I've recently been hearing about how men in their 20s are pursuing women in their 30s and 40s. To be clear, it's not the women going after younger men, the men want an older woman! And it got me thinking...
Typically we've seen older men going after much younger women, for example, Leo DiCaprio who won't date a woman over 25 yet he's 50 years old. This is somewhat accepted and sometimes even expected in society, maybe the age gap isn't always quite that big but an older man with a younger woman is totally normal. However, when a woman dates a younger man she's called a "cougar."
Why does it matter who is older?
Does age actually matter or is it about your stage in life?
Is location and or cultural upbringing a factor?
I knew a couple from church a while back, she was about seven years older than her husband and seemed to feel a bit embarrassed by that, like it was taboo and needed to be kept secret.
Would a husband feel ashamed if he's the older one?
I know most of us here are happily single, but I'm wondering for those of you who are searching or open to a relationship, what is your age gap preference? Would you date only younger or only older? Five, ten, or even twenty years? What's your reasoning behind your age range?
I think I'd be okay with ten years younger or ten years older. I don't want to date someone who is still in college but I don't want to date someone with AARP either.

(*Note, for those outside North America, AARP is a nonprofit organization dedicated to those over the age of 50.)
Hi Elizabeth! Great thread!
Never mind me, it's just your Friendly Neighborhood Resident Cougar here to add a couple of thoughts.
I'm Asian, and was adopted into a small white town with no other Asians. Starting from about the time I was about 14, men who could be my dad and grandpa started trying to talk to me because I was a curiosity object.
There was also the movie, "Full Metal Jacket" with an infamous scene involving an Asian prostitute, and every now and then, I'd hear that quoted in various settings. Being in a small town that didn't know any better, men seemed to assume that Asian women must be like the character in this movie -- cheap, available, and more than willing.
I was actually quite terrified of older men for a while, but very appreciative if I met one (at work, school, or church) that had an honest, caring "someone older but that I could trust" vibe.
When I hit about 35, something very strange happened. The older guys hit on me more online than in real life (I think I got too old for them, as they were dashing past me for the 25-year-olds,) and the younger guys started trying to talk to me.
I don't get asked out often (this is an accumulation of several years' worth of stories,) but now the average age gap of guys who ask me out is around 15 years younger than me. And it's because they assume I'm around their age range or only slightly older. The biggest age gap I've ever experienced was with a guy who was 19 years younger than me -- when he found out how old I was, he mentioned his mom was only like 4 years older than me -- and that was a bit too much.
Even with a 15-year difference, it's strange to think I was driving when these guys were born.
I've gotten to a point where I'm attracted to life experience, but still hope to have a lot of things in common with someone, or at least, relatable. With younger guys, the biggest issue is having a family. I'm past the point of wanting to have kids, and I would never want to deny someone from having a family. I've known a few women who couldn't have kids that married men who said they didn't want to have kids -- but their husbands changed their minds a few years into the marriage, and left them for what they saw as viable mothers-to-be.
A few years ago, I was seeing a younger guy who asked me to consider marrying him several times, but I didn't have peace with it. We went our own ways, and he's with someone now who I think is a much better match for him -- and right around his age.
On the flipside, I can't see myself with someone that much older either. It would depend. I know a lot of blended families with a lot of drama (his kids hate the new younger "replacement" for their mom, etc.) and I'm not interested in being a part of all that. I also have a friend who became a grandmother through marriage at the age pf 33. This can be a huge responsibility, especially with so many people financially supporting their adult children and helping to raise their grandchildren.
My lifelong best friend and I were talking about this. She said, "We thought we had to get married because no one told us there was another option." I have good Christian friends who are married and have told me they sometimes wish someone would have told them it was possible to live a happy, productive single life.
Singles are told we're selfish -- we just serve in other ways. Right now my priorities are making sure my parents are loved, comfortable, and know they aren't alone as they get older, and on my vacations, I love going and voluntarily for my friends who own businesses. (They pay me back with about 5 extra pounds, as they feed me much too well while I'm there!!) This was a dream of my for several years that God has thankfully answered. My friends are the type who are always helping others in need -- I told God that I wanted to serve the ones who are always serving.
I've also worked long and hard to pay off my debts. I drive an older car and I rent, but I don't have to worry about the bank taking back anything I own.
Most any relationship possibility I've been in, whether older or younger, would have plunged me into a whirlwind of family issues, relational drama, a multitude of other caretaker responsibilities, and mountains of debt.
Sure, my single life isn't perfect and has plenty of its own problems.
But until I find a marriage possibility in which both of us wouldn't be plunging ourselves into a tornado of issues I know I would get lost in, I'll probably be single until Jesus comes back, or God calls me home.
Thanks very much for the thread!
