Is it uncomfortable for men to be in a relationship with a women who is more successful academically, financially or intellectually than themselves? I suspect that this is easier for younger people, so I am especially interested in the opinions of people 60+. Ladies- if have found yourself in this type of relationship, what was it about your guy that helped make it successful? Gentlemen- if you are in such a relationship, what do you offer to feel you have a mutually beneficial relationship? My marriage got ugly when I became successful because my husband was jealous and could not be proud of me. He started belittling me in front of people. Iām still trying to learn from all that, so to not make the same mistakes again.
In my opinion when one is secure with who they are, there would be no need to compare oneself with their partner. A relationship should be how well you relate, work, and play together. The purpose of relationship is not a competition but being with someone who helps you grow as a person. If you stumble upon a narcissist, however, I suggest you run
I would welcome it. I met a very compatible woman 2 years ago who dropped me because I couldn't match her financially. Everything else was a very good match from dancing to general intellectual interests. we went and saw Mozart's Requiem together at Smith College.
I'm fitter, read more nonfiction books, seen more ballets and classical concerts than most people and am told I'm kind, caring and funny, and yet, at 70 been alone for 10 years. Go figure?
@Healthydoc70 Besides your scaring the proverbial out of many people with your very desirable attributes you pose a familiar situation. I'm curious about the woman. Her reason for rejection, particularly coming from a woman, is imo not true. You mention dancing and intellectual pursuits but you do not mention mutually desirable and pleasureable sex and physical intimacy. Why?
@FrayedBear Just noticed this. We only dated for about 2 months and the relationship never became sexual because I refused to let it go there until I felt we had achieved a certain intimacy level. She was relieved I didn't push simply for sex, as was her frequent experience with men, even on first dates. Sex is a wonderful natural part of a healthy relationship, but unless I feel accepted on a level I describe as intimate, which would include being OK with different financial abilities, I don't let the relationship progress. Many women on many dating sites including this one, state unequivocally, the man must be financially stable, which when translated usually and often means the man must be sitting on a pile of gold. Mick Jagger at 75 just had a baby with a 29 yo. Mick Jagger has nothing on me except over 300 million dollars. Jackie Kennedy married the decidedly unhandsome crook Onasis. He had billions. Melania and the orange orang utang(sp)The examples are legion.
@Healthydoc70 proving the saying that most marry for money not love. ?Namaste
Those are issues that mean nothing to me. All that matters to me in a relationship is that we treat each other with full caring, dignity, and respect and that we add quality to each other's life.I would find it difficult to maintain the best of relationships with a women who was accomplished.
I was in a relationship for many years with a brilliant woman. I'm a smart guy, no slouch (master's degree from brand name school) but she was much brighter than me. Probably the world's expert in her field, or at least top 5.
Easily the best relationship ever. I didn't know such happiness and bliss could exist; we were envied by other couples. Every day was stimulating and interesting. So connect with a smart partner. And not being arrogant or elitist, but dumb gets old fast. No amount of looks offsets a lack of being interesting.
@CrazyQuilter It is required
@Mitch07102 Unless death ended it, which would be very upsetting and I would weep for you, why are you not still together?
There is no blanket answer. For some men yes, for others no. Most will say no and some of those will still be uncomfortable. Some will be able to manage their lack of comfort, some will lash out poorly. You'll need to figure it out by the individual.
If all that academic, intellectual, and financial superiority translates into egomania and domination, then I couldnāt handle it. Each partner needs to contribute value to the other. If a man is not needed and is treated like one of the children, donāt expect him to stay.
Not at all... I always been an overachiever in love. Just one example, I don't have an internal clock, needed for partnered dancing, been in some kind of relationship on and off at my desire with a Pro Ballroom Dancer, 16 years, ask me if her level of dancing been a problem. My response.... "She makes me look like a Fred Astaire". She is not around because of my dancing. Since you asking... "I been Rocking Her Christian World as no dancer could for 16 years. It is up to what you can offer that she wants.
I'm only knocking-on 50, but I much prefer my partners to have a strong intellect or abilities that I haven't. I like to be impressed by a person ā makes me feel proud to be their man. ?
....As to what I offer in a relationship such as that? Companionship, comfort and support; stimulating conversation; plus I'm pretty good in the kitchen.