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“Entitled” bride unleashes after only seven people RSVP to her wedding

<p dir="ltr">A furious bride has been slammed online after unleashing on a lengthy tirade, calling out her friends and family who aren’t attending her wedding. </p> <p dir="ltr">Sara took to Facebook to share the extensive rant about her upcoming nuptials, after only seven people RSVP’d to the big day. </p> <p dir="ltr">The American bride-to-be called out those she invited to her destination wedding, saying they showed how little they “really” cared about her and her fiancé.</p> <p dir="ltr">“When we invited our friends and family to our destination wedding in Thailand, only nine people RSVP'd. Out of 150!!! OK, I get it, paying $3,000 to share my special day is too much for some of you. I'd pay for yours, but whatever,” she wrote. </p> <p dir="ltr">“But then, when we changed the wedding to be in Hawaii, so it's within everyone's reach, only seven of you RSVP'd? It costs less but less if you want to come? Is that what you think of me? You can't spare $2,000 to come and share our happiness?”</p> <p dir="ltr">Sara said that she was willing to take drastic measures to make up for the disrespect she'd been shown by her loved ones. </p> <p dir="ltr">“I'm tempted to just elope and not let any of you be part of our happiest day. This is it guys, you have three days to respond to our e-vites or we're deleting you off Facebook and good luck keeping up with our lives then.”</p> <p dir="ltr">“And don't get me started on the registry - only the cheap stuff is gone, I swear I thought I had better friends.”</p> <p dir="ltr">“[My fiancé] and I are asking you to reconsider.”</p> <p dir="ltr">Sara’s unhinged rant was quickly shared to a Facebook group dedicated to shaming people’s wedding choices, where it garnered hundreds of comments slamming the bride. </p> <p dir="ltr">“People who get married abroad have chosen not to have guests at their wedding,” one person said.  </p> <p dir="ltr">“Does she not understand people have jobs and kids or just simply don't want to spend thousands on someone else's wedding?” another asked. </p> <p dir="ltr">“If I was her friend I’d save her a job and unfriend myself after reading that,” a third person admitted.</p> <p dir="ltr"><em>Image credits: Shutterstock</em></p>

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“Disgusting”: Wedding guest’s entitled RSVP slammed

<p dir="ltr">A bride-to-be was left shocked after one entitled guest sent an RSVP back for her wedding with a list of “unhinged” demands.</p> <p dir="ltr">The couple had sent an invitation for just two people, but they decided that this would be the perfect time for a family trip and RSVP’d for six people instead.</p> <p dir="ltr">“We should arrive Thurs late afternoon in our motorhome. We have a screened-in cabana room. We can all sleep in our motorhome, we’ll need to hook up power,” they wrote in the invitation.</p> <p dir="ltr">“We will need a ride to all wedding festivities. We would be happy to host a breakfast Friday morning for all at your home, took a lot of planning for us to make this trip. Looking forward to all the fun.”</p> <p dir="ltr">The photo of the invitation, which was posted on Facebook, has since been slammed.</p> <p dir="ltr">The photo was posted with the caption: “Shaming this guest who apparently is bringing the whole family when just two people were invited AND making travel accommodation demands, all while guilt-tripping the guide. Update: [the] couple has rescinded their invite to this guest”.</p> <p dir="ltr">A lot of people were outraged on the bride’s behalf, and shocked at the audacity of some wedding guests.</p> <p dir="ltr">“Disgusting. You call and talk to make plans even if they were close enough, which it doesn’t seem like they are, to make these requests,” wrote one person.</p> <p dir="ltr">“Wow. No. It’s wild to me that people think they can still bring extra guests, let alone make the logistics of their transportation on the day of the wedding the bride and groom’s problem. How are some people so oblivious?” commented another person.</p> <p dir="ltr">“I’m still stuck on the audacity to write down six [guests] when it sounds like the invite specified only two,” commented a third.</p> <p dir="ltr">Others shared their own wedding invitation horror stories.</p> <p dir="ltr">“We had a guest try to bring a partner and five uninvited kids (some adults), when we said it wasn't possible they acted like we were unreasonable and said we could just 'pull up a few extra chairs to a table’,” one person revealed.</p> <p dir="ltr">To which another quipped: “This also happened to me, but the intended invitees (my cousin and her husband) crossed their names out and put her mum and dad, brother AND his wife down as attending ‘in her place’. We tried so hard to circumvent problems by putting each person’s full name on the RSVP card and it still happens”.</p> <p><em>Images: Facebook</em></p>

