Color Me Fuming!

Posted by Gayle

The Unequal Marriage

I’ve been known to praise the UK for it’s willingness to talk about age-gap relationships in their media.  This article has me absolutely fuming.  It represents the typical prejudice and stereotypes age gappers are know for.  This is the quote that sent my blood pressure soaring.

If you’re the older partner in an age gap relationship, the worst thing you can do is expect, or assume, that it will last – it’s highly unlikely.

My goodness!  You may as well just tell the older partner…. “don’t work at it, don’t even really bother to try because it’s doomed.”  This is one of the those times when I’d like to take all 25 years of my marriage (imperfect as it may be) and wave our marriage license in the author’s face.  Marriage is hard work…. period. full stop. end of sentence. And yes even people with significant age differences can and DO MAKE IT WORK!!!

I’d love to hear what you think about this one:

Read:  Are age gap relationships better women?

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Good Morning America’s Story on Modern Families with Age Gaps!

Posted by Gayle

This morning, Good Morning America did a segment on real Modern Families. Today’s family was a couple with a 30 year age gap!!! We are becoming more and more mainstream by the second! Such exciting times for all of us gappers!

http://abcnews.go.com/gma/ModernFamily

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May December News: Continuing the Search for Research

(Posted by Maya)

May-December: Canadians in age-discrepant relationships
Canadian Social Trends Autumn 2003
by Monica Boyd and Anne Li

North Americans often assume that most married or common-law partners are close in age to each other and this, in fact, tends to be the case most of the time. There are, however, exceptions, couples with substantial age gaps between them. Although the typical pattern for age-discrepant marriages is the so-called “May–December” relationship, in which the woman is much younger than the man, the reverse also may hold.  Read entire article now.

Maya’s Critical Review

This article appeared in Statistics Canada’s “Canadian Social Trends” publication in the fall of 2003. It is a study of Canada’s 2001 Census of Population, with a focus on age-gap unions. I have been unable to find citations of this article, but I believe that, despite dealing exclusively with Canadian data, it provides important information that may have resonance with Americans as well.

Read the rest of this entry »

Taking the Easy Way Out

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Or not being willing to do the work (A post by Ron)

We recently received a call from a reporter for Slate.com who was working on an article about age-gap relationships. I sat and listened to one side of the interview and at one point heard Gayle say “Yes, an age-gap can be the reason for a divorce.”  I certainly couldn’t disagree with her but in my mind I began listing other reasons for divorce.  Money problems, communication difficulties, affairs, children (to have or not, how to raise, etc.), incompatibility, growing apart, and on and on.

I often tell my couple clients that any relationship requires a great deal of work to be successful.  In my opinion (backed only by personal and client related experience) every successful relationship stays that way because the individuals in the relationship are willing to do the work.  Just think about who you were when you entered into your relationship.  You were an individual.  It doesn’t matter how much you loved the other person or how much you believed you were alike you were headed for a shock – you each had a lot to learn.

Consider these potential problems and add your own as you go along.  All of the questions I’m asking come from my counseling experience and no matter how petty some may seem, have been real problems with couples.  How do you load the dishwasher?  How do you separate the laundry?  Do you chew with your mouth open?  Do you make strange noises when you laugh?  Has there been an affair?  Does your libido match that of your partner?  Do you have sex too often?  Not often enough?  Is there a significant age difference between you and your partner.  Do you disagree about money?  Do you want to have children?  Do you not?  Do you want more privacy than you get?  I could continue the list, but will let you finish it with your own issues.

So here’s my point.  Almost every one of the problems I’ve listed, and many more, can be a single, easy way out of your relationship.  Yes, even the “unimportant” issues such as dishes, clothes or chewing.  Not likely by themselves, but they usually mask even more serious problems.  Affairs, money, communication, sex, age gaps and incompatibility can each be an early, easy way out.  Particularly if you are already looking for an excuse to be out.

