Meet the Other Phone. Protection built in.

Meet the Other Phone.
Protection built in.

Buy now

Please or to access all these features

AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

To not look at this couple in the same way anymore?

706 replies

AvrilAprill · 07/07/2024 23:17

At the end of last year I made friends with a mum who’d just moved to the area. We got on great, as did our partners.

However, I’ve now found out that they first got together when she was 16 and he was 20/21. It genuinely makes me feel uncomfortable knowing that, and my husband says I’m being weird

OP posts:
itsgettingweird · 08/07/2024 07:53

Yes you're being weird!

4 years is a normal age gap!

My parents had the same gap. Met at 18 and 22. Married for umpteen years until my mum died young of cancer in her 60's.

Tbh I'm not sure there's much difference between 16 and 18. Depending on when birthday falls it could literally only be about a year!

radiatorbed · 08/07/2024 07:53

AccountCreateUsername · 08/07/2024 07:52

Improved safeguarding and better sexual boundaries isn’t infantilising teenagers.

The reasons why children in the UK are so unhappy compared to others has been written about. Adult men who want to have sex with teenagers are judged. If those men are in their 20s, their peers do judge them.

Yes this.

radiatorbed · 08/07/2024 07:54

NameChangePoP · 08/07/2024 07:50

At least they were both of consensual age. When I was in 6th form, one of our teachers 'fancied' a girl in year 8. They married and had children. Her parents supported the relationship. They're separated now after 20+ years, but I still find it absolutely awful 😞.

That teacher should have been in prison.

Notacrab · 08/07/2024 07:55

RoundRedRobin · 08/07/2024 07:52

I think 16 year olds today are very young and child-like, I was 17 when I started dating my DH who was 21, I was driving, had a job, paid for and owned my own car and would house sit for people in our village (so responsible for homes/pets of complete strangers).
We have been married over 20 years- quite happily too!

I don’t know any 17 years old like that now, they all seem like preteens and so it would seem strange nowadays.

I agree. I was in full time work from 17 and moved into a rented flat at 18.

AnneButNotHathaway · 08/07/2024 07:55

I'm with you, OP. Now that they're adults, they are probably on the same level mentally, but 16 years old and 22 years old are very strange and questionable. I'm not even talking physical level of maturity, I'm talking psychological one. 21-22 is a college student/past college, I can't see people from that circle being interested in friendships or communication with high schoolers. Even the "half your age plus seven" rule doesn't apply here as his minimum would be 17-18 (no that it would be healthy still, I think it mostly applies to people in their 30s). I can inderstand him being a catch for her, because in her eyes he probably was so grown and everything, but what was in her, a literal child, for him, an actual adult? That is the question.
However, I tend to think everyone knows best for themselves, so if they're happy, I'd let it go. It's shady and very questionable, but not my business after all.

Rocknrollstar · 08/07/2024 07:55

I was 17 and DH was 21. What’s the problem? and what has it got to do you with you? Either you like them as a couple, or you don’t.

Alondra · 08/07/2024 07:55

She is 16 and legally old enough to have sex with an adult, She's also old enough to see a doctor and get contraception or an abortion without her parents' consent. She's old enough to leave home, again, without her parents' consent or leave school and start her working life if she wants to do so. 18 may be the "adult age" for drinking, but in reality, 16 is the age young women have real independence.

He's 20 y.o.and only 4 years older than her. If he was 30 I would understand your post. But he's not.

You keep talking about being a different generation. But from your lack of understanding what being 16 means in the life of a young girl today, I seriously doubt it.

radiatorbed · 08/07/2024 07:57

Most 20 year olds don’t want to date or even hang out with a 16 year old imo. The developmental gap is pretty large. One is a child and one is an adult

This.

MrHarleyQuin · 08/07/2024 08:00

Why has this turned into a discussion about safeguarding and teenagers today?

Yes if my 16 year old daughter got a 21 year old boyfriend I would certainly be concerned about the age gap, at least until I knew him and his intentions. Her actual boyfriend is a few months older, and they both got bullied at school for getting together when he is in the year above 🙄

Yet I am also able to hold this fact in my mind and have never once thought to judge the age gap of mature friends' relationships.

inamarina · 08/07/2024 08:00

Politicians247UnderwearExtinguishingService · 08/07/2024 00:44

It's interesting how you NEVER seem to hear about a woman aged 20+ getting together with a 14/15/16yo boy.

