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Why Be My Grandfather’s Caregiver? What Will You Offer—A Flat? A Car? My 24‑Year‑Old Fiancée Demanded When I Proposed. Andrew, 43.
Why should I become a caretaker for an old man? What will you give mean flat? A car? she said, looking at me as if I were an unsold item on a supermarket shelf, past its bestby date, left untouched. In that instant, after years of slumber, a strange question rose: had the world finally tipped over if, at fortythree, I was already being labelled oldtimer and the price tag on a partnership was laid out plain as day, without a hint of flirtation or a game?
I am fortythree. I have never married. Two cohabitations, each lasting two years, came and went like two sensible, uneventful chaptersno alimony, no exfiles, no baggage, no endless comparisons. I used to think that was a plus, a clean slate. In todays market, however, an unmarried man is treated like a curious anomaly, as if the absence of a wedding ring marked a defect, a secret contract that never passed inspection.
I decided it was time. I wanted a family, a woman beside mebeautiful, wellkept, young. I wasnt ashamed to admit I preferred someone not older than twentyeight, someone who would make my friends, green with envy, ask, Where did you find her? I had a decent salary, a flat in Manchester, a motorcar, no drinking, no smoking, a tidy appearance. By my own calculations I was a respectable offering on the dating market.
The market, it turned out, runs on a different set of rules. I was not a buyer but a commodityone that barely attracted any bidders.
**First date.**
She was twentysix, met me through a swiperight app, and for a week she giggled at my jokes, called me interesting, said youre easy to talk to. I thought perhaps this could be a normal, uncomplicated connection. The moment we met, however, the conversation slipped into another dimension.
She sized me up, eyes unflinching, and, after fifteen minutes, asked:
What car do you drive?
I answered.
Do you own a flat?
I answered.
How much do you earn?
It struck me then that this was no date but an interview, and I was not a candidate but an asset being tested for liquidity. She asked each question with the same calm she would ask, Tea or coffee?
When I finally turned the table and asked, What are you looking for? she smiled and said, Comfort. I need a man who can meet my needs. No coyness, no subtextjust a price list.
**Second date.**
She was twentyfour, strikingly polished, the sort of pictureperfect girl I imagined was worth the effort. We met in a restaurant in Brighton; I paid for the meal, as proper. The talk drifted to the future.
I want a family, children, a solid relationship, I said.
She stared at me and replied evenly, And what can you give?
I blinked, What do you mean?
She leaned back, You want a young woman, right? She has choices. Why should she pick you?
Then the conversation that would shatter my complacency began.
Youre older, she continued, so you have to compensate with resourcesflat, car, money, lifestyle. Otherwise, whats the point?
I tried to argue that love, compatibility, respect mattered too, but she shrugged, Those are secondary. First, the basics.
And then, in that flattoned tone, she said, Why should I be a caretaker for an old man? She added, If you want someone young, you have to match the expectations.
I left the table feeling as if Id been dismantled on a conveyor belt, each part appraised for market value.
The worst part was not the oneoff incidents but the system behind them.
**Third encounter.**
A twentysevenyearold woman had messaged me first, asked questions, flirted, and I began to hope perhaps not everything was so mercenary. Then she sent a voice note: Listen, lets be straight. I need a man who will support me. I dont want to work myself to the bone. If youre not ready, dont waste either of our time.
I asked, What do you offer in return?
She laughed, Memyself.
That simple reply cracked something inside me. I was being offered a product, a allinclusive package with payment due upfront. The absurdity was that they seemed blissfully unaware of the flaw.
They did not hide, they did not play gamesterms were set instantly, and if you didnt fit, you were written off, emotionless, like an unsuitable model.
Ironically, I had blamed women.
I thought they had become spoiled, greedy, only after money. Yet the more dates I endured, the clearer it became: the fault lay partly with me. I entered this market expecting to choose, only to discover I was the one being chosen.
I wanted youth, beauty, convenience. They wanted security, stability, profit. I chased the eyecandy, they chased the resource. In that logic, everything was honest, just unpleasant.
It dawned that I was not a unique treasure, but one of many items compared, priced, discarded. The pain was not in the rejections, but in the moment I realized I was being seen not as a man, but as an offerterms, conditions, expiry date. Perhaps I arrived too late.
Maybe I should have built a family earlier, before relationships turned into transactions. Maybe I lingered too long in the illusion that time was on my side.
Now reality sits unadorned. To obtain what I desire, I must either conform to the existing demands or reshape my own. And Istill at fortythreeam not ready for either path.
That, perhaps, is the most unsettling revelation of these recent years.
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