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Dear Breakup Girl,
I've just got a quick comment on your advice to Sheri (the 42-year-old with
2 kids). You told her to be up front with her 34-year-old potential
squeeze/summer fling, and suggested that any guy who is scared off by kids
isn't worth it [Note from Breakup Girl: Whoa!
That's totally not what I said. BG is not in the biz of that kind of flip
character call. My actual point: some guys (and gals!) are -- legitimately --
reluctant to get into a pre-fab family when they'd like to fab one of their own
from scratch. And also for the reasons that Jo so eloquently describes below.
In some cases, this may mean that -- even all other things being lovely -- a
potential couple may be, practically speaking, incompatible. That's
all.] I just wanted to add something.
It looks like Sheri wants a nice, relaxing, "just for Mom"
relationship; she's not thinking tickets for four to the Spice Girls with
hotdogs to follow, she's thinking candlelit dinners and a suite at the Ritz. It
seems to me that she needs to a) let the guy know that she's got kids, and b)
(once she's sure this guy is going past date #4 or so) let the kids know that
she's got him, but c) let everyone know that the relationship is for fun, not
fatherhood. She won't have to hermetically seal the kids off from the
relationship, but she can keep their evenings out for the nights when Dad/her
mother/her best friend has the kids. Then, if their relationship lasts past
Labor Day, the two of them will have a good relationship, which will help when
he gets to know the kids.
The most important thing is that she let him know that she doesn't want him
to parent (or even be involved with) her children, without feeling guilty or
awkward about it -- and then to act on that, firmly. And she has to be sure
that's what she wants. The reason many single people bolt at the first sign of
offspring is because there are so many hidden pitfalls; a lot of parents are
looking for a step-parent, rather than a lover. Even if they aren't, sharing
the day-to-day life of a parent means sharing the day-to-day life of a child --
which can be pretty hairy if your idea
of responsiblity is a tank of fish. Being pitchforked into weekend
psuedoparenthood is very, very frightening, especially since the kid isn't
usually happy about "Daddy's/Mommy's new friend," and often takes the
first available opportunity to whack you with some Lego.
But I digress. If she really doesn't want him to play Nintendo on the
third date, she should tell him so, and then take things as they come. If she
does, then she should look for a nice child-friendly man (a single dad,
maybe?) who will happily build blanket forts, miss meetings to make day-care
pickups, eat Kraft Dinner on the second date and spend his day off at the
amusment park.
And oh yeah -- the fact that a 42 -year-old with two kids can meet a
charming 34-year-old while I, single at 37, can't get arrested (I'm the
five-years celibate "loony Norma Desmond clone," as if you could
forget that letter) just strikes me as one more example of the
Unfairness of the Universe.
-- Jo
Breakup Girl responds: How about snagging a couple of kids, then hitting a singles
event? Could get you both (a date, and arrested)? Kidding, kidding. Thanks for
writing.
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