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Bride shares horror wedding RSVP

<p dir="ltr">A bride-to-be going through her RSVPs for the wedding was left speechless when one came back with a list of demands.</p> <p dir="ltr">Melissa Baum took to <a href="https://www.tiktok.com/@melissabaumevents/video/7060859536822865157?is_copy_url=1&amp;is_from_webapp=v1" target="_blank" rel="noopener">TikTok</a> and shared the RSVP response to her followers and captioned the video “It’s just 1 meal for God’s sake!”</p> <p dir="ltr">The RSVP shows the guest had “gladly” accepted the invitation and ticked the section for requiring a vegetarian meal.</p> <p dir="ltr">You think the guest would stop there, but no, she went on to list all specifications for her meal at the wedding. </p> <p dir="ltr">“No iceberg lettuce. No nuts or beans. Dislike red pepper. Not spicy. Dressing on side with salad. Sensitive to garlic,” the guest wrote.</p> <p dir="ltr">The video has been viewed more than 1million times with many making fun of the guest and recommending what the bride should do.</p> <p dir="ltr">“Tonight’s meal will be a spicy black bean patty garnished with roasted red peppers, toasted hazelnuts and garlic aioli,” one person wrote. </p> <p dir="ltr">“Due to your severe allergies, and our concern for your safety, we request you to bring your own meal,” another commented.</p> <p dir="ltr">“You are cordially uninvited to our wedding,” one suggested the bride respond. </p> <p dir="ltr"><em>Image: TikTok</em></p>

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"Hurtful": Bride shares aunts furious wedding RSVP

<p>A bride has revealed the furious RSVP she received from her aunt after not inviting her partner of two years to the wedding.</p> <p>Taking to Reddit, the woman shared the "rude" response, explaining she had to cut down on her guest list due to the pandemic, but her aunt didn't take it well.</p> <p>"Most rude and hurtful," Aunt Edith scrawled across the invitation sent back in the mail.</p> <p>She added her partner's name 'Uncle Danny' and wrote a cross alongside 'Declines with regret'.</p> <p>Before adding: "Family shouldn't separate family. You shouldn't have sent one at all.</p> <p>The bride continued to explain that Uncle Dany wasn't very well-liked among the rest of the family and she had only met him a handful of times.</p> <p>Many agreed with the bride's right to invite who she wanted to, with one person telling the aunt to "harden up".</p> <p>"That‘s a quick way to quit being invited to family gatherings ever again," one person wrote.</p> <p>There were a few who thought the couple was actually rude for not inviting the partner, given they had been a couple for two years.</p> <p>"It's possible to think the couple was rude for not inviting a guest's long-term partner while also thinking the aunt's reaction was over the top," was one response.</p> <p>While others agree with that point, though stressed Covid changed the situation.</p> <p>"I think Covid makes a very big difference though. Without Covid, you should invite partners. With Covid, guests lists are very restricted," one person wrote.</p>

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I found love online – and you can too

