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44 going insane seeing a 29 year old is this a midlife crisis ?!

124 replies

TheAmberBird · 03/01/2026 17:35

Hi all,
Bit of an odd one and I am looking for some outside perspective.

My ex husband and I have been divorced for almost three years. We have two boys aged 11 and 9, so we still see a lot of each other. I initiated the divorce and it was tough because the love was still there, and in many ways still is. We even slept together one final time the night before he moved out for good.

The reality though is that he was not a good partner or father. I felt like I was doing everything alone, so I eventually thought I might as well actually be alone. There was a lot of weaponised incompetence and I got completely sick of it. Things like asking me to watch “your child” while he showered or had some time to himself. He was physically present but not really there, always on work calls or distracted. Once I popped out for a coffee and a walk and came back to find the house completely trashed. He did not care because he knew I would clean it up.
The divorce itself was not messy. I had simply had enough and did not want my children growing up thinking that was normal. Co parenting is actually much better now and he is a better father because he has to be.

Fast forward to now. I met a man at a bar last April while I was out with friends. He approached me when I went to get a drink, we got talking and went outside to chat. He kissed me and I went back to my friends, but I gave him my number. I still do not know what possessed me to do that. He texted the next day and we have been seeing each other since.

It started as something light and fun for both of us. On my weekends without the boys I would go to his flat and we would spend the weekend together. He is spontaneous and we have been on lots of weekends away together, including the Netherlands, Scotland, France and the Lake District.

He has a good job, works hard and treats me well. I care about him a lot. We have things in common and share hobbies that we do together. Recently he said he would like to take things seriously. He has also told his parents about me and has said they would like to meet me sometime soon, which has made me feel surprisingly nervous.

This is where I start to feel unsure. He is 29 and there is a 15 year age gap between us. I am past the age of wanting more children and I want him to have the opportunity to have a family if that is what he wants. I have not introduced him to my children yet. Although it has become serious, he has only met a few of my friends and I have met his. I was his plus one at a wedding back in September.

Part of me wonders if he has some sort of mummy issues, or if I am overthinking everything. The age gap itself does not bother me hugely, but he is very much a younger millennial, almost Gen Z, and I am definitely an older millennial.

OP posts:
basejump · 06/01/2026 20:09

I did this when I was 42 and he was 27. Been together nearly 9 years, married 6. I left a bad first marriage (XH unfaithful) as I fell madly in love with younger man. He pursued me. It was wonderful for the first 6 years but now he seems to have gone off me (surprise). But doesn’t want to split up. Says not bothered about kids. So I am basically waiting to be discarded when he’s ready. It really sucks and I feel crap about myself as well as guilty. I still wouldn’t have done anything differently though as the first years were worth it.

Merlinis · 06/01/2026 20:15

Don’t know how old your kids are. If still living at home I wouldn’t be making this serious. He’ll most likely leave you when he hits mid 3s/ early 40s for someone more his own age to have a family with. It’ll cause heart ache all round. Fine just to have fun but definitely a no on the going serious front. Do not enter into any financial agreements / marriage / live with him as you’ll probably end up losing out as will your kids when it goes tits up.

Crushed23 · 06/01/2026 22:42

basejump · 06/01/2026 20:09

I did this when I was 42 and he was 27. Been together nearly 9 years, married 6. I left a bad first marriage (XH unfaithful) as I fell madly in love with younger man. He pursued me. It was wonderful for the first 6 years but now he seems to have gone off me (surprise). But doesn’t want to split up. Says not bothered about kids. So I am basically waiting to be discarded when he’s ready. It really sucks and I feel crap about myself as well as guilty. I still wouldn’t have done anything differently though as the first years were worth it.

Why don’t you end it? Are you happy to stay with a man who you know is no longer into you? That’s harmful to your self-esteem and could make moving on harder.

Christwosheds · 06/01/2026 22:52

Eddielizzard · 03/01/2026 18:59

I personally think this is fine. 29 is a fully fledged adult age. I would take it as it comes and enjoy it. It's rare to really connect with someone and he sounds great.

