Los Angeles Times

The right man for a family

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Dear Amy: I’m a 36- yearold gay man. I have an interest in starting a family. The issue is that I struggle to find a “peer” to date.

I’ve dated profession­als f ive to 20 years older than me, but I know that people in that age group are unlikely to want a family, and there is an imbalance ( from my perspectiv­e) in the dynamic.

On the f lip side, I have dated those f ive to 10 years younger than me, and the connection can seem just as great, but inevitably, they are still starting out.

Ideally, it would be great to meet someone who is at a similar place in their life as I am with mine, but I wonder, at this age in my life and given the length of time I’ve been single ( 10 years), am I asking too much? Profession­al and Single in Portland

Dear Single: You are not asking too much from your dating life. You are asking the exact right amount.

First, you shouldn’t necessaril­y make assumption­s about people based solely on their age. Although I agree that age has an impact on a person’s readiness to have children, being family oriented is more of a core value.

It seems that your approach to dating so far has a Goldilocks quality. You’ve tried dating people who you perceive are too old for children, you’ve dated people who are too young, and now, at 36, you are looking for someone who is just right.

Put the word out among your friend group and rewrite your profile on whatever online matching sites you use that you are a family- oriented man, ready to have children with the right partner

You might find ( as I did at your age) that all of your peers seem to be taken.

If that is the case, if you want to get started on building your family, you can do so as a single man. Look into adoption, surrogacy, and fostering children. Also consider dating available men who are already dads. Being a stepparent is a unique challenge and joy.

Dear Amy: On occasion my wife and I will go out to dinner with two other couples. Since none of us drink, we always split the bill and tip evenly between us.

However, the last time we all went out one of the couples insisted on separate checks. When the checks came, the wife pulled out a gift card to obviously be applied to their bill.

My wife and I don’t need a gift card contributi­on when we dine out, but I was appalled by her actions.

If my wife and I had a gift card, I would have applied it to the total bill — or at least I’d have bought appetizers for the table!

If she did not want to share the gift card’s value with us, then she should have saved it for when just she and her husband go to this restaurant alone.

What do you think? Appalled Diner

Dear Appalled: I think that this other couple should rethink their choice to dine with you. You are way too sensitive about how people pay for their meals.

The restaurant gift card is the equivalent of currency.

Your tone implies that because their restaurant card was a “gift,” they should have shared it with the table. How do you know it was a gift? Why does it matter?

It might not have been necessary to ask for separate checks. Restaurant­s can handle gift cards the way they handle other payment cards, if you ask them to deduct a specific amount from the card’s total.

Send questions to Amy Dickinson by email to ask amy@ amydickins­on. com.

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