<p><em><strong>Robyn and Mick Thwaite, 61 and 65 respectively, are a true online dating success story. Despite living in neighbouring suburbs, it took an online dating site to bring them together. Nine years later, they’re happier than ever. Here, Robyn shares her incredible story and her advice for others looking for love.</strong></em></p> <p>My friends at work put me up on RSVP one night after work and didn’t tell me. I went in to work the next morning to find this email from RSVP saying, “You have two kisses”. So I’m thinking, “what’s going on here?” I clicked on the link and there was my profile, written by my girlfriends. It was a bit of a shock at first, but I didn’t really mind. They did it for good reason – they knew it was time I got off my bum and did something.</p> <p>I had used RSVP off and on for a couple of years before I met my husband. He was what he calls “fresh meat,” having only been on the site for six weeks. It turned out we had both saved each other to our “favourites”, and I kept going back and looking at him, thinking I really liked the fact that he smiled all the way up to his eyes. It’s rare – a lot of men have really plastic photos, and they say all the nice things about holding hands, walking along a deserted beach and all that crap. But what Mick wrote really struck a chord with me.</p> <p>I had some friends from America staying with me at the time and had decided to give RSVP a miss for a while, because I was just three months out of a six-month relationship and felt like I needed a bit of a break. But then, my girlfriend from America said, “Go on, send him a kiss!” And I thought, “Oh well, what the hell.” And it turns out that at the same time, he was looking at my profile and within the same hour he sent me a kiss.</p> <p>It was one of those things that was meant to happen, I think. It turns out we actually lived five minutes apart – he was in the next suburb! We chatted online and on the mobile for about four or five days, and then we organised to meet up. We first met on October 18, 2006, and we probably talked for about two or three hours about everything and anything. We ended up going out for dinner that night, too. He rang me the next day and said he’d like to go out again, and we just sort of really clicked. It was quite amazing.</p> <p>Five months later, we began living together. Then in in November 2007, we decided to buy a house together because we agreed the relationship was committed and long-term. He’d come out of a divorce and had to sell his house and I had been living in rental accommodation.</p> <p>We’d talked about marriage, because Mick is something of a traditionalist, and even though he’d been married twice before, he didn’t have a problem with marriage. So, in February 2008 (a leap year), I asked him! I thought, “it’s the 29th of February, I’m just gonna do it.” For about a split second he looked like a rabbit in the headlights, but then he said yes. We got married in August that year, so it’s been nearly nine years now!</p> <p>I’d had probably one other serious relationship in the two years that I was on RSVP, but as much as we were really happy together, his lifestyle was so different to mine – we just weren’t compatible in that way. We actually had two goes at it – we were together for two months, split up for a couple of months then got back together again for about three months and then I just said, “I can’t do this. It’s just too different to the way I want to live.”</p> <p>I’ve met some really nice guys, one of which turned out to be the photographer at our wedding, and we still see him quite regularly. We dated a couple of times but there was no real chemistry.</p> <p>I met another really nice guy who has MS and was in a scooter because he could no longer walk. He was just looking for female companionship, and we’re still friends to this day. He came to our wedding and he’s the loveliest guy. He and I would have a whale of a time together – we’d go to the movies, we go out to dinner… in between my dates, he would be my date.</p> <p>It’s an interesting thing to do. I think, particularly for older women, it’s a safer way to date. But, you have to be careful about what you do. I had a girlfriend the same age as me, so obviously we were looking in the same group of men, you might say. We made a deal that when we went out on a first date, after about an hour we would ring each other. When I was on a date, she’d ring me and if I sort of said something like, “oh, okay, no worries, I’ll come straight home,” she would know that the date wasn’t working out and that I needed an out, and I would do the same for her. On the other hand, if I said, “Can I call you back later?” she’d know everything was fine. It was just a bit of a safeguard. I also made sure that I usually met during daylight hours and always in a coffee shop or somewhere open to the street. I just found that was the easiest and safest way to go about it. Usually within the first 10 or 15 minutes, you know if it’s right or not.</p> <p>I’ve said to other friends of mine in my age group or older, give it a try. You just have to be honest in your profile, open-minded and you need to have a degree of self-confidence – one, to be able to say “yes” to things you aren’t sure about, and two, to be able to say “no” to things you are sure about. You’ve got to be able to accept rejection without getting hurt. It’s very hard at first, and I actually found that my expectations and what I wanted changed over the two years as I met different men.</p> <p>Going into it, you have this preconceived notion. The constant comment is, “I don’t want anyone with baggage,” and I’m thinking, “If you’re in your 50s, no matter what’s happened in your life, you’ve got baggage.” It’s about how you deal with it – and their baggage – when you go into a relationship.</p> <p>I would recommend it. It’s an interesting experience and I’m glad I did it. It solidifies what’s really important in life.</p> <p>Did you find love online? Share your experience in the comments below.</p>

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The romance that started in a chat room

