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60+ dating can be intimidating, especially after divorce. Find out what to expect, how to start dating again, and join our community of like-minded women.
See also: Dating After 50
Dating After 60 For Divorced Women
Dating at any time can be scary and intimidating. When we’re young, we’re figuring out who we are, and if anyone likes us. If we’re single again after 30 or 40 years of being married, we’re back at that point, wondering if anyone is going to like us. My advice: First of all, like yourself!
Dating after divorce is different from dating if our husband died. The grief of death is very challenging, but there is not that personal devastation that happens when our husband leaves our marriage, especially because of an affair.
If our husband dies, we usually aren’t left with those ugly scars that happen with divorce. If we’ve been through a long, messy divorce after 60, we may again be asking those terrifying questions. Who am I now? Will anyone find me attractive and desirable, especially now that I’m divorced and in my 60s?
Also, with after 60 divorce, we may have to still see our ex with his sweet young thing. He seems happy as a clam, while we may still be wondering, “Will I ever find anyone I can love again?” Because of the trauma of divorce, the thought of dating again at 60+ is often terrifying!
Remember, you are a good, fun, generous, woman. Take the time to grieve and heal and then be open to the possibility of dating again, when the time is right. Keep your standards high. Be choosy. Make a list of what you want in a possible partner. Not everyone you go out with will be long-term material. Relax. Don’t feel pressured.
Take Your Time, There’s No Rush
Here’s the good news! Sixty is the new 40! Divorce and over 60 dating is more common than ever, but the worst thing you can do is to rush into another relationship before you’re ready.
You need to take time to do the grief and healing work that’s necessary after your divorce before you even begin to think about dating. Figure out your own best self after a 60+ divorce has most likely beaten down your self confidence, especially if your ex-husband left you for someone younger.
Many women think to themselves, “I’m over 60 years old. If I don’t find someone quickly, I may be alone forever!” That’s not true. It’s better to get strong yourself and not rush into a second or third marriage that statistics say is more likely to end in divorce.
How to Start Dating After 60
The best way to get started dating after 60 is to Get Comfortable With Yourself! Your physical self is the best place to start, because getting healthy and fit is good for everything else. Emotions smooth out. You have more energy, self-confidence and optimism about the future.
Get Involved! Find those things that make you excited about life again. Interact in positive ways with others. Many churches and organizations have volunteer groups that stuff backpacks, load grocery sacks, or spend time reading to kids.
Get Positive! Get your self-esteem back after divorce by taking a class at a community center or junior college. Join a MeetUp group for something you’re passionate about. Get a part-time job or throw yourself into new projects at work. Have fun! Be Fun!
Get Brave! In finding romance after 60, we’re all pretty much flying by the seat of our pants! Being interested in life and solving problems in your community help make you a more desirable person. You’re more likely to come into contact with possible future partners than if you sit home feeling sorry for yourself, or if you feel desperate to find someone.
What To Expect
After my own divorce, I was out of practice dating to say the least! I hadn’t had a date with anyone besides my husband for 35+ years! When the sobbing and screaming phase of your divorce recovery is over, slowly start interacting again with safe family and friends. Rediscover what you love to do, and then find ways to do it.
One simple thing that helps is to start referring to yourself as single instead of divorced. Your divorce is in the past. You’re a stronger, wiser, more interesting woman after the life lessons you’ve just endured.
When you actually launch out into the 60+ singles world, Relax! Take a deep breath. It’s not a life and death matter if your first connections don’t work out. Remember, it’s not a judgement of your worth as a person if someone doesn’t call you back or respond to your “like.” Keeping your sense of humor is the best dating after 60 advice I can give!
Finding People From The Past
When you’re comfortable, tell your friends and family you’re thinking about dating again. Many relationships are the result of someone we know introducing us to someone they know who might be a good match.
A 60+ friend of mine had been introduced to a friend of a friend, and they have now been dating for almost a year. They are planning a wedding sometime in the future. Yea love and dating after sixty!
High school, college, and business reunions are a good way to reconnect. There are lots of stories of old friends finding each other at school reunions after decades apart.
WARNING! Do not get involved with someone from the past who is in a current relationship! Period! Do not become “the other woman after 60,” no matter what kinds of feelings are rekindled in you about an old boyfriend. That’s a recipe for after 60 divorce #2 or #3.
Online Dating After 60
After divorce as a senior, many of us are trying to rebuild our self-confidence after our ex often tried to tear it down. When I felt strong and positive again (after several years!), I realized that if I could find the right person, I would love to be in another romantic relationship.
