Relationship Advice Forum Ask April Masini

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I Bee-Lieve

A little advice needed.

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  • #1077
    mulla
    Member #3,059

    Hey,
    I have recently met a lovely girl (35) and we have been on two dates now and all is pretty much going very well, i do have a slight concern though, i am 10 years her junior (25) and i think in a way she has some concerns about this, although i could be reading in to the situation the wrong way.
    Last night we went out on our second date and for pretty much the whole night we kissed and cuddled, and she said she really wanted to see me again today, and even text me when she dropped me off at home saying “had a great night, wish i was next to you in bed”.
    This morning i text her saying “hey, what time would you like to meet later” and the reply i got was, “i dont know hun x, you make me feel so good but i dont know where this is all going. God knows what you must think of me x” so i said i would call her and have a chat, and what she basically said was that she was worried that she would not fit in to my life, and she isnt sure if we have anything in common, and she also she didnt see what i see in her, almost sounding very self critical, but she did admit that she worries a lot.
    My job is that i am a rave promoter, and she is an accountant, so i do understand that we have totally different jobs but i did say to her, that i dont want her to change and that i was looking for someone just like her, this has now lead to her being i think quite happy and we are meeting up again tonight for a drink and a chat.
    Thing is im really worried that i could mess this up come the end of the night if i approach the situation in the wrong way.
    Any ideas please 🙂
    Shaun

    #9540
    Ask April Masini
    Keymaster

    First of all, you won’t mess this up. You can’t. So stop worrying about that.

    Second of all, there’s nothing wrong with a ten year age difference in either direction. Lots of couples with ten year age differences do just fine and lots of couples with no age differences break up all the time. So, since you’re 25, and not 18, I really don’t think the age difference has to be a problem.

    That said, If she’s not interested in a serious relationship with someone ten years her junior, there’s not going to be a lot you can do to convince her otherwise. Some people just don’t like blondes. Or brunettes, and don’t want to date them. Some people will only date boyfriends or girlfriends of a certain religion or body type. People have preferences and you shouldn’t take it personally.

    What you can do is to continue to ask her out, and reassure her of what it is you’re looking for for yourself in a relationship in the long run. If she’s 35, chances are she’s got a biologically ticking clock and may be looking for a potential husband and father of her (your?) children together. If you’re not on board for this then be honest. If you are (and there are plenty of 25 year old guys who are ready to get married and have a family), then all you can do is reassure her of your intentions.

    Keep the communication going, ask her out on dates, and be honest with her — and more importantly, yourself. There’s no reason an age gap has to mean anything negative at all.

    #47588
    Ethan Morales
    Member #382,560

    Ten years isn’t the problem here. The gap only matters if your life goals, energy levels, or expectations are misaligned. She’s anxious because she’s weighing practicality (career, stability, maybe kids) and emotional fit. Your job as a rave promoter is loud and fun; her job as an accountant is steady and detail-driven. That contrast can be attractive if you both see it as complementing, not competing.

    Tonight, don’t try to “fix” her worries with big promises. Do the opposite: listen. Make the evening low-pressure a casual drink, eye contact, calm conversation. When she brings up doubts, validate them briefly (“I get why that worries you”) and then pivot to specifics: what you like about her, the things you have in common (values, humor, how you handle problems), and small ways your lives could work together. Concrete beats grand declarations.

    Show, don’t lecture. Mention a few real examples that prove stability and compatibility: how you manage money, how you plan weekends, what you’d do if one of you had a tough week. If kids or long-term plans are on her mind, be honest about your timeline even saying “I don’t know exactly, but I want to figure that out with someone I trust” is better than overpromising.

    Things to say tonight: “I like you for who you are not for what you’d become.” “I know we’re different. That’s okay. I don’t want you to change.” “I’m interested in seeing where this goes, and I’m willing to be patient and intentional about it.” Things not to say: “Age is nothing,” as a lecture; “I’ll change my life for you” as a promise; or any pressure about labels or timelines. Don’t try to be louder than the conversation be steady, confident, and reassuring.

    Small gesture: plan a next thing before you leave tonight. Not “marry me,” but “let’s try X next weekend” (a low-key activity that connects your worlds). That gives her evidence you’re serious enough to plan and not so rushed she feels pressured.

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