<p><em><strong>Over60 community member Robyn Green, 60, from Byron Shire, NSW, never set out to meet a potential husband when she started talking to people on internet chat websites, but 15 years later she’s glad it turned out that way.</strong></em></p> <p>“I met my husband Mark, 52, online 15 years ago. In my case, it was not a dating website, rather a chat site. At the time, I worked long hours and was a supporting parent of a teenager. I’m not a drinker or someone who goes to pubs or clubs, so there were few opportunities for me to meet people outside of clients or work colleagues.</p> <p>Chat rooms (or chat websites) were a way to connect with people all around the world. I was at that time not interested in an internet romance. I used a website called ICQ, which may or may not still be operating. Folks from all around the world would just log on and chat. My regular chat partners included a 15-year-old Vietnamese boy in Darwin, a 73-year-old poet from Tenterfield, NSW, a chap who ran dog sleds in Alaska, a Canadian IT worker and a young lass from France.</p> <p>After a while I ‘met’ online a Sydney woman and another chap from Sydney (where I lived at the time). He introduced me online to a friend of his from Goulburn and all four of us would meet up online several times a week and just joke around and share news. The gentleman from Goulburn is the one I ended up marrying some while down the track.</p> <p>At the time of first meeting, Mark and I both had partners, dates if you like. Neither were long term or serious. We learnt a lot about each other online so when the time came that his Sydney friend offered to take me to Goulburn on a weekend trip with him, I was comfortable to do so. Mark and I hit it off just as well in person as we had online. There were no surprises as we had shared many deep and meaningful conversations online and knew what each other felt about life in general. After the first meeting we kept in touch, both on the phone and online. Both our short-term relationships faded away.</p> <p>It wasn’t until a particularly stressful week where Mark offered to host me and my grandson (a 10 month old) for a weekend getaway that romance blossomed from there. We kept in touch online each night and by phone and visited each other on alternate weekends until, as fate would have it he was posted to Sydney. The rest is history. While we both like to travel, when it comes to other interests, we’re pretty much polar opposites. We both share the same life values and philosophies, but we approach things from totally different angles. One slightly amusing aside is that as we were both used to typing online conversations to each other, when we talked in person we found ourselves ‘air typing’ as we spoke – rather like air guitar but not as energetic!</p> <p>Technology is a great way to connect people – if you use discernment and take your time. It is safe (if you take precautions) and you’re not distracted by all the physical nuances that might otherwise prevent you from getting to know someone on a deeper level. You can talk to people anywhere in the world, from any walk of life. You can learn so much and can share your pain or your wisdom.</p> <p>There are so many websites now for individual issues. For example, I currently have parents with dementia and there are websites for carers or people with dementia, or family members etc. We can all come together, share questions, rail against the pain of the disease or have a laugh when all around seems so bleak. It doesn’t matter if I am in Australia and others are not, we are all going through similar things and the fellowship and shared information is invaluable. Sometimes you end up meeting, sometimes you don’t, but you share all the same. </p> <p>When it comes to trying to meet people online, I can only say that it worked for me, my brother and sister, and Mark’s brother. We are all married to or in long-term relationships with people we met on the internet. This is purely by chance and none of us knew the other was meeting people from the internet – it just happened that way. I’ve never tried a dating website so I can’t attest to any of those but simply finding a chat website that works for you. Use interests or life issues as a starting point, or simply take a deep breath and jump in!