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Why Should I Become My Granddad’s Carer? What Will You Give Me—An Apartment? A Car? — a 24‑year‑old’s response to Anatoly’s (43) marriage proposal.

Why should I become a nurse for an old codger? What will you give me a flat? a motor? she said, staring at me as if I were a discounted item forgotten on a supermarket shelf. In that instant, at fortythree, I wondered whether the world had finally tipped over, labeling me a grandpatype and slapping a price tag on a relationship without a hint of flirtation or game.

I am fortythree. Ive never been married; I have had two cohabitations, each lasting two years, ordinary and uneventful, ending amicably like two adults parting ways. I always thought that was a plus: no alimony, no exfiles, no baggage, no endless comparisons. Yet in todays marketplace that seems a suspicious anomaly, as if never having married marks you as defective, as though there were a hidden certification you failed.

I decided it was time. I wanted a family, a woman nearbybeautiful, wellkept, youthful. Id be honest: I preferred someone under twentyeight, someone who would make my friends ask, Where did you find her? I saw no shame in that; after all, I earn a steady income, own a flat in Croydon, drive a modest Ford, drink no spirits, smoke no cigarettes, keep fit, and, in my mind, I was a respectable prospect on the market.

But the market, I discovered, runs on different laws now, and I was not a buyer but a product and not even a popular one.

The first date was with a twentysixyearold named Poppy, met through a dating app. We chatted for a week; she laughed at my jokes, wrote youre so interesting, being with you is easy. I thought it might be a normal connection, free of demands. The moment we met, however, the conversation slipped into another dimension.

She looked at me, appraising, and after fifteen minutes asked, What car do you drive? I answered. Do you own a flat? I answered. Whats your salary? And then the realization struck: this was not a date but an interview, and I was the asset being assessed for liquidity. She asked each question as calmly as one orders tea or coffee.

When I turned the table, asking, What are you looking for? she smiled and said, Comfort. I want a man who can meet my needs. No hint, no coyness just a price list.

The second date was with a twentyfouryearold called Daphne, the very pictureperfect girl I thought was worth the effort. We met in a restaurant in Manchester, I settled the bill, and conversation drifted to the future.

I want a family, children, a stable relationship, I said.

She stared and replied, And what can you give? I blinked. What do you mean? she continued, You want a young woman, right? She has choices. Why should she choose you?

Then she said, Youre older, so you must compensate with resourcesflat, car, money, lifestyle. Otherwise whats the point? I tried to argue that feelings, compatibility, respect mattered, but she simply shrugged. Those are secondary. The foundation comes first.

And then, calmly, she echoed the line that had haunted me: Why should I be a nurse for an old codger? She added, If you want a young woman, match the expectations.

I left feeling as if they had dismantled me, examined every component, and priced me on a market board.

The worst part wasnt a single incident but the whole system.

The third encounter broke me completely. Id been texting a twentysevenyearold named Elsie, whod initiated the chat, asked questions, flirted. I began to think maybe not everything was rotten. Then she sent a voice note: Listen, lets be honest. I need a man who will support me. I dont want to work himself to the bone. If youre not ready, dont waste either of our time.

I asked, What do you offer in return?

She laughed. Me? Myself.

That sentence clicked inside me like a cold snap. Myself turned into a product, a service, an allinclusive package that required payment upfront. The absurdity lay in how earnestly they presented it, no shame, no pretense they set the terms, and if you didnt fit, you were written off like unsuitable stock.

Ironically, I had blamed women that they were spoiled, greedy, only after money. Yet the more dates I attended, the more I realised the flaw wasnt theirs alone.

I entered this market expecting to choose, yet I found myself being chosen. I wanted youth, beauty, convenience. They wanted stability, income, advantage. I chased eyecandy; they chased resources. In that logic everything is honest, just unpleasant.

It hit me that I wasnt unique or special, just another item compared, rated, discarded. The pain wasnt in rejection; it was in the moment when you realize youre seen not as a man, but as an offer with conditions, limits, a production date. Perhaps Im simply too late.

Maybe I should have built a family earlier, before everything became a transaction. Perhaps I lingered too long in the illusion that time was on my side. Now reality sits plain, and to get what you want you must either conform or change your demands. Im not ready for either, and that, perhaps, is the most unsettling revelation of recent years.

Uncategorized11 minut ago

Why Should I Become My Granddad’s Carer? What Will You Give Me—An Apartment? A Car? — a 24‑year‑old’s response to Anatoly’s (43) marriage proposal.

