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Thoughts on OLD man..

81 replies

Perrylobster · 27/12/2025 12:53

I met a man on OLD and would really appreciate some outside opinions, especially as I’ve previously been in an abusive relationship and want to sanity check myself before getting more involved.

He is divorced and has a daughter. He separated from the child’s mother very shortly after the birth. He says this was not his decision. There was a long court process and he eventually got standard contact, every other weekend and one midweek day.
He says the mother moved away and he followed her, including relocating his job. He works in a professional role that involves a lot of empathy and care, which I mention only because it seems relevant to his presentation.
His explanation is that the child’s mother was developing mental health problems after the birth and moved in with her parents. He says her parents wanted to protect her and were concerned the baby might be taken away, and that as a result he was shut out.

I’m aware that there are always two sides to these situations. As a woman myself, and having had my own experience of being left shortly after giving birth and being labelled abusive, I know how complex and painful these dynamics can be.

In person he came across as open and willing to answer questions, and his body language felt genuine to me, but I also know that I may be over analysing or projecting because of my past.

I’d really welcome thoughts on how this sounds to others, any potential red flags, and what sensible, non confrontational questions I could ask on a next date to get a clearer picture.

OP posts:
Jugendstiel · 27/12/2025 23:40

So she had PND and wanted him to leave when their baby was tiny and he did?
I'd be unimpressed by any man who let a relationship fail in the weeks after a baby was born.

Also - you have had ONE date - is that right? And you seem to have been fed a huge amount of information about what a wonderful man he is - moved to be near his child, court order, caring profession... That's quite a manifesto for a first date. Where's the lighthearted chat and focus on the present moment? What did he learn about you? What nice things did you discover you had in common?

If you go on a second date, I'd recommend you don't ask questions. See what he finds out about you. Is he interested in what you like doing, what your opinions and tastes are, whether you enjoy your job etc? Or does he dig too hard and deep to try and uncover your emotional insecurities by asking about past relationships, or asking about sexual preferences when you barely know him? You might also try disagreeing with him to see how he handles it. Doesn't have to be confrontational, just have a difference of opinion and see if he tries to belittle you or tease or challenge you. Does he get a bit annoyed or macho about it, or easily respect the difference?

Perrylobster · 28/12/2025 00:10

@Jugendstiel
We had a long first date and discussed all manner of things. He did ask me questions about about family, hobbies, food preferences, work, etc. He was a bit shy but fortunately i’m not so he came out of his shell as time went on
I’m used to interviewing people for my job so I have subtle ways of extracting information without it seeming too intrusive but he certainly didn’t dump it on me.

We had a long walk and we just discussed everything really to establish whether it’s worth bothering seeing each other again. I don’t have much time so in need to know if it’s worth investing in quite quickly I guess.

Obviously his situation is more complicated than I’d like but I wonder if it’s realistic to find someone without baggage at my age - but what I don’t want is to walk into another abusive situation.

regarding sex, I can’t imagine he’d discuss that easily, he was quite awkward and shy and wasn’t comfortable hugging at the end.

OP posts:
Perrylobster · 28/12/2025 00:12

@Jugendstiel Oh and we did have a bit of a laugh about a shared mutual hobby - I would say the bulk of it was lighthearted or I don’t think I would consider sending him again tbh

OP posts:
MsGinaLinetti · 28/12/2025 08:23

ChamonixMountainBum · 27/12/2025 13:40

I guess that's great if you get to be the primary carer, not so great for the other parent.

The point is it's not about the parents. The children are the primary consideration.

MsGinaLinetti · 28/12/2025 08:25

WilfredsPies · 27/12/2025 16:24

It’s not supposed to be about what’s great for the other parent though, is it? It’s supposed to be what’s best for the child.

Exactly

ChamonixMountainBum · 28/12/2025 09:51

MsGinaLinetti · 28/12/2025 08:23

The point is it's not about the parents. The children are the primary consideration.

Noble words, but let's be honest no invested, present and loving parent is going to say "yeah, I'll take a bullet for the team and only see my kids EOW".

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