</p> <p>I think the issue of people being wary of meeting people over the internet is an important one. Always use caution, your brain and for me, humour. Don’t give personal information, such as address or phone number for a long time. I really needed to know someone well before I’d hand out a phone number and I rarely did that. Don’t agree to meet up at your home or theirs, keep things public. You can be whoever you want to be in a chat room, so remember folks aren’t always what they seem, some are living a fantasy life in cyberspace and some are con artists. But, if you take your time, have fun and use your intelligence, you can meet some really nice people. Of the few that I met in person – both men and women – none were a surprise to me face to face. I had come to know them well enough online that when I met them in person, it was just like meeting an old friend.”</p>

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5 signs you're ready to start dating again

<p>Dealing with a breakup or a loss of a loved one is tough and takes time. It might not seem likely but at some point you may feel like getting back in the “game”. It can be hard to figure out exactly when you are ready to pursue another romantic relationship though. For many people, the thought of dating can be daunting if you’ve been out of the dating world for a long time. But remember there’s a big bright world out there with many wonderful people ready to make your acquaintance. Here are some signs that you might be ready to meet somebody new.</p> <p><strong>You have let go</strong></p> <p>This is the hardest thing to do but once you have truly let go then you are ready to start dating again. Whether you are widowed or divorced, you need to let yourself grieve. There is no time limit and it can be a painful process but there will come a day where you feel like you’re ready to make new memories. This may mean you no longer feel betrayed, hurt or angry. It might mean you know your loved one is gone so now you can look to the future. If you are still thinking of the past, you won’t be ready to give a new relationship a proper go. Think of what the future and the dating world will open up for you. </p> <p><strong>You are at peace alone</strong></p> <p>Are you independent and happy to be alone? Sometimes after a breakup we become dependent on others to fill our time or our sense-of-self has been lost in being a couple for such a long time. Being at peace with yourself is about having a life that it not only yours but one you are satisfied with. After all, how can you be a partner to someone if you aren’t content with your life? It may seem strange but once you are comfortable with being alone, you are ready to meet somebody new. Remember you want to start dating, you don’t need too!</p> <p><strong>You know what you want</strong></p> <p>You don’t have to have everything figured out but it’s important you have an idea of want you want out of life moving forward. This can help you determine what you want (and don’t want) out of a new relationship. When you know what you want in life, the future and a companion, you’ll be able to see much clearer when you’ve found the person for you!</p> <p><strong>You are doing it for the right reasons  </strong></p> <p>The only reason you should begin dating again is if you are genuinely looking to meet someone new. You need to be honest with yourself – if you are looking to fill the void, a confidence boost, make somebody jealous, replace an old partner or afraid to be alone – you aren’t ready to start dating. Dating for the wrong reasons usually ends in disappointment and hurt.</p> <p><strong>Your friends and families tell you</strong></p> <p>After a painful loss or break-up, it’s common to get comfortable in a routine. You might think “that’s it” or it’s “too hard” even when family and friends are telling you to get back out there. It’s not the easiest thing to hear and you might think you know best, but sometimes your loved ones can see things you can’t. If your family and friends (who know you best) think you might be ready to start dating again, it might be the gentle push you need to go out and mingle! </p>

