Hindustan Times - Brunch

Please don’t mind the gap

Silver fox, cougar, cradle-robber, MayDecembe­r. Let’s give the tropes a rest and focus on love instead?

- Urvee Modwel urvee.modwel@hindustant­imes.com

IIt’s the stuff of movies. Their eyes meet across the room. Sparks fly. A conversati­on ensues. Then, he casually mentions his age: He’s eight years younger than she is. She sighs, pats his head, and continues drinking her martini. She doesn’t save his number. Except, the plot is changing. In September 2023, dating app Bumble polled 26,800 users around the world on their dating habits and found that crossgener­ational relationsh­ips, aka gen-blend relationsh­ips, are on the rise. Some 63% of respondent­s believe that age isn’t a defining factor in dating; 59% of women admit they are open to dating someone younger. Plus, 35% of women confess that they are less judgementa­l about agegap relationsh­ips. My, we’ve grown up!

It’s a welcome change from even a generation ago, when older men were described as silver foxes and older women, uncharitab­ly, as cougars. It was fine when we learned that there’s 17 years between George and Amal Clooney, and 12 for Jay-Z and Beyoncé. But when it came to Nick Jonas and the 10years-older Priyanka Chopra Jonas, boy, did people have opinions.

Movies about older men are seen as just romantic comedies – that’s the dream, apparently. But if a pairing has a younger man, it tends to become the whole story. Jennifer Lopez played a woman who landed in trouble for having an affair with her young neighbour in The Boy Next Door (2015). Samantha (Kim Cattrall) from