Latinoman said:
Although you provided some solid advice...the issue here is that
1- She is asking men because she wants to know how men view women in her situation and what turn men off.
How much does this really matter, though, when it comes to living the life she has to the best of her ability? Caring about what anyone thinks of her is less important than doing the best job she can with what she has to work with, and it can even trip her up. What a lot of men expect of single mothers can destroy her children if she panders to it.
Latinoman said:
2- She obviously wants a MAN that can phuck her...not a girlfriend that can talk about changing diapers or their kids school recital. In essence, she want to feel wanted and have intimacy in her life.
What she wants and what she has available to her are two different things. That's not a punishment, it's just life. It's always that way to some extent. Also, I seriously question how much real intimacy men offer single moms, keeping in mind that sex and intimacy are completely different things.
That, and where did you get the idea that girl-talk between mothers was all about the kids? Unless there's something major going on, that's the last thing we want to talk about. All of us had something going before we became mothers, and we will have something going when our children are grown. Coffee dates are part of how we stay in touch with that.
Latinoman said:
3- She is already dating some 24-year-old kid. I for one are telling her that she is 29...so she is young (prime years for her) and that alone (assuming she is good looking) could be enough to hook a "nice guy" (AFC). There are plenty of nice-guys out there. She just has to decrease her standards a little.
Decrease? Try increase. Low standards got her where she is now. Lowering them further isn't going to help her any, and the last thing she needs is an AFC. Under the best of circumstances, dating an AFC is like trying to drive with your brakes on, and her situation isn't the best of circumstances.
Even if she never dates again, this is better than being saddled with what you guys call an AFC.
Latinoman said:
By the way...I am sorry about what happened to your sister and her husband.
Thank you. I can't say we're over it or that we ever will be, but we're learning to live with it.
Latinoman said:
I strongly believe that children need a strong male figure in their lives. It teaches the boy how to apply positive masculinity...and teaches the girl how men should treat her. A strong male figure serve as an example for both male and female children. Of that I have not doubt.
Well, okay, but when you find one of these, you might as well have him bronzed and stuffed. They're just as rare as Prince Charmings.
I don't think this means that all men are bad. They're a mix of strengths and weaknesses, just like women. I do think that the whole Father Figure thing has been blown up to mythological proportions, and the standards are such that no flesh-and-blood man can live up to them perfectly. Certainly my father didn't and neither did my BIL, but nobody would call them weak or AFCs.
I really don't believe in living an imaginary life, one that includes whatever absent figure we think will save the world. I don't care whether it's Prince Charming or a Strong Father Figure, if it's not there, it's not there, and for every single one of us, there's something missing, even if it isn't one of these two things.
To put it in more personal terms, why should I stop living just because I know that Prince Charming isn't going to ride in and take away all of my sorrows, and why should I give up on my son/nephew just because there isn't a Father Figure sitting at the head of the table? Do I structure my life around looking for these two ideals in one man, which is pretty much what it would take to get them both into my life at once? Or do I live the life that's in front of me now as fully as I can?
I'd rather live, if for no other reason than because I'm having a really good time.