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It took 630 contacts, 62 coffee dates and 5 relationships before I found my husband

<p><em><strong>Over60 community member Becky, 62, from the Gold Coast in Queensland, had to kiss a lot of frogs to find her perfect man – literally – through online dating. Here, she gives a funny, inspiring and detailed account of her happily ever after.</strong></em></p> <p>“I am living proof of the power of optimism over experience. At 50, I had been married twice – the first was when I was young enough not to know better and the second, which was much later, was when I realised at the age of 34 that if I didn’t have children soon, it would be too late.</p> <p>That marriage lasted 14 years and gave me two wonderful sons. The marriage fell apart as soon as they were old enough for it not to be a problem for them and now here I was, moving towards the dreaded 60 milestone (kicking and screaming I might add), financially secure (I had always been as lucky in my career choices as I had been unlucky in my personal relationships), but with a deep sense of loneliness and a feeling that I had to make a real effort before it was too late to find out if there was anything in this “true love” business.</p> <p>It was around 2001 and I was working in the IT industry. This meant that I was not as uncomfortable looking online as I may have been if I had still been in some of the other careers which litter my past.</p> <p>It was relatively early days for the online dating scene and I was reluctant to let anyone know what I was doing as it was still seen as somehow a bit “tacky”, although why it should be considered quite acceptable to meet some guy in a pub or at a conference rather than in a coffee shop after a series of emails and phone conversations, I can’t understand.</p> <p>I started out with RSVP because it was the most high profile dating website at the time. I created the profile name of Becky and that name stuck with me even until today as this article shows. I was too afraid to post a public photo of myself but I had one available, which I could reveal with a password to any interested suitor if he seemed okay and I thought he was worth the chance.</p> <p>At first, I started out with the complete truth with regards to my age. I was 51 at the time but I’ve always been a bit of a “hippy chick” and I’d aged well enough for most people to pick me as being several years younger, nevertheless, I went first of all with my true age.</p> <p>However, this netted me a bunch of contacts from blokes who I just knew I would have nothing in common with. I guess I was looking for someone with the same ‘Peter Pan’ approach to life as myself. I wanted someone young at heart but not too different in age to myself – I definitely didn’t want a ‘toy boy’. So I knocked a couple of years off (something which my now husband has NEVER let me forget).</p> <p>I was also not prepared for the sense of rejection I felt when I’d been chatting online to a bloke for a week or so, and he seemed nice. He asked to see my photo and I sent him the password only to have him immediately drop contact with me. That feeling wore off pretty quickly, I also changed the photo!</p> <p>I don’t remember the first time I arranged to meet someone for coffee – I have no recollection of that person at all as I don’t think it went anywhere. This leads me to an observation I quickly made and which has been amply re-enforced over the years. The one business to make a killing out of the online dating market in my opinion is Coffee Club.</p> <p>They are everywhere, you can usually park nearby and they are seen as safely anonymous. If my husband and I are ever at a Coffee Club, even today, we entertain ourselves by trying to pick out the people waiting to meet someone they have only, until that moment, ‘met’ online.</p> <p>Over the following five years, when I dated online, I compiled the following set of results:</p> <p>Contacts from interested dates (in RSVP these are known as ‘kisses’): 630</p> <p>Contacts which led to coffee or something similar: 62</p> <p>Contacts which led to dinner: 28</p> <p>Contacts which led to second dates (dinner, movies, etc): 10</p> <p>Relationships: 5</p> <p>Marriages: 1 </p> <p>Over the years I have met and chatted to quite a few guys who have told me some awful (and sometimes quite funny) stories of their online dating experiences. I remember one chap saying he’d been chatting to a woman online for a couple of weeks and they had arranged to meet at (you guessed it) Coffee Club!</p> <p>She apparently walked in, scanned the room, saw him and walked over, looked down at him and said, “Oh no, you won’t do at all” turned around and walked out. I liked him because he laughed when he told me even though he said he’d been shattered at the time.</p> <p>One of my less memorable experiences was meeting a guy who told me he was in real estate, and that his marriage had broken down due to his constantly being at work. He then took a mobile call and spent the next 30 minutes trying to negotiate some real estate contract. I don’t know why I hung about but after 10 minutes I took out my book and started reading.</p> <p>He didn’t really apologise when he finished but he told me that he was looking for a ‘girlfriend’ who could occupy his two children, who he had on alternate weekends while he went to work. I gathered he was after a babysitter with ‘benefits’. Needless to say, I wasn’t interested. The whole ‘date’ (and I struggle to call it that) felt like a job interview!</p> <p>One of the other strange experiences I had was from a woman who wanted to meet because ‘I sounded like fun’ and she wanted to compare dating experiences. We did catch up a few times for a meal and a laugh but we fell afoul of each other when I started dating a bloke who (as she said) ‘she wasn’t finished with yet’.</p> <p>I had an odd and rather unsettling experience with a man who claimed to be 54 (my age at the time) but who I doubt could have been any older than 34. I never really got a straight answer from him about anything and after a while it got too wearing and I dropped contact with him.