Uncategorized1 godzinę ago

“If You’re Not Happy, Go Home”: My 56‑Year‑Old Partner Kicked Me Out of Our Country Cottage — and I Finally Figured Out My Role in the RelationshipIn that quiet moment, I realized I had been clinging to a fantasy, and for the first time I felt the courage to rewrite my own narrative.

Uncategorized1 godzinę ago

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.

Uncategorized2 godziny ago

“‘If You’re Not Happy, Go Home’: My 56‑Year‑Old Partner Threw Me Out of Our Cottage—And I Finally Realised My Role in the Relationship”

Uncategorized8 godzin ago

Na weselu syn obraził matkę, nazywając ją „macochą” i „żebraczką”, i kazał jej odejść. Jednak wzięła mikrofon i wygłosiła przemowę.

Uncategorized8 godzin ago

„Weź! Weź! Słuchałam cię na darmo” – krzyczała nieznajoma do mojego męża, podając mu niemowlęMężczyzna, zszokowany i jednocześnie zafascynowany, podniósł dziecko, które wpatrywało się w niego oczami pełnymi niewinności i tajemniczego przesłania.

Uncategorized9 godzin ago

— Lusia, chyba… potrąciłam kota… — szepcząc w telefon.

Uncategorized10 godzin ago

Ania spieszyła się do domu. Na zegarze było już prawie dziesiąta wieczorem, a ona niecierpliwie chciała jak najszybciej dotrzeć do swojego mieszkania, zjeść kolację i położyć się w łóżku.

Uncategorized11 godzin ago

Miała już prawie sprzedać wszystko. Ale za drzwiami usłyszała prawdę…

Uncategorized11 godzin ago

Uśmiechnął się i rzekł: „Już nigdy nie dotkniesz moich pieniędzy.”

Uncategorized2 tygodnie ago

Zofia chciała uczcić jubileusz u nas i zażądała opróżnić mieszkanieKiedy otworzyła drzwi, w progu stanęła grupa przyjaciół z tortem i balonami, gotowa świętować razem z nią.

Uncategorized2 tygodnie ago

Czemu nie otwierasz drzwi? – Nie chcę! I nie otworzę.

Uncategorized2 tygodnie ago

– Nie będziemy cię wyrzucać na czas święta. Przygotuj nam trzy sypialnie – moje siostry i siostrzenica zostaną na nocleg. Sama zostaniesz w kuchni. – Halino Wasylowo, a co z tym, że jestem jedyną właścicielką tego domu? Mam na to dokumenty. Więc nie próbuj wchodzić – wyciągną cię stąd z policją.

Uncategorized2 tygodnie ago

– Nie jesteś nam krewną – rzekła teściowa i przeniosła mięso z talerza synowej z powrotem do garnkaWtedy synowa, z nutą rozpaczy w oczach, podniosła rękę i wyciągnęła z kuchni starą, zakurzoną książkę rodzinnych przepisów, szukając dowodu na swoją prawdziwą przynależność.

Uncategorized2 tygodnie ago

– Ania poszła do kuchni! – Usłyszałam od męża – i nie wytrzymałamKiedy otworzyłem drzwi kuchni i zobaczyłem, że Ania przygotowuje gigantyczny pieróg z niespodziewanym nadzieniem, moje serce zamarło ze szoku.

Uncategorized2 tygodnie ago

– Nie jesteś nam rodziną – powiedziała teściowa i przeniosła mięso z talerza synowej z powrotem do garnkaSynowa zamarła, patrząc, jak podgrzewane kawałki mięsa ponownie trafiają do wielkiego żeliwnego garnka, a w kuchni zapadła nieprzyjemna cisza.

Uncategorized3 tygodnie ago

– Mamo, chcesz oddać nasze mieszkanie bratanowi? A potem przyjść do mnie zamieszkać? Nie pozwolę!

Uncategorized2 tygodnie ago

Pani Natalko Stepanowa, nie będę mieszkać z waszym synem, przekażcie mu to – powiedziała Światłana.

Uncategorized4 tygodnie ago

Przez osiem lat mój mąż zabraniał mi odwiedzać dom jego rodziców w małej polskiej wsi.

Uncategorized3 tygodnie ago

Gdy pracowałem, rodzice przenieśli rzeczy moich dzieci na piwnicę, mówiąc: „nasz drugi wnuk powinien mieć lepsze pokoje”.

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