Agree with this.
I know quite a few couples with a gap like this, or larger. Some the woman older, some the man. All are very happy together. Your boyfriend is about to turn 30 and has already got a PhD, hardly an immature 20 year old.
It seems that him wanting a child may be the deciding factor, but at the moment I would just see how things go and enjoy being happy together.

Jack80 · 06/01/2026 23:44

Chat see what you both want long term.

Sodthesystem · 06/01/2026 23:55

There's a million things that could break a relationship before kids become relevant.

Hes 29...unless he's an 'always wanted to be a dad' baby broody don't, he won't even think about kids till he's 35. Maybe even 40.

I'm childfree and only ever once had to bring kids up for a set discussion because the guy was 36 and talking about how his best mate had 4 kids and they had all gone on a camping weekend so I asked him if he wanted that and he basically said he'd never really given it much thought.

Most of them don't care unless you make it clear its a cant/won't. I wouldn't even mention it.

Just enjoy the relationship for what it is for however long it lasts :)

basejump · 07/01/2026 06:57

Crushed23 · 06/01/2026 22:42

Why don’t you end it? Are you happy to stay with a man who you know is no longer into you? That’s harmful to your self-esteem and could make moving on harder.

Yes because there are worse things than harm to my self esteem - which is an inside job anyway. I’m done after this relationship and there is enough good still left in it to make it worthwhile.

aCatCalledFawkes · 07/01/2026 08:13

I'm 47yrs and I wouldn't personally but my exH is also 47yrs and his wife is 61yrs. I have to say they are very very happy and she's been such a steady influence in my daughter's life. I guess the difference is that they both already have children, he has one and she has two. My exH was always adamant he wasn't having any more.

SoftBalletShoes · 07/01/2026 08:20

I think it sounds fab as a casual thing, but I would not commit to him. No living together or marrying. The reason is because you run a massive, massive risk of what happened to Demi Moore with Ashton Kutcher. Don't put yourself in that position. Keep things as they are now, and enjoy it as long as it lasts, but keep your own home and finances and general life, is what I would say.

NavyTurtle · 09/01/2026 13:49

TheAmberBird · 03/01/2026 17:51

Are you implying I shouldn’t be seeing him ?

I think she means that if it was the other way around no one would even question it.

Jokethecoalwoman · 09/01/2026 13:53

I have just entered a "thing" - exactly the same ages. I am very aware of the age gap, but I'm not expecting anything I'm trying to just relax and enjoy it for what it is. And we are from the same generation, right?! Both Millennials.

abitgutted · 09/01/2026 14:13

I think you're wasting your time tbh, and it will end in tears. It might be fun now, but you will get invested / fall in love, and when it ends you'll have another heart break to get over. I'm in my 50's and my son is 29!

I'd say look for someone your own age, where the relationship could really have some future.

LancashireButterPie · 09/01/2026 14:17

Well it worked for Macron.

LancashireButterPie · 09/01/2026 14:20

I would just say that there is a large age difference between me and DH, it didn't seem much of a difference when it was 25 and he was 35, but now he's in his 60s he has definitely slowed down to a level where it's really noticeable.
So long as you both have an awareness of that.

AltitudeCheck · 09/01/2026 14:27

Absolutely fine, 29 is adult enough that you shouldn't feel there's any weird power imbalance at play. Ignore the people predicting a future split over wanting children or differing lifestyles.

Men (and women) of any age can change their minds about children, relationships, monogamy, where or how they want to live. Life can throw curve balls with health and work, regardless of your ages.

Enjoy what you have for as long as you have it, don't ditch a happy and functional relationship because of a 'what if' that might happen years down the line or might not happen at all.

omggggggg · 09/01/2026 15:07

LancashireButterPie · 09/01/2026 14:17

Well it worked for Macron.

Doesn’t she hit him?

Clarehandaust · 09/01/2026 15:10

AyeKarumba · 03/01/2026 17:57

Good for you op!
Maybe just ask him if you can take it slower. Ask him how he feels about children.
I wouldn’t be happy if I was his mother. But if you’re both happy, crack on.