One of the easiest ways to get started finding another relationship is to explore online dating (yes, even after 60!) We get to see “The good, the bad and the ugly!” My first bit of advice: be alert and go into this adventure with your antennae up!
- Watch for clues and discrepancies in conversations
- Never, ever share private, personal information
- Never get in a car with someone you have only met online.
- Make early dates in a very public place with lots of activity going on.
- Tell someone where you’re going, what time you’re going and when you are safely home.
- Be alert for scams.
According to FBI data, 82% of romance scams are on women over 50. The scammers spend months building a relationship only to break hearts and steal millions of dollars.
One common scam is veterans posing as online prospects. They use (fake) pictures of men in uniform. They are often “deployed unexpectedly,” and then later need money for an airplane ticket to visit. Be alert!
Even with the possible pitfalls, online dating can be fun. The whole process of posting your picture, your profile and answering personal questions can help you clarify what you actually want in your life. Try it. If nothing goes right at first, hit the pause button and try again later.
Over 60s Dating Sites
There are more and more dating sites for seniors. Even general dating sites like eharmony.com have sections for seniors. There are also interest-specific sites for just about everything you can imagine.
Some sites are faith-based (keep those antennae on!), lifestyle based, (farmers, vegetarians, athletes). Some are just plain weird: Trek passions, clown dating, paranormal Date (The website’s slogan is “You are not alone!”, Sizzl (a tongue-in-cheek site for bacon lovers started by Kraft Foods!).
A few of the most popular online sites for 60+ seniors:
- ZooskSeniors
- SilverSingles
- Match
- eHarmony – MDR’s recommended online dating site.
- OurTime
- EliteSingles
- SeniorPeopleMeet
Common Mistakes Men & Women Make
The most common mistakes 60+ seniors make when we start dating again:
- We rush into dating before we are ready. We’re worried about being old and time running out. People who love us encourage us to “get back out there again,” before we’re ready. The grief and healing of divorce is complicated and takes longer than we want it to, but don’t start dating until you are comfortable with your new single self.
- We haven’t figured out, “Why am I doing this?” Figure out what exactly you want from the dating experience (other than a good-looking, rich, caring, fun, adventurous future partner!) Seriously, we need to know why we want someone else and what kind of relationship we are looking for before we jump into dating after 60.
- We take the whole dating thing too seriously. Be lighthearted and fun. Be honest with the people you go out with. Don’t be devastated if a date doesn’t work out like you want it to. And don’t be afraid to cross someone off your list, if they’re not a good fit.
- Dating Our Ex. It’s tempting to date your ex, especially if your miss them, but tread cautiously.
Why Bother?
Being divorced after 60 often brings a devastating loneliness. I went straight from my childhood home, to college to being married and having our four children over a span of 53 years. Shortly after our divorce, I was alone for the first time in my life. I experienced a gut-wrenching loneliness that was hard to endure.
After 60, we are also experiencing other losses …. our bodies are changing, children have usually left home, parents are declining, we may have retired … all contributing to the losses of being over 60.
Sometimes we wonder, “Is all of this worth the trouble?” Maybe I should just resign myself to the fact that I’m meant to be alone. Find a support group of other women who are going through divorce in midlife. See how they are coping.
If you would like another relationship, go places and do things that will connect you with the kind of person you want to meet. Be the kind of person you want to meet. Get involved in activities you enjoy. People in the process of living a good, full life, often meet other people living their own good, full life. It’s worth the effort!
My own personal online-dating story:
After my divorce, and after I had done the work of grief and healing, I prayed this quiet prayer: “God, thank you for bringing me to this point in my life. Thank you for all the good things in my life now. If you see fit, I’d love to meet someone. If not, that’s okay, too.” Amen. And I went on living my life the best I could every day.
I was 56 when I started dating my new husband. He was 61. We met online. I believe it all started with a question on the site. “If you could meet someone anyplace in the world, where would it be?” I replied “Fly fishing in Wyoming.” Among other things, he is an avid fisherman! We corresponded for several months before we ever met. He is an amazing gift in my life.
This summer we will have been married 13 years and are looking forward to many more.
Get the help you need to heal. Re-discover your best single self. Open up your heart again. No telling what will happen!