</p> <p>I had heard from other women who mentioned there were blokes out there who just like older women. Trouble was I didn’t feel like an ‘older woman’ and it was not a role I wanted to play – even for fun. Like I said, it was unsettling. </p> <p>I ended up in a three-year on-again/off-again relationship with a man who suited my lifestyle. He was younger (by about five years) but had been retired on a disability pension due to depression.</p> <p>He spent his time travelling around and camping in all sorts of places. I had never really gotten in to camping but I grew to enjoy these trips. We also did a lot of bush walking and photography. We remained friends for a number of years and he in fact came to my wedding with his new partner. </p> <p>Perhaps the worst experience I had was with a man who told me his previous partner, some two years before, had committed suicide because she found she was suffering from some debilitating disease, which would eventually leave her wheelchair bound and in pain. He then said ‘but I never want to talk about it’. </p> <p>I honoured this wish and never discussed it with him, but it turned out that he was far from over the experience and after a couple of months told me that he’d been ‘seeing her’ in his room when he woke at night alone. He broke up with me in a particularly brutal fashion which led me to suffer a great deal as I’d grown very fond of him.</p> <p>It was after this that I knew I had to do something about myself as regards to the poor relationship choices I seemed to keep making. I started visiting a psychologist and he was pivotal in the next stage of my life. He said to me, ‘Becky, what is it that you really want in a relationship?’</p> <p>I started babbling about finding ‘the love of my life’, someone to ‘take away my loneliness’ and on and on it went. He shook his head and said, ‘how can you find what it is you are looking for when you don’t even have a clear idea what it is?’</p> <p>He sent me away to compile a list of all that I wanted in a man and told me to spend at least 10 minutes each night thinking about those attributes and who that person would be. A month after that, William walked into my life.</p> <p>I say ‘walked’ but that wasn’t strictly true. He drove his new car to my house, parked outside the house next door and promptly backed up over the gutter scratching his brand new wheels. I was standing on my verandah, hidden by my garden, watching him, and I remember thinking, ‘minus five points for not being able to drive’.</p> <p>Nevertheless, I watched him as he walked (oblivious to my gaze) down the footpath to my house. He was wearing green ‘slacks’ (he said they were jeans but in my opinion anything by Farrah is a slack, not a jean) and a pink shirt. I thought ‘oh no, he’s gay!’</p> <p>But, when he walked up the stairs and we saw one another for the first time, I had this strange urge. As he leaned forward to kiss me on the cheek, I turned my head and kissed him full on the lips. I could see by the startled look in his eyes that this was not what he’d expected but he later told me that he found it very enticing and that it immediately piqued his interest. Fortunately, my concerns about his sexuality were unfounded.</p> <p>Looking back, I’m surprised I invited him to my home without first meeting him. This is certainly not something I would recommend to anyone meeting someone for the first time. However, we had been emailing for a couple of weeks and had spoken on the phone at length for a few nights and I had felt a real connection with him. He was also in IT and knew the scripts to all the Monty Python sketches (I’m a big fan), so how could he be a threat? He also met two of the many ‘must haves’ on my wish list – he was six feet tall and a Virgo. </p> <p>We dated a few times but each of us was wary after previous dating debacles, so it wasn’t until after my birthday at Christmas that we really started getting serious about each other. We both agreed to stop dating other people and he introduced me to his mother who was up for the holiday from Sydney.</p> <p>I had the strangest feeling when I was with him of my blood fizzing in my veins. He was my Peter Pan. Full of fun, silly jokes, highly intelligent, well informed (he is an avid reader of the Economist) and very fit (ran marathons and rock climbed regularly). I couldn’t understand why he was still single! He is four years older than me and had also been married twice, but they had both ended badly. My sons approved of him and even my ex-husband who I kept in touch with regularly seemed to find him acceptable.</p> <p>In April, of the following year, he proposed and despite having told my friends that if I ever looked like getting married again they were to take me outside and give me a good kicking, I said, ‘of course’.</p> <p>We married in May 2007, having first made contact with each other online in November 2006. I can honestly say that true love is everything that the songs and the books say it is. I am sublimely happy and my only regret is that we didn’t meet 30 years ago, although as he says, ‘darling, I would probably have stuffed it up’. </p> <p>We built a house together and now live on the Gold Coast. I’ve retired but he continues to works part time. In our spare time, we read, garden, bush walk, talk, talk, talk and laugh a hell of a lot. I think it’s a sign of a great relationship if you can put up 250 metres of fencing together without having a single argument, but having lots of giggles along the way!</p> <p>To anyone out there at the age I am now (I’m 63 this year and he’s 67), who is alone and doesn’t want to be, I’d say, ‘Don’t be fearful! Go online and give it a go.’ You have complete control over the dating process. You don’t have to chat to anyone you don’t like the look or sound of, you can pick the location for the first date and you can remain as anonymous as you want to – you don’t even need to give your real name.</p> <p>Unfortunately, sometimes you have to ‘kiss a lot of frogs’ before you find the one, but hang in there. There are a lot of people out there who are not what you want, but you only need to find one who is and your whole life can change into something wonderful. Mine did.”</p> <p><em><strong>If you have a love story to share please get in touch at <em><a href="mailto:melody@oversixty.com.au">melody@oversixty.com.au</a> </em></strong><span><br /></span></em></p>