Each of these problems can be overcome if you are willing to do the work.  That’s the secret, do the work!  So often I find that only one partner is willing.  The other may have given up, or be frightened, or just not believe in getting help.  It is so much easier to just say it’s not working and should end.  Sadly, many of these do end.

Yes, a significant age-gap can be the stated “reason” for a divorce or breakup.  If you are in that situation, though, I ask you to think back to when you started the relationship.  The same age-gap existed then.  Did you believe you were honestly in love?  Did the age-gap seem to be a significant problem then?  If so, why did you enter into the relationship.  And now, what has changed?  Why is age a problem today?  If the age-gap didn’t exist, would you be ready to leave this person you once loved?

I don’t believe any single issue causes a relationship to end.  I do believe you are doing yourself, your partner and all of the other people in your life who love you a disservice if you don’t at least make an effort to “do the work” to deal with real issues and perhaps save the relationship.  That usually involves bringing a third party in as an arbitrator, interpreter, and/or counselor.  Does it have to be a therapist?  No, but that may be best.  After all, I have no biases towards either of the individuals.  I’m neither family nor friend and, as a result, am more likely to be able to consider both sides of the issues.

While a couple is in counseling with me I constantly challenge them to look at themselves as well as their partner and the relationship.  As I’ve heard Gayle say, “there are three clients in relationship counseling – the relationship and each partner. Sometimes one or both of the partners really don’t like me but that’s not why they engaged me to help them.  In fact, not liking me often gives them another target and takes some of the pressure off the relationship as we interact.  I watch for signs of unidentified or hidden issues.  I teach them how to communicate and even how to argue.  I assign “homework” and keep after them until they accomplish it.  In short, I make them work as hard as I possibly can to save their relationship.  That is my job.

So I want to amend something I said above.  Yes, an age-gap in a relationship can be the “reason” for a divorce or breakup but not by itself. If it is used by itself I believe it is used as an excuse.  Age-gaps are only one aspect of a relationship, as is money, or communications, or sex…  By itself an age-gap has little or no power over the success or failure of your relationship.  Don’t use it as an excuse.  “Do the work!”

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May December News: Why do women want to marry older men?

Maybe they’re nutty; it is after all, fruitcake time again.

(Posted by Gayle)

Nuptial Economics: Why women want to marry older men.

22 Nov 2008, 1613 hrs IST, Rucha Biju Chitrodia, TNN
The Economic Times

…Agreed, there may be different reasons for different women to choose an older man. But the advantages are there for all to see; an older man is expected to be more experienced, mature, resilient, have a more rounded personality, less likely to stray and, of course, is definitely a lot more bankable than a young guy just starting out in life. He would make a good provider for his woman and children…. Read entire article here.

Gayle’s Commentary

This article discusses the impact time and equality are having on the Indian custom of men marrying women who are significantly younger.  It seems that as time goes on this custom is disappearing and marriages of “equals” are becoming more and more common.  Yet with the development of parity in relationships a new freedom of choice is emerging in Indian women.  No longer, being “required” to fulfill a societal custom and marry an older man is also freeing women to fall in love with men who are significantly their senior.

A 25-year-old media person, settled in Australia and married to a man 11 years her senior, reveals via e-mail: “Ours is not a classic case these days. However, with him, I’ve found a way to look deep inside a man’s soul and find a spiritual partner…. We vibe on a different level, one which has nothing to do with age at all.’’

My sentiments exactly!  While arranged marriages have not had the same place in the US as in many other countries, they were common place in pioneer times for the same reasons discussed in the reviewed article.   When the requirement is lifted, it’s natural to see a drift away from the prior demands.

I’m in my marriage for love and compatibility – not because it’s cool and not because society tells me I must be married to an older man.   I am a proponent of healthy choices. Partnering with someone whose age is significantly different than yours is a choice.  That’s all it is – that’s all I ever hope it will be – just a choice.

If it’s a choice you are considering, you are in the right place.  Subscribe to our RSS feed and newsletter and keep on reading – there’s more good stuff coming!