Hmmmm.
When you date someone you have to weigh the pros & cons of that individual. I can see why
@SW15 is single or unattached.
He is looking for the equivalent of a caring, childless, feminine gorgeous woman who has been under a rock unknown and untouched in her adult life someone who has entirely escaped being on any desirable man's radar.
He is looking essentially for BigFoot.
Those women do exist of course as very young women. Then a man finds them, scoops them up & locks them down, often in a marriage with babies.
I do not think his stats and theories are terribly constructive because all interactions happen between individuals, not statistical trends.
My second husband is childless man in his late 40s. I have a high school daughter still living at home. Um. My daughter does not dictate anything about our day to day lives. As general things, yes I'm continuing to reside in the highest rated public school district while she finishes high school, and we cannot blare the TV late at night after she's gone to bed, but honestly she does not impede what we do, and my husband is not actively raising her, she has myself & her father for that.
I will say that my husband at times struggles with my rationale for certain things because he is not a parent, and has never been female so he has no frame of reference regarding child rearing or female concerns as a teen. It can be frustrating at times or quite comical. I ignore it and simply guide my daughter in partnership with her father. No cuc koldry or parenting required of him. They get on well and have a respectful interaction.
Even if a woman doesn't have kids, she may have parents, siblings, aging grandparents, troublesome friends. You aren't plucking a woman away from all her other relationships in any case just because you showed up looking to shag her, lol.
Very young children I agree can be a huge ask for a childless man because they are totally dependent, need constant supervision & guidance & parenting. That's ALOT when it's not your own kid.
But stable high school kids? They have their own interests and friends and social groups. As they differentiate into adulthood they need greater independance to learn to navigate the world, and learn with a safety net back at home. My youngest daughter is learning to drive. I already have a vehicle for her, and as she learns she will gain greater independence. She already goes to the gym several times a week (walking distance from our house) and is making applications for her first job. She's 15, and very responsible. Does her own laundry, knows how to cook for herself and manage the house.
If hubby & I go away for a weekend? She's fine. She does chores as asked and is well mannered and polite. If she asks to go to the mall with friends or go to a game night at another family's home? I nearly always allow it due to her agreeable attitude; and often she'll have a ride to/from although I do help carpool if/when it fits in MY schedule.
This does not adversely affect my marital relationship at all. My husband is the priority and my daughter understands that, although I do accomodate her school activities as needed. After school practices and rehearsals are part of it.
My husband knew all this going in but felt I as an individual had a high enough value to warrant accepting kids in my home (my older 2 are living independently since finishing high school)....and so it's a non issue.
We are an outlier couple to be sure.
Single dads have an instant relatability factor with single moms, but there are always then "blended family" issues. Not always do the partner's children get along with yours. That is a whole other kettle of fish that can be complicated.
I recall after my parents divorce my step mother did everything in her power to reserve my father's resources and time by diverting those things to HER children. That didn't fly with my dad. So my step mother tolerated us but seethed about it. Not a healthy dynamic.
My younger sister married a single dad before they had 2 children of their own. My sister (childless) had quite a rough introduction to step parenting because the ex wife was SUPER jealous of my sister (they were both divorved and single/available when they met - not like she was the mistress or anything....) and my sister's step sons were a behavioral nightmare until the late teen years as a result. They incidently have been married 25 years now. They older boys are grown, live independently and have relationships of their own; the younger two boys are in high school & college respectively. Everyone now is harmonious but it did not start out that way.
So you are always navigating the whole landscape of relationships that surround you as well as the other person. Choose wisely & well.