I was over my ex husband shortly after he left. I grieved the marriage for the past 20 years. I had to put my head down and work for 5 years to dig out of the debris and finish putting my daughter through school. I am much stronger, I know I can do it again if I had to. I do feel life shouldn’t be emotionally and physically without a helpmate. So I am looking, it has been 12 years but I am open. I have been on dates for 5 years, finding mutuality is not easy. It seems everyone I much complicated after 60.
I was married for 30 years to an abusive man. I finally left. I had worked on myself and grieved my marriage while I was still in it. 15 years of counseling. I was reacquainted with a man I had gone to school with and married him 2 years later. He was bipolar and simply did not understand relationships. That marriage ended after 5 years and a lot of frustration. I really don’t know if I am brave enough to even go on a date.
I have enjoyed reading all these perspectives. On the one hand there are more times than not that I feel divorce has made me weaker. I understand the concept that it is suppose to make you stronger. Because I have not met that special man to share my life with I often feel disheartened and devastated by this. I still want to share my life with that special person. My values are sharing, caring, loving, companionship, being there for each other emotionally and physically! Perhaps I have to do whatever I can to be happy. I am an animal lover so maybe I need to get a dog for now. I need new pictures and need to decide what site/sites I wish to get active on. I am 62.
There’s some very candid accurate valid comments made on this site. I’m surprised no one has mentioned the fact that there’s simply too many single women and not enough men. Of all ages. I live in a metro area in Cali.
I have gone to singles gatherings and there’s alway ten women to every one man. With those kind of odds combined with the fact that many women are desperate and value themselves according to their relationship, no wonder older women many like myself have such a hard time meeting a quality man .
I am not going to compromise my values or try and out-slut the woman next to me over a man.
I feel I have a lot to offer and life is too short to be stuck in a one sided relationship with a badly behaving man because he has his pick of the litter shall we say.
I’d much rather spend time coming for my friends and dining with my friends and dogs. And making home made wine and growing a sustainable garden.
Found this post very useful. Have just broken up with my 7+ year partner because of commitment issues amongst other things I am 62.
I am not ready to date or even know if I want to but what I do know is I want to get myself healthy, fit and enjoy life by joining in activities etc.
I have custody of 2 grandchildren which makes things wonderful and difficult at the same time.
I think I need to concentrate on myself and if I meet someone by chance great because I enjoy being in a couple. If I dont well I may look to other avenues or not. My main concern is to be happy, I have friends and family so I am lucky.
What advice do you have for someone who is the spouse of someone in a nursing home and will most likely never return to the home or the person they were? It is difficult and the loneliness can be overwhelming. There are days when you want someone to talk to and spend time with. How do you navigate these waters?
Your story of finding love inspired me to not give up on love after 60. I agree with everything that you wrote about, especially finding yourself first before taking the plunge.
I found myself suddenly divorced at 62. Maybe I should have seen it coming, but I didn’t. After getting over the shock, I tried to be optimistic. My adult daughter walked me through the world of online dating and created a profiles for me on several dating sites. I quickly discovered that most men my age aren’t interested in older women or smokers (I have a three pack a day addiction). Oddly enough, younger men messaged me. Unsurprisingly, I rebuffed them, thinking the age difference was weird or a scam. One younger man did not give up and I agreed to let him meet with my daughter. The man was a bit weird, but he wasn’t a scam artist. He was 24, good looking, educated, employed, and he didn’t smoke or drink. I went out with him and had a good time after I got over the initial awkwardness. He’s a normal guy. The only thing weird about him is that he likes older women and he doesn’t mind my smoking. We married 6 years ago and I’ve never been happier in my life.
I’m 79 and became romantically involved with a woman I met last Oct on a group tour. We did a lot of texting, emailing and phoning starting mostly three months ago with just a little before that. We are now deeply in love. This sounds eerily the opposite of your recommendation above Suzy. Whaddya think? – is this relationship doomed?
Tom
I discovered my husband had been in an affair for 1 1/2 years. It was just before we retired that this was discovered. After 9mo. of “working” on our marriage and many ups and downs, he has left the home and filed for divorce (the affair is long over).
I am 65 yo., with my husband 36 years (34 married). I am devastated. I am finding myself in a position that will cause me to have to go back to work, having to divide assets and basically starting over in a position that will create many hardships. Together our assets were comfortable, divided they are poor, at best.
I was so looking forward to our being retired, travelling where ever and when ever we wanted. That is now all gone. To make matters worse, I love Him.
I am paralyzed with fear. Still waiting for a mediation hearing between us. I just pray he will come to his senses and we will work on love again. I don’t know that I am capable of surviving this.