Half of men would have sex with a 21-year-old
 
rusalexandrov
 
Дата публикации:

Half of men would have sex with a 21-year-old

853a4785

When Keanu Reeves 55 was dating visual artist Alexandra Grant 46 many praised the rare example of a Hollywood star being in an age-appropriate relationship. The actor has never dated a woman older than 25, despite having had eight girlfriends since he himself was that age. In news that will surprise no-one, the results show that men are far less restrained when it comes to age.

I have been seeing my girlfriend for about 10 months. At the start I took her out on two dates and then for a week or so she stopped texting me.

Hopefully, for your sake, you got introduced to heartbreak in your teens. In many ways, having your heart stomped on and cut in two is better during a period of your life in which it’s socially acceptable to cry while writing in a diary, because, a it prepares you for adult breakups, and b you’re less likely to go on an alcoholic binge and spend a solid week coming down after you get dumped in year ten.

There’s a difference, though, between that immediate kind of heartbreak and the slow-burning one you experience in your twenties and onward until you die. This isn’t the kind you have the emotional intelligence to experience at secondary school. It’s a particular kind of adult heartbreak—the one that happens when the spitting fires of your early romance have burned to ash, when you become nothing more than furniture in each other’s lives.

Even now, reading this, you might be thinking, Nope, haven’t had this, doesn’t apply , in which case you’re one of those promise-ring Christians who ends up married forever to the first person you kissed in high school, or it’s waiting for you out there. This road to a breakup is long and lonely, filled with a melange of individually unpleasant and almost thrillingly upsetting events. Today we’re going to walk you through some of them. If you recognize any of the signs, then you might want to prepare yourself for the impending death of your relationship.

But you probably already know it’s coming, don’t you. Fighting is a pretty natural part of relationships. There are always outliers: Those weird straight-backed unblinking married couples who’ve “never had a row,” who when you meet them—at weddings or parties or at your mom’s open-house Christmas bash, hands tangled together, faces curiously similar—always freak you out in a way you can’t quite put a finger on, as if they can only love each other when they are murdering crows.

But there’s a near imperceptible shift between fighting over something “You won’t commit!