - and I intend to ask friends and family this question too, but interested in wider views too!

I’m 50yrs old and with a 13yr old son who lives with me half the time. I’m divorced over a decade ago, live in a rented house but have a good deposit for a house purchase available.

At the beginning of 2023, I met a really lovely woman who I get on with incredibly well. We have lots of shared interests and non-shared interests, good circle of friends each, etc. Normal stuff. She doesn’t have children although she did want them, is financially secure, owns her house, good job etc. A really lovely woman all round. A keeper without doubt.

The only fly in the ointment is that I want to move in together at some point and possibly remarry; and moving in together is not high on her priority list. She enjoys having her own space and has gotten used to it, being single for quite a large part of her life.

So, what to do:

a) stick with it, in the knowledge that it isn’t what I want right now, but that it could be, maybe, one day. If she were to change her mind.

b) call time on it now before I get much more emotionally involved, and have a break / move on /whatever because it isn’t what I want (right now).

c) some other solution I haven’t yet considered.
I know a woman who sounds very much like this one - divorced, no children, own home etc.....

The key point is that she really has no need to change - and is very unlikely to do so. Most women in that situation can, if they wish, build up a relationship with lots of new friends, men included.
What's in it for her ?

Sheets Tabuer

21,053 posts

239 months

Sunday 22nd October 2023
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Do you think she's just using you for sex?

Slowboathome

4,461 posts

68 months

Sunday 22nd October 2023
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Are you in a particular hurry?

Why do you want to live together and/or marry her? Is it because it would make the relationship permanent?

Does she prefer the current arrangement because of independence or is she not as keen on you as you are her? Sorry to be blunt.

If she's lived on her own for a long time, giving that up is a huge step.

I'd give it more time - until late Spring 2024. And in particular see how Christmas goes.


anonymous-user

78 months

Sunday 22nd October 2023
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It's only been ten months, give it a bit more time. She appears less committed than you but I wouldn't fret over that at the moment.

Lincsls1

3,942 posts

164 months

Sunday 22nd October 2023
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Having lived on my own since divorce several years ago now, I can understand where she is coming from.
Having your own space is great, and getting a little set in your ways inevitable.
Doesn't mean she doesn't want to be with you though.

SuffolkDefender

Original Poster:

281 posts

120 months

Sunday 22nd October 2023
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Thanks for the responses.

No, I’m not in a hurry at all and I’m flexible on the marriage side, just slightly less so on the living together side I suppose. I feel that living together is the natural progression and when I’ve lived with other people many years ago I did enjoy my being part of a team, for want of a better word.

Not at all concerned that she doesn’t want to be with me, she has been very clear that she does and that she wants it to work long term and make a real go of it.

And, to be fair, when I was divorced it took me a long time to come around to the idea of thinking about marriage. But as I say, the marriage idea is not a deal breaker at all, just something I’d considered

Edited by SuffolkDefender on Sunday 22 October 21:39

BoRED S2upid

20,993 posts

264 months

Sunday 22nd October 2023
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Sheets Tabuer said:
Do you think she's just using you for sex?
Ah the dream lol

dirky dirk

3,383 posts

194 months

Sunday 22nd October 2023
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I’d not be looking for a relationship at all
All the learning new friends and relatives and stories from work etc etc

I’d be a lot happier with no mither

Ashfordian

2,405 posts

113 months

Monday 23rd October 2023
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SuffolkDefender said:
Thanks for the responses.

No, I’m not in a hurry at all and I’m flexible on the marriage side, just slightly less so on the living together side I suppose. I feel that living together is the natural progression and when I’ve lived with other people many years ago I did enjoy my being part of a team, for want of a better word.

Not at all concerned that she doesn’t want to be with me, she has been very clear that she does and that she wants it to work long term and make a real go of it.

And, to be fair, when I was divorced it took me a long time to come around to the idea of thinking about marriage. But as I say, the marriage idea is not a deal breaker at all, just something I’d considered

Edited by SuffolkDefender on Sunday 22 October 21:39
Don't take this wrong way, but your two posts either display selfishness or a lack of awareness of your own situation.

You come with a 13yo boy from a previous relationship for half the week, so it is not just you moving in. This makes a huge difference to the equation of moving in together. This is your normality but this will be really far out there for her. I also suspect things are different in your relationship regarding who your focus is on when your son is with you, compared to when he isn't.

It sounds like you have found a great person and have a great relationship, and I doubt you'll find better from what you have said. But you'll have to accept the next steps could take a lot longer to happen because of your circumstances. It could easily be 2-5+ years before you move in together.

ARHarh

4,892 posts

131 months

Monday 23rd October 2023
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Just go with the flow. No point trying to force things, that will just end with someone being unhappy or feeling forced into something.

Blackpuddin

19,079 posts

229 months

Monday 23rd October 2023
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She sounds very sensible.

Teddy Lop

8,301 posts

91 months

Monday 23rd October 2023
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YOLO. OLLI. ETC.

seriously invest the time and maybe she'll come around. Maybe she likes the chase and doesn't want to fall at the first hurdle. Maybe she has a hang up about not being "desperate to get hitched". All sorts.

GT03ROB

13,994 posts

245 months

Monday 23rd October 2023
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9 months is nothing. Whats the rush? Whilst it may be the logical next step, it really doesn't have to happen in any sort of timeframe. It will add stress to the relationship, and if one party is not ready for that step yet, will probably break the relationship. Sounds like things are good right now so no need to rock a boat.

grumbledoak

32,405 posts

257 months

Monday 23rd October 2023
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OP, given your ages you are very unlikely to have a couple more kids between you. The downside of a teenager moving in, for her, is pretty obvious, but where would be the upside? For either of you? It would be a binding commitment, but to what end?

Electronicpants

3,039 posts

212 months

Monday 23rd October 2023
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I bumped into a retired old work accountant the other week, he was in exactly the same position as you (50's divorced, new woman)......28 years ago!

In his late 70's now, she lives 400 yards away with her cat. They couldn't be happier.