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A Friend Stopped By | 06/26/2008 10:50 am

Six Reasons You’ll Find Love After 40, by Dr. Judith Sills

By Judith Sills, Ph.D.
© iStock
Editor’s Note: Dr. Judith Sills is a clinical psychologist and the author of five bestsellers. Her newest title, Getting Naked Again: Dating, Romance, Sex, and Love When You’ve Been Divorced, Widowed, Dumped, or Distracted will be out soon.

When an author introduces a new character half of the way through a novel, it feels contrived. Where has this guy been for the last 200 pages? If the heroine falls in love, it’s hard to believe in the happily ever after.

You might be skeptical about the possibilities of a meaningful late entry in real life too. The dismal certainty that if a relationship is not right here in my life right now, then it probably never will be, darkens the outlook of so many divorced and widowed women. It probably limits their possibilities, too, since we tend to get what we believe we will find. And the fact is, women — single, divorced, widowed, and, truth to tell, still married women who maybe wish they weren’t, but haven’t done a thing about it — create meaningful, loving relationships at 40, 50 and 60 and on and on. Believe it or not.

Yes, it’s true that men die earlier so there are fewer of them. And it’s true that they rarely lose their attraction to young flesh and so frequently look right through ripe fruit. But other things are true too, and they make loving connections likely to appear later in your life story:
  1. This time you don’t need a “provider.” Your nest is built, your babies have grown and this relationship is for your own pleasure. His package has less power (unless you are broke, of course. Then you are stuck in the traditional female romantic pursuit of the “provider”) and that gives you more males from whom to choose. You might finally be open to connecting with a man’s soul.
  2. This time you don’t need to please your parents. Your own parents are either aged or gone. With that great loss can come a freedom of spirit. Now you choose partners a little less to please your mom or defy your dad. That leaves a relationship with meaning to you.
  3. You can’t get pregnant. And by the way, the fact that you can’t reproduce anymore is a great attraction to many men. Sure he gets automatically hard when he sees a blonde 30-year-old in a belly shirt, but then he looks more closely at the belly and sees the possibility of a whole dreaded second family with 20 more years of tuition and soccer jail. He’s happy out dancing cheek to cheek with you.
  4. Older men, open hearts. All man after 50 are not about trophies on their arm, any more than all women are seeking life-long “big daddies.” Each gender has its share of opportunists that gives the rest of the group an ugly rep. Later in life, men often turn to love and connection, perhaps with more open hearts than they had at 25 or 30.
  5. More time, more money means more romance. Time and money are excellent relationship nutrients. You may have more time and disposable money now. He probably has more time and money now. Ergo — relationship pleasure goes up.
  6. What’s meaningful means something different now. Your definition of “meaningful” expands with maturity. As the definition expands, so do your possibilities. In your 20s and 30s, only those relationships that led to marriage were said to have “worked out.” Now your field is so wide open. Live with someone? Maybe. Remarry? Maybe. Same sex, true love? Maybe. Travel fabulously with a married man and then happily send him home to his wife who has to deal with his sciatica? Maybe. The meaning is in the connection between you. The context matters so much less.
That is the point, really. The life path unfurls before us for an indeterminate time. If you are some way down that path, and if yours goes to interesting and unexpected places, new characters will enter and walk a ways with you. During that time, they may share card tricks, stepchildren, your bout with breast cancer, your bed or just an endlessly engaging conversation. The meaning is in that walk together and the bond between you.