I know that, in general, girls tend to be more mature than boys of the same age, but surely there must be some mature/worldly lads of that age out there who would meet immature/inexperienced women who are in their early 20s, wouldn't there?

It's interesting how you NEVER seem to hear about a woman aged 20+ getting together with a 14/15/16yo boy.

Err, yes, it does happen. Not to me, but I know someone who had an older girlfriend at 15.
I really don’t see the issue with 16 and 20 unless you base it solely on numbers. Surely it depends on the personalities of those involved and on how mature they are?
I had a friend at secondary school in the nineties who was 14 when she started going out with a 17-year-old. They‘d met in church, everything was pretty much above board for several years and her parents very much approved of the relationship.
She eventually broke up with him when she was about 18 because she wanted to date other men and found her boyfriend and the whole relationship too nice and innocent.
She also said she was the one who initiated any physical proximity in their relationship, but some mumsnetters would probably still call her boyfriend a creep 🤷‍♀️

radiatorbed · 08/07/2024 08:00

I feel ever more sorry for teenage girls as I read the responses on here. The concerns of a girl this age being involved with a man in his 20s are huge but everyone is keen to brush then under the carpet and pretend that this is completely normal. It really isn't.

radiatorbed · 08/07/2024 08:01

It's interesting how you NEVER seem to hear about a woman aged 20+ getting together with a 14/15/16yo boy

Isn't it just?

Iaskedyouthrice · 08/07/2024 08:02

radiatorbed · 08/07/2024 07:52

I completely disagree with you on this. If anything girls in particular are being forced to grow up more quickly and the rise of easily accessible hardcore porn and expectations of anal sex/strangling etc has put a sexual pressure on them unlike anything my generation ever experienced. It is a very difficult time to be a teenage girl right now.

Thank you! Having being part of a thread recently that discussed this, for some reason, some women are really reluctant to admit this. They were also reluctant to accept that girls and boys needed seperate talks about consent. I would be interested to know why. It certainly is a difficult time to be a teenage girl/young woman right now and I would most definitely be wary of such a gap at these ages these days. I doubt you will get a response though sadly.

MrHarleyQuin · 08/07/2024 08:03

radiatorbed · 08/07/2024 08:00

I feel ever more sorry for teenage girls as I read the responses on here. The concerns of a girl this age being involved with a man in his 20s are huge but everyone is keen to brush then under the carpet and pretend that this is completely normal. It really isn't.

Have you actually read the thread?

It's not about a teenage girl, it's about a grown up couple who have school age kids.

You would serious question this out of concern for teenage girls?

Teacherprebaby · 08/07/2024 08:03

AvrilAprill · 07/07/2024 23:17

At the end of last year I made friends with a mum who’d just moved to the area. We got on great, as did our partners.

However, I’ve now found out that they first got together when she was 16 and he was 20/21. It genuinely makes me feel uncomfortable knowing that, and my husband says I’m being weird

You are being weird...you must have a lot of time on your hands to care.

CatrionaBalfour · 08/07/2024 08:04

radiatorbed · 08/07/2024 08:00

I feel ever more sorry for teenage girls as I read the responses on here. The concerns of a girl this age being involved with a man in his 20s are huge but everyone is keen to brush then under the carpet and pretend that this is completely normal. It really isn't.

He's not "a man in his twenties" the information we have is 20/21.
Is there evidence of grooming? Is she vulnerable? Otherwise not a problem.

Mothership4two · 08/07/2024 08:05

FlowerHandle · 08/07/2024 07:50

I never understand what young women find sexy or attractive about immature older men.

Well in my case, he didn't seem immature to me at the time and we were around the same 'level'. I would have probably found a mature older man boring. He was fun, outgoing, kind and goodlooking. He had a steady job but wasn't particularly ambitious - he was more about enjoying life. But he wasn't a slacker, had own house and car. He was social and popular. Loved his mum and dad and went to see them often. No vices that I was aware of. He wasn't particularly deep. If we'd stayed together long term I would have probably outgrown him.

CatrionaBalfour · 08/07/2024 08:05

MrHarleyQuin · 08/07/2024 08:03

Have you actually read the thread?

It's not about a teenage girl, it's about a grown up couple who have school age kids.

You would serious question this out of concern for teenage girls?

Quite. It's clearly worked out well for this couple and does not appear to have been problematic. Nor "grim".

ItsNotYou852 · 08/07/2024 08:06

radiatorbed · 08/07/2024 07:48

I wonder how many of the mothers of daughters on here saying it's fine would be delighted that their 16 year old child was with a 21 year old man?

