Hartford Courant

Older singles have found a new way to partner up

-

the caregiver walked him over to her place. Now he manages on his own with his walker and spends weekends with her when his caregiver is off. Their intimacy continues.

With greater longevity, the doubling of the divorce rate since the 1990s for people over 50 and evolving social norms, older people like Randall are increasing­ly re-partnering in various forms. Cohabitati­on, for example, is more often replacing remarriage following divorce or widowhood, said Susan L. Brown, a sociologis­t at Bowling Green State University in Ohio.

These older adults are seeking (and finding) love, emotional support and an antidote to loneliness. But many older women, in particular, fear that a romantic attachment in later life will shortly lead to full-time caregiving. To avoid this role, some seek to meet their social needs solely from their relationsh­ips with family members and friends. Margaret Widuckel, a widowed nurse, 75, from Melbourne, Australia, said she sometimes misses having an intimate partner but fears she’d be drawn into caregiving. “I also see my friends with frail husbands unable to pursue their own activities, and all their conversati­ons are about what the doctor said or didn’t say.”

As researcher­s study those who do partner, however, they find that increasing numbers are choosing a kind of relationsh­ip known as LAT (rhymes with cat), for “living apart together.” These are long-term committed romantic relationsh­ips without sharing (or intending to share) a home.

“A big attraction of LAT is to avoid the potential responsibi­lity of being a full-time caregiver,” said Ingrid Arnet Connidis, an emerita sociology professor at Western University in London, Ontario. “Women cared for their children, parents and spouse, and want to avoid getting into these traditiona­l gender roles.”

While researcher­s have not yet delved deeply into the demographi­cs of those in LAT relationsh­ips, anecdotall­y it seems to be more prevalent among those at high enough socioecono­mic levels to be able to maintain separate households. In general, there is evidence that wealthier people who are single later in life are more likely to re-partner.

In Europe, the data clearly show that laterlife LAT relationsh­ips are on the rise. Jenny de Jong Gierveld, a sociologis­t at Vrije University in Amsterdam, said that as early as 1995, social scientists in the Netherland­s added questions to large national surveys to track later-life LAT relationsh­ips. Brown said that didn’t happen in the United States, where surveys typically ask who is in a household. Neverthele­ss, Connidis said, social scientists can infer that LAT is now a “popular option” in the United States and Canada. For example, sociologis­t Huijing Wu of the University of Western Ontario determined that of unmarried but partnered Wisconsin residents over 50 in 2011, 38% were daters, 32% were LATS, and 30% were cohabiting.

Social scientists comment on the resourcefu­lness of these older couples, who are creating ways to enjoy the intimacy and emotional support of marriage or cohabitati­on — as several studies on LAT have confirmed they do — while avoiding caregiving expectatio­ns. As Gierveld and her colleagues have found, LAT partners provide mainly emotional support to each other but not hands-on care. Some couples assume some care but not full time.

“Once they’re in that relationsh­ip,” Connidis said, “partners end up more willing to care for each other than they thought they’d be, but not necessaril­y to the same level as a marital partner.”

Jill Spoon, 73, and John Backe, 74, a LAT couple in New York City for nearly a decade, illustrate the complexity of this emotional bond. When Spoon, a retired administra­tor, and Backe, a retired pastor, met and fell in love, both were 64 and gave no thought to caregiving. Yet they opted to live in their own apartments, getting together about four times a week. Spoon, in particular, then working full time with an active social life, wanted to maintain her independen­ce while enjoying their intimacy.

Three years later, the issue of caregiving arose when Backe had major heart surgery and needed

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States