Read more about: Beauty, Judith Sills, Love, Romance

49 Reader Comments (so far…) Sign In or Register to comment

CAROLINE MuLVEY
My Mother -in -law has been alone for 10 years. She works part time just to be doing something, she has no desire to have sex, However my Mother could never stand to be alone. She is married to her 6th husband for financial reasons and to have someone to take care of her,she does not work and she cleans the house when her husband is off so he can help her,she dose not cook every night and on weekends she expects to go out. I do not remember a time when my mother was ever alone.
By CAROLINE MuLVEY on 06/26/2008 7:54 pm
J B
Ah, Caroline…I have a friend like this…a dynamic woman who left an abusive marriage with three small children, she put herself through college at night, worked two jobs, bought a house…I admired her so…but she could NOT be alone…as my Grandmother used to say “She wore her wedding dress on every first date.” She is now married to someone NOT her intellectual equal, she can’t even take him to her corporate functions etc. She married him after a four month courtship, he had never lived on his own, so now its like she has four children to raise…all because she just couldn’t be alone. After my fifteen year marriage ended, I treasured my “alone” time…and I believe a woman has to know how to be comfortable being alone before she can truly be happy in a relationship. Just my opinion.
By J B on 06/26/2008 9:02 pm
kermie b
I agree with you. After my ex and I split and I exhaled a sense of relief, I went years without a real relationship, just dates that fizzled because I found fault with all of them. I didn’t know what I wanted in a man, just what I didn’t want. When I finally felt good about myself, had no one at home, no prospects and truly liked being alone—that is when Dan sat down next to me in jury duty. It took me five minutes to realize the poor guy was trying to work up the nerve to ask me out. That’s how used to being alone I was. We laugh about it now.
By kermie b on 06/27/2008 2:37 am
Maggi D
I think that I gave up my chances when I adopted my twin two-year-old greatgrandsons. I have a male friend who told me recently that I was an attractive woman and should get out there. I told him I don’t think that I would find a man in his sixties willing to raise two boys and his answer was, “You might want to wait until you have had a date or two before you bring up the kids.” lmao Maybe my two boys and the men I have been looking for all my life - you never know.
By Maggi D on 06/27/2008 12:29 am
Maggi D
That should be - Maybe my two boys ARE the men I have been looking for all my life. Hard to laugh and type at the same time.
By Maggi D on 06/27/2008 12:31 am
W G
This headline took me by force this week. Married 15 years and a little over a year ago he walked out because he was “unhappy”. Until last Saturday I thought I had met THE man I would spend the rest of my life with. I don’t know that we would have ever decided to marry, but I really thought we would have many happy years together because everything fit together so well. It simply “worked”… or so I thought. Now I am putting on my big girl panties each day and moving forward trying to remember that if it doesn’t kill me, it will make me stronger. Maya Angelou said, “I can be changed by what happens to me but I refuse to be reduced by it.” At 44 years old, I am: back in college (collecting yet another degree), working full time, taking up the new hobby of semi-serious bicycling for a good cardio and muscular workout, and raising my beautiful 15-year-old daughter to know there is only one thing in this world a married woman can have that a single woman cannot and that is her own husband….
By W G on 06/27/2008 5:58 am
Star Lawrence
I never think much about this anymore. Not to encourage our bud Markie, but even if you have a “decent figure” and a fat checkbook, most men are looking for a woman 25 years younger. Men approach me in the store all the time—because of my blond hair, I am convinced. But I still have a passive-aggressive child in the house…one’s plenty.
By Star Lawrence on 06/27/2008 3:27 pm
Star Lawrence
Plus—many older men (who like the same musical groups and so on) are looking for a nurse or a purse.
By Star Lawrence on 06/27/2008 5:31 pm
Diana T
Star, Or a purse AND a nurse. Most men I know at my age(middle 60’s) opt for the 45-50’s. The rest? You don’t want to know about the rest; think vast wasteland.. I’m thankful for my friends, that’s for sure.
By Diana T on 06/27/2008 7:05 pm
Frank Peterson
Pardon me while I beg to differ: this is one “old” man of 64 who neither needs a nurse (gee i can walk ma) nor a purse, I have enough to suit my needs until I win vast amounts on the lottery lmao—Sweet Baby Huey! Now I do realize there are leeches in every society but this man (and I am certain there are many like me) is not one of them. Just so’s ya know :-)
By Frank Peterson on 06/28/2008 12:34 pm
Star Lawrence
Exception to every rule. Didn’t you say you were only getting one love, though? Not to get personal—but women also find that hard to deal with.
By Star Lawrence on 06/29/2008 1:06 pm
Frank Peterson
Probably is the case—so far—nothing personal believe me. But I just don’t see it happening again. Not like that.
By Frank Peterson on 06/29/2008 5:04 pm
No Way-No How -No McCain
I believe that a passionate interest and involvement in life are the best way to meet a man or anyone.
By No Way-No How -No McCain on 06/27/2008 11:15 pm
Donna H
I’m 55, work at a job I get good money & benefits for, will be eligible to retire in a bit over a year (if I choose), own my own home (I paid off the mortgage several years ago), have no debt at all. I’ve never married & never will. Why not? A deep-seated horror that I’ll end up with a man like Dr. Mark Klein, who is stuck in the 19th century & will never realize that that his antiquated views make him a joke in today’s world.
By Donna H on 06/28/2008 10:20 am
Frank Peterson
Donna, Mark is not stuck in the 19th—more like the palaeolithic. :-)
By Frank Peterson on 06/28/2008 12:37 pm