Love After 60: 7 Honest Truths From People Who Have Been There

types of love love after 60
Photo by Dmytro Zinkevych at Shutterstock

What better way to learn how to find love after 60 than to ask the ones who have already found it? And after all, who says that love is just for the young? We all want to find a special someone and share the last slice of pizza with them, no matter their age.

Whether we are 17 or 67, most of us just want to find someone to talk to, laugh with, and grow old with. In the seventh decade of life, most people are already married or in long-term relationships.

Even so, statistics prove that a shocking 45% of American citizens are still single. How come? Did they simply give up trying to find someone to spend their life with? Or is finding love after 60 too hard? Let’s see what the “experts” are saying!

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

TOP PICKS

INSTAGRAM

[instagram-feed feed=1]

LATEST POSTS

You feel a lingering disconnect in your relationship, a subtle sense that your partner adores a version of you that doesn’t actually exist. When someone loves the idea of[..]
You once met romantic partners through mutual friends, a shared class, or a chance encounter at a local coffee shop. Today, your dating pool exists inside a glowing rectangle[..]
Throw out the outdated rulebook dictating that romance belongs only to the young; modern singles over fifty are rewriting the script to build profound connections on their own terms.[..]
Identifying exactly what creates emotional distance early in a romance saves you from endless frustration and heartbreak. When someone you care about suddenly turns cold or distant, the shift[..]
Stepping back into the dating world after fifty brings a unique set of advantages—you know who you are, what you tolerate, and what you actually want. Yet, building a[..]
When you want a meaningful relationship, leaning in too hard early on can push the right person away. Desperation rarely looks like begging; it usually disguises itself as overeagerness,[..]