What age-gap is feasible in a relationship?
Esther Walker and Nirpal Dhaliwal23 Jun 2009
They are candid, provocative - and totally at odds with each other. Our resident 'sexperts' Nirpal Dhaliwal and Esther Walker offer conflicting advice on Londoners' sexual dilemmas...
Question:- I've just started seeing a much younger woman. What age gap if any is feasible in the long term?
ESTHER SAYS
Relationships in which the man is older than the woman make sense for all sorts of reasons.
Women mature faster than men.
They are often ready to move along a life stage get a mortgage, get married, have kids while men are still sticking posters to their bedroom walls and thinking seriously about getting a tattoo.
While a lot of same-age relationships work out fine, when trouble does come along, it is more often than not because she wants to get on with growing up while he hangs back, uncertain and not ready to be encumbered with all that responsibility just yet.
The younger woman/older man set-up does away with all that.
She doesn't have to wait, silently panicking about her fertility, until she and her partner are 35 and he finally feels ready to have children; he doesn't feel as if he missed out on anything, and his wild oats are pretty much sown.
But it can also be a disaster. A woman of 20 will have changed beyond recognition by the time she is 29.
You can pretty much guarantee that what a woman wants and expects from life will be completely transformed in that decade.
So, while there's that trite little calculation about the youngest partner you can have being half your age plus seven, the thing you really have to worry about is how old she is now.
If you are 35 and she is 22 then, yes, you ought to be concerned that she will change her mind. If, on the other hand, you are 45 and she is 28, the risk is lower. You get the idea.
Having said all that, it would obviously be insane to call time on your relationship just because your girlfriend might, at some point, change her mind about you.
If you get on fine and can agree, without anyone having to make huge sacrifices, on what you want from life, not that much can go wrong.
But if you genuinely suspect that she's not serious, there's only one way to know for sure: if things are still good after 18 months or two years, propose.
It's extreme, but it will work. The sight of a ring and the prospect of forever will sober her up pretty quickly. You'll either be happy ever after, or she'll see to it that things unravel before you've even set a date.
NIRPAL SAYS
Like any other significant difference between two people such as their incomes, backgrounds or religions an age gap doesn't make a long-term relationship impossible, but it does require both partners to be aware of the possible difficulties ahead and honestly discuss those issues, defusing them before they explode in your faces.
Pretending that your ages don't matter is a surefire way to reach a crisis point, as you inevitably grow in different directions and one day find yourselves with irreconcilable needs and expectations.
Relationships between people of different ages can be magical.
The openness, enthusiasm and lack of cynicism of the young is always appealing to those otherwise surrounded by people who are jaded and pessimistic by comparison; while an older person's experience, worldliness and assurance is often attractive to someone younger especially if they're precocious and more intelligent and enquiring than their peers.
The sexual chemistry between the two can often be irresistible and too compelling to withstand, so no amount of rationalising will stop you getting the ball rolling in the first place.
It's where it ends up that you have to careful of.
The truth is, you'll physically become increasingly out of sync as time goes on.
You'll slow down and settle into yourself, while she'll want to do new things as she gains confidence. Your sex drive may fade but hers may rapidly increase in her thirties, as happens with many women.
Parenthood may be an issue: you may already have children and want no more, or you might want them immediately while you can still be an active father. Your room for manoeuvre on these issues is tighter than hers and you need to be decisive. Without being an Eeyore, it's your responsibility to be realistic.
Talking about this stuff will enable you to make plans, and by letting her know what might be in store you can deal with it together.
Any meaningful relationship is a risk, but you have to snatch whatever chances of happiness you get in life. Love, even if it's fleeting, is an experience no one should forgo.
The fact that you have your eyes open to the hazards of getting involved with someone younger but are prepared to brave them anyway proves that your feelings are genuine and that you have the guts to follow them. Just do your best and good luck with it!
Reader views (8)
Rules and regulations....
- Tom, paris, 15/07/2009 16:24
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I think it is all about commitment and expectations on both sides
- Tommy, bruxelles, belgium, 07/07/2009 21:53
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It's the western world that tells us get married (because of your biological clock)and have 2 kids and live happier ever and do it before you're 30. Age is unimportant and if there's an age gap "so what". This is the New Age ToyBoysAreUs.
- Anikar, Norfolk, 24/06/2009 11:17
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My 'girlfriend' is 20 years younger than me. I have been in love with her since we met nearly 18 years ago when she was 27 and I 47. She is an intelligent and beautiful woman, only one problem, I am married but will not divorce my wife (I am not cruel) and live in SE Asia, she is divorced and lives in Australia! Many years ago she told me 'what would I want with a husband who will die 20 years before me!' After a nasty bout with cancer, she has altered her opinion a bit!
Oh, by the way we have not seen each other for 15 years but our love is as strong as it ever was!
- John, Guangdong, China, 24/06/2009 11:15
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As the Dubliners used to sing:
'Maids when youre young, never wed an old man'
- John Jones, Westminster, 24/06/2009 09:50
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I think it is all rubbish.
If 2 people love one another age should not come into it.
I have a friend who is 50 and his young 29 year wife died before he did.
Its only the western world that thinks this way of age difference,Get a life i say and stuff what people think.
- Martin, sheffield, 23/06/2009 15:06
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As a woman of 33, i consider myself quite mature but even so, i'm afraid most men i know of 40 and over tend to be already quite stuck in their ways and jaded. Personally I can't imagine going out with anyone over 40,unless of course he was fabulously rich...! I much prefer someone a bit younger,who quite frankly has the sexual stamina to keep up with me and someone who i can eventually have a family with,who will keep up with our kids, and not expect me to chase after them all day..!
- Reena, london, 23/06/2009 13:52
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This article paints a rather negative picture of the benefits of a differing ages RELATIONSHIP. I met my wife when she was 29 and I 40. We fully understood the difference issues and (this being an important "AND") are fully aware of what life and aging throws at you. Even to the point of understanding that, as a male, I will die a significant time before her. We are planning for this.
The physical aspects of aging are part of your genetic makeup and also how well you take care of yourself. Twelve years later we are still going strong both physically and psychologically, looking to have a child, and our partnership is stronger than many we see around us. We are realistic and pragmatic. The 'age' thing is one of self-image. Society paints a picture of how you 'should' be rather than how you are. Most people fall into this trap and become older before their time. "Oops, I'm fifty. Time to dig out the pipe and slippers." Good grief. I'm off wind-surfing...
- James, Spain, 23/06/2009 12:51
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