I agree with you OP but I work in safeguarding children so perhaps I always see the worst.

I wouldn't be delighted, I'd be keeping a careful eye on her (and him) but I wouldn't automatically leap to "he must be a paedophile" either.

And a few years down the line, when they are happily married with children, I don't see why anybody, least of all a "friend" would be judging them for meeting at those ages.

Conkersinautumn · 08/07/2024 08:06

A school girl with a final year uni student (potentially same age as trainee teachers or TA'S in school). Yep, that's grim. I'm surprised so many people would be comfortable with that. My parents had a two year gap when they met (my mum was 15) and that led to a teenage pregnancy at 16 and all the shit of someone who had kids not wanting them as she didn't appreciate the impact nor think of what else she could do. This four plus year age gap (a quarter of the life of the 16 year old) is not great until theyre at similar life stages, similar footing.

CatrionaBalfour · 08/07/2024 08:08

It's not "grim". She could be yr12, he could be second year university.
The age gap between teachers and students isn't completely about the age gap, it's about the professional relationship.

Nannyfannybanny · 08/07/2024 08:09

saraclara,lot of sense,thank god! When I was at secondary school,we all fancied one of our teachers,he was really good looking, but very strict, not very nice. One of the girls in our class became his CA on leaving school. They did go on to marry,very happy almost 5O years later. I got pregnant at 18 (he was a month younger!!) got married,he was manager of a shop in London at 19, I had an amazing well paid job there. At 20 we had a mortgage, and I did my nursing training. We were definitely a lot more mature then. My second DH is 7 years younger than me. I met him at work,no idea how old each of us was. His B said it wasn't right. Well, just coming up to our silver wedding anniversary! My late DM was several years older than my late father, his DM was several years older than his F, no-one batted an eyelid.

LakeTiticaca · 08/07/2024 08:09

LordPercyPercy · 08/07/2024 07:45

I'd argue that babying young people to the extent we do now, insisting that sixteen year olds are children, isn't the enlightened approach some think.
Many of them seem so anxious and unhappy.

I think you've nailed it here. Just reading some of the posts on here about parental intervention makes me wonder how on earth these youngsters can ever grow into well rounded adults
As a section leader in a large supermarket chain, we employed quite a few 17/18 years old, we had parents ringing up saying that their son/daughter has been spoken to about elongated lunch breaks, spending 40 minutes in the tiolet etc, wanting the next 3 weekends off etc. and wanting apologies for upsetting their little precious.
"But he/she is only 17"
Jesus christ talk about infuriating!!

MrHarleyQuin · 08/07/2024 08:10

Conkersinautumn · 08/07/2024 08:06

A school girl with a final year uni student (potentially same age as trainee teachers or TA'S in school). Yep, that's grim. I'm surprised so many people would be comfortable with that. My parents had a two year gap when they met (my mum was 15) and that led to a teenage pregnancy at 16 and all the shit of someone who had kids not wanting them as she didn't appreciate the impact nor think of what else she could do. This four plus year age gap (a quarter of the life of the 16 year old) is not great until theyre at similar life stages, similar footing.

But why is it grim in the context of a couple with this age gap who have been together a long time, are now adults and your friends? You would seriously stop being friends with someone over this?

Yalta · 08/07/2024 08:12

GingerReader · 08/07/2024 07:44

It would be considered an inappropriate relationship now-a-days and a potential safeguarding issue. She is still a child. He is an adult. It doesn’t matter if she’s “mature for her age” and he’s “a sweet and nice guy” and they’ve been together ever since - this would be a red flag. Most 20 year olds don’t want to date or even hang out with a 16 year old imo. The developmental gap is pretty large. One is a child and one is an adult.

As someone with a dd who is hugely more mature than the b/fs she has dated, even at 16. I wish this ridiculous way of thinking wasn’t around

I feel that none of her relationships last because her life experience (even at 16) was far more varied and she is far more mature than any boy she might have as a b/f who is only 4 years older than her

For a start none of them know how to drive
so it is her running them around like she is their mother

Even her work put her in charge of 30 staff at 17. Some of whom a university degree to learn the job she was doing

She also has her own business or 3

If I were to choose a b/f for dd I would be looking initially at someone at least 10 years older than her who has a driving licence, car and their own business.

I have always have thought this. Even when she was 16 and no longer a school girl

Swipe left for the next trending thread