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„I Want a Man for the Weekend, Not for Life—I’ve Got My Life All Set” A Candid Confession from a 52‑Year‑Old WomanShe spends her evenings sipping tea on the balcony, scrolling through dating apps that promise fleeting romance without the burden of commitment.
I’m after a woman for the weekends, not for the rest of my life I’ve already got everything set up just fine, declares the 52yearold man with frank honesty.
Should we move in together?
Why?
How come? Were both adults.
Thats exactly why I dont get it why?
If someone had told me at thirty that by the time I hit fiftytwo Id be fending off women who were keen to pack their bags and live with me, I would have thought the world had gone completely mad. In my youth it was the opposite. Back then women shied away from any hint of commitment, from sharing a flat to discussing the future. Now the tables have turned. A lady spends a month or two with me, and suddenly she develops a sudden urge to join refrigerators, budgets, rent, laundry piles and all the other joys of cohabitation. Whats even funnier is that none of them can actually articulate why they want that from me.
My name is James, Im fiftytwo. Ive been divorced for fifteen years. I have an adult daughter, Rosie, my own flat in London, a steady job, a circle of friends, two weeks of holiday a year and a surprisingly tranquil existence. In the evenings I can eat icecream straight from the tub while watching a series until two in the morning. On weekends I can sleep until brunch. I can leave a mug on the kitchen table and ignore any lecture about tidying up. I can skip making a Sunday roast if Im not feeling it. Most importantly, no one ever hovers over me asking, Whats for dinner tonight?
The problem is that women seem to treat my independence as a temporary glitch that must be fixed by their presence. At first theyre full of admiration. Youre so selfsufficient, interesting, selfcontained, they tell me. A few weeks later it becomes clear that their praise had a hidden agenda they sincerely hope my independence will one day start working for them.
The first warning call came from Martin. Martin was fiftyeight, looked respectable, talked knowledgeably about his travels and even knew how to fold a napkin properly a skill you might say is a rarity after fifty. We dated for about a month. Cinema, walks, cafés, weekend trips out of the city everything was pleasant. Then, one evening, he said something that made me set my coffee cup back on the saucer.
Listen, could you pop over after work?
For what?
Just to cook something.
I asked, What would you like me to cook?
Dinner.
It turned out Martin was simply tired of living alone. Not emotionally, but practically. His fridge was a silent, empty beast. His stove refused to conjure a beef stew without a second pair of hands. His washing machine seemed to demand a human operator. At one point I realised he was looking at a relationship as a form of outsourced domestic service.
Martin, why dont you just cook yourself? I asked.
He stared at me as if Id suggested he perform heart surgery.
Because youre a woman.
A stunningly concise argument. It shuts down any further questioning, especially if you dont overthink it.
After Martin came David. David was fiftyfive, an avid complainer about golddigging women his favourite pastime. Any conversation with him would, after seven minutes, veer into a tale of how people tried to use him for money. It was especially amusing coming from a man who drove a car older than some university freshmen and counted every penny at the supermarket checkout.
On our sixth date David invited me over.
Come over on Saturday, he said.
Alright.
Just pick up some groceries on the way.
What do you need?
For dinner.
You want me to bring the food?
Yes.
And what will you do?
Ill meet you.
I still think he was an underrated genius; not many can devise a date where the woman shops, transports, cooks, and then thanks the man for the invitation.
David, what about paying for the groceries?
Why?
What do you mean?
You have a job, dont you?
Thats when I realised the word golddigging was only ever applied to others, never to himself.
After a few similar episodes I noticed a pattern. Women liked my flat. They liked its neatness. They liked that I always had food, clean towels, fresh sheets and functional plumbing. They liked my lifestyle. Yet most of them were convinced that once a relationship started I should broaden my service to include them as well.
The most amusing case was Victor. Victor launched into the idea of moving in together with the enthusiasm of a man who had just discovered a way to slash his expenses.
Imagine how cheap it would be if we lived together.
When a man starts a conversation with the word cheap, a woman of my age suddenly reaches for a calculator.
What do you mean?
One fridge, one broadband, one council tax bill.
For whom is it cheap?
For us.
I smiled.
Victor, where do you live now?
In a rented flat.
And me?
In mine.
Now the maths got interesting.
So youll stop paying rent, move in with me, cut costs and be happy?
Yes.
And wheres my gain in all this?
After that question Victor fell silent for a couple of minutes. You could see the gears turning in his head, turning so hard that I never got an answer.
The funniest episode involved Edward. Edward was sixtyone, very decent, wellmannered and utterly exhausted by loneliness.
Its hard being on my own, he said.
I nodded sympathetically.
Its easy for me, he added, stumbling over his words.
Hed lost his footing because men usually expect a different reaction. They anticipate sympathy, solidarity, a shared sense of loss. When a woman calmly says shes fine on her own, the script glitches.
And here we arrive at the core issue that irks many men.
I do need a woman.
But not to wash his shirts.
Not to iron his trousers.
Not to make Sunday soups.
Not to hunt for his socks under the sofa.
Not to listen to stories about why he cant book a doctors appointment himself.
I need a woman for conversation, for trips, for walks, for theatre, for travel, for a pleasant evening, for intimacy, for emotions, for joy. Not to become the landlord of my kitchen.
Men get angry at this stance. Ive been called selfish, spoiled, overly independent, someone who cant build a relationship. Yet nobody can explain why a partnership has to mean extra chores for the woman. Why does a man get a companion, confidante, lover, housekeeper and chef all in one, while a woman is expected to consider his mere presence a reward?
Sometimes I think many men simply havent noticed how the world has changed. They still live by rules that made sense thirty years ago, when it was easier for a woman to accept an inconvenient marriage than to stay single. Today, many women my age have jobs, homes, friends, grownup children, debts paid off and lives that run smoothly. When a man appears the only question is: will my life improve with him?
If the answer is no, then why should I bother?
So yes, I speak plainly. I need a woman for the weekends. My life is already sorted for the long haul. And you know whats the most surprising thing? Every time I say that, men get offended. Yet, if you think about it, its the most honest compliment you can give a relationship, because I want someone by my side not because I cant manage alone, but because I enjoy their company.
Living together just so someone can get a free chef, cleaner and personal administrator? No thanks. That vacancy was filled fifteen years ago and Im not reopening it.
Psychologists analysis
After fifty, many women find themselves in a position where relationships stop being a necessity and become a choice. They already own a home, have income, social networks and marriage experience. The central question shifts from how do I avoid being alone? to will my life be better with this person?
Conflict arises because some men still view cohabitation as a natural tradeoff: the man contributes his presence, the woman contributes care and household work. Modern women, however, increasingly weigh the real benefits against the costs. If a partnership demands more resources than it returns in happiness, the motivation to share a roof drops sharply.
The bottom line is simple: todays mature relationships are built more on mutual comfort than on mutual need. When one partner gains convenience and the other gains extra labour, the union rarely lasts.
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