I certainly wouldn’t be upset if my son chose an older woman, There are abusive partners of all shaped sizes and ages. I’ve just keen for him to avoid one of those.
At least an older woman can’t land him with an 18 year commitment after the relationship is finished

feelingsuperlucky · 09/01/2026 15:31

My in-laws have a 10 year age gap, he was 29 and she was 39... They are now 65 & 75 and very happily married. Albeit they did have a child together when she was 42 as that is what they both wanted x

Soonenough · 09/01/2026 15:44

Life is too short . You haven't mentioned any negatives except his age . And the only problem with that is if he wants children and you don't or can't . But that can happen in any age bracket . The fact that you have travelled well together is a huge plus in my book . You really get to see different sides of people doing this.

Go for it , enjoy while you can . No need to define it or ramp it up if you don't want to.

Wisperley · 09/01/2026 15:52

I know a few couples with age gaps like this. A & B met when A was about 27 and B was 45. B had already had her kids. They have been together ever since. B is now 74 and A is 56. They do not have kids together.

Another couple met when he was 27 and she was 42. Again, she already had kids. She is now 80 and he's 65. They also do not have kids together. His mum refused to meet her for two years initially though.

Both of the men in these couples love their partners so much that children were secondary.

Another couple I know met when she was 34 and he was 22. They've been together 25 years and have children.

It might work, or it might not, but no-one has any right to judge.

Sodthesystem · 09/01/2026 16:46

abitgutted · 09/01/2026 14:13

I think you're wasting your time tbh, and it will end in tears. It might be fun now, but you will get invested / fall in love, and when it ends you'll have another heart break to get over. I'm in my 50's and my son is 29!

I'd say look for someone your own age, where the relationship could really have some future.

Heartbreaks are part of life though.

Why avoid romances because they might end in broken hearts?

The future with a man her own age could involve becoming his nurse maid or him becoming grumpy and senile. Personally I'd rather risk the young hottie.

harlemshake · 09/01/2026 17:52

As a man who dated an older woman i shall comment. Have the best fun you can whilst it last, just like any relationship, you are consenting adults.

I was 24 and she was 36, Our son is now 12, when she turned 40, i fast realised we were just too different people who were of different ages, she did not have the energy to go out to clubs like we did before, mentally mature beyond me and many other age related differences.

I do understand you may do a lot together but from research, most women, age faster than men, so do think of this too.

I see my ex now , i am 37 now and albeit she is and will always be gorgeous to me and has taken great care of herself, she is very visibly older than me (grey hair, wrinkles etc). I always remind my female friends who have taken a liking to younger men of my experience.

to add: i had mummy issues so I always approached older, settled women. Now i had therapy and i would not even consider someone over +5/-5 years

harlemshake · 09/01/2026 17:55

omggggggg · 09/01/2026 15:07

Doesn’t she hit him?

yeah, granny issues almost like. not mummy issues

Paramaribo2025 · 10/01/2026 01:17

harlemshake · 09/01/2026 17:52

As a man who dated an older woman i shall comment. Have the best fun you can whilst it last, just like any relationship, you are consenting adults.

I was 24 and she was 36, Our son is now 12, when she turned 40, i fast realised we were just too different people who were of different ages, she did not have the energy to go out to clubs like we did before, mentally mature beyond me and many other age related differences.

I do understand you may do a lot together but from research, most women, age faster than men, so do think of this too.

I see my ex now , i am 37 now and albeit she is and will always be gorgeous to me and has taken great care of herself, she is very visibly older than me (grey hair, wrinkles etc). I always remind my female friends who have taken a liking to younger men of my experience.

to add: i had mummy issues so I always approached older, settled women. Now i had therapy and i would not even consider someone over +5/-5 years

Edited

I rest my case.

patooties · 10/01/2026 01:31

I’m early fifties. I have really close friends in their late 20’s (they would describe me as their friends and I’ve met their other similar aged friends and holidayed and been out with them). One of my dearest friends is in his early 70’s and has stayed current. I wouldn’t want to be in a relationship with any of them - not because they are not attractive people - but their world view and lives lived are so far from mine.
I couldn’t ’date’ below probably 40’s? And no chance would I look over 60 - so about 10 years either way.