Amitié
Amoureuse
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An eighty-year-old man, John S., who lives a ten-minute drive from the home of his seventy-four-year-old "significant other", Nancy T., says,
"our romantic friendship gives both of us a lot of space and time to ourselves, but offers intimate pleasures and comforts as we all get older and our circle of friends inevitably diminishes."
Romantic friendships are especially attractive to the women in such partnerships because, frequently widowed, they may want a breather from daily rounds of homemaking.
Women past sixty often have a history of such intense family caretaking over such a long period of time, sometimes punctuated by exhausting nursing duties, that a fast spin back to twenty-four-hour domesticity is not as appealing as it is to many men in their age group who are used to twenty-four-hour on-the-job wives.
Whether previous caretaking responsibilities are the issue or not, many women simply want the time for interests, talents, and hobbies they never had time to pursue before. Here, too, it's difficult for many men to quite accept that a prospective partner might wish to stay free for her painting classes or travel or yoga workouts and might not want to be available for company on a daily, hourly basis.
But in spite of the old hangovers from earlier relationships (men wanting to he cared for in a domestic setting, etc.), men and women are increasingly establishing loving friendships that are fun, exciting romantic, and sexy -- but don't mean necessarily a wedding ring or yet another new domicile to furnish.
One seventy-eight year old man explained,
"Romantic friendships are somewhere between sexual ecstasy and best pals, between having the earth move, and putting on old sneakers to take a walk together."
Looking at today's greatly changed and expanded world, it seems clear that for women who reject the notion that plump grandmothers have nothing to say about adventure, romance, or different new lives -- and for men who can break free of the narrow world their work often imposed on them -- the outlook for new seasons of love and passion to the very end of life is brighter than we've been gloomily brainwashed to believe.
This article was excerpted from the book:
Seasons of the Heart: Men and Women Talk about Love, Sex, and Romance
after 60 by Zenith Henkin Gross.
©2000. This article was excerpted with permission of the publisher, New World Library, Novato, CA
94949. http://www.nwlib.com.
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Author
Zenith Henkin Gross, 75, has worked as a journalist for more than thirty-five years, both as a freelancer and for the Associated Press. She is also the author of And You Thought It Was All Over: Mothers and Their Adult Children.