Relationships

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Finding love again after 30 years

<p>After 30 years on her own, Sharon Fogarty decided it was time to throw caution to the wind and give dating a go. Here’s why she’s glad she did.<br /><br />Over60 community member Sharon Fogarty, 64, from beautiful Kempsey in NSW, never intended to be in another permanent relationship after a bad marriage and raising three children alone. But 10 years ago, with the kids having flown the nest, she decided it was time to focus on herself and get back in the game. <br /><br />“A good male friend, who I had met on the internet in a chat website, says to me one day, ‘I have found this really good dating website and I’ve joined. How about we put you on as well and see what happens?’<br /><br />I had been on my own for over 30 years, bringing up my little family, and thought it was about time I spread my wings and enjoy myself now that the kids had all left home and made their own ways in the world. With my heart in my feet, I told my friend, ‘Yes, why not, it’s only on the computer after all’. I started online dating about 10 years ago now, at the age of 54. <br /><br />Frogs there were and plenty of them too. Men who I met who had no expectations as to what would happen afterwards, some who had no teeth, some with clothes that didn’t match, some who only wanted to go for a beer and others who smelt of cigarettes. Yes, I was being particular!<br /><br />To my surprise, I began talking with a very nice man the same age as myself. He couldn’t spell but he didn’t smoke and he was clean with nice breath, and I liked what he typed in his emails to me. We seemed to have a lot in common. We’re only three days apart in age so I think it helps that we remember a lot of the same sort of things. All in all, I thought he was a nice bloke. <br /><br />One day he asks to meet up and me being a bit cheeky says, ‘Come on. You only live an hour and a half away up the road, why not come down and visit me?’ He took me up on that offer a few weeks later and we’ve been together ever since, about eight years so far and loving every minute of it!<br /><br />I had massive heart surgery a year after first meeting the gentleman and he stayed with me throughout the entire recovery – looking after me and sitting in the hospital while I recovered. I thought to myself if he can do this, he is a keeper. One year after my heart surgery, he suffered a stroke while we were out to tea. It was my turn to look after him. We still don’t live together all the time since he goes back to work a few days a week and I often stay at home, but I think it’s good in that it gives us some space. <br /><br />We had only been seeing each other in person a few times when my daughter rings up early one Sunday morning and says, ‘I’m in labour! Can you come into town?’ He was in the middle of cooking his breaky so I told him he could either come or stay at the property. At this stage, none of my family had met him since I thought it was a bit early. But, he came and went with the flow of helping out with the other kids. <br /><br />Some of the things we have in common are elderly parents. His mum is still alive and he sees her every two weeks and takes her out from the nursing home. My dad has recently passed away, with both of us looking after him for the last 18 months. <br /><br />We also both love gardening but lately, I have become the forman and him the worker! We both like animals, going on holidays in our little caravan, doing jigsaw puzzles, reading, finding out about our ancestors, going to the club for the raffles and tea, and, of course, doing things with our kids and grandkids. <br /><br />When he came to the house for the very first time it was after he had spent the day with his mum. It was late in the afternoon. I looked out the window and saw a man with shorts, thongs, a brimmed hat and an esky in tow. I didn’t know whether to open the door or not! But, being the nice person that I am, I opened it and asked what was in the esky. I thought it was full of booze but instead it was breakfast – fresh bread, eggs, bacon, hash browns and real milk from the farm. I never thought I would be in another serious relationship after going through a bad marriage and raising three kids alone. I thought I would be alone forever but I didn’t mind too much as I like my own company and can amuse myself. However, I did give online dating a go. While dating websites can be expensive, boring and a minefield, there are men on there who are absolute gentlemen. <br /><br />All I can say is to go for it and give it a try. Remember to be careful and take notice of your own concerns, and be positive about what you want and not what the men you meet necessarily want. Meet in a public place and tell someone where you are going.<br /><br />As we get older I suppose we know what we want. Well I certainly did and it wasn’t a permanent man in my life after a bad marriage and being alone for nearly 37 years, but here I am doing what I want, but not what I thought I wanted.”</p> <p><em>Photograph is a stock image and is not of Sharon Fogarty.</em></p> <p><em><strong>If you have a love story to share please get in touch at <a href="mailto:melody@oversixty.com.au">melody@oversixty.com.au</a></strong></em></p>

Relationships

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What people really want from relationships

<p>It’s not income or looks that’s important when it comes to looking for a long-term relationships but how willing a person is to share the household duties, reveals an RSVP survey.</p> <p>The online dating site annual “Date of the Nation report 2015” surveyed more than 3,300 people of all age groups to find the most important factors people considered when evaluating a partner for long-term potential.</p> <p>Domestic chores like cleaning the loo and taking the rubbish out ranked in at number one with 77 per cent of single over 60s rating it as important. The survey also found that sex rates equally as much as intelligence, while having the same morals is as important as a sense of humour.</p> <p>“It’s not surprising that personality, sense of humour, morals, manners, shared interests, sexual chemistry and intelligence make up the top factors that singles consider when evaluating someone’s long-term potential,” said John Aiken, RSVP’s relationship psychologist.</p> <p>“It is interesting to see that willingness to share domestic duties is the next most important factor for relationship success, ranking above many others including outlook on kids, career aspirations, religious beliefs, income or ethnic background.”</p> <p>Here’s the full list of the most important factors that singles look for in relationships:</p> <ul> <li>Personality – 88 per cent</li> <li>Morals – 86 per cent</li> <li>Sense of humour – 86 per cent</li> <li>Manners – 84 per cent</li> <li>Shared interests – 82 per cent</li> <li>Sexual chemistry – 77 per cent</li> <li>Intelligence – 77 per cent</li> <li>Willingness to share household duties – 69 per cent</li> <li>Age – 67 per cent</li> <li>Similar outlook on kids – 66 per cent</li> <li>Social skills – 65 per cent</li> <li>Looks – 62 per cent</li> <li>Body Type – 53 per cent</li> <li>Career Aspirations – 46 per cent</li> <li>Fashion sense – 39 per cent</li> <li>Religious beliefs – 37 per cent</li> <li>Income – 37 per cent</li> <li>Ethnic background – 34 per cent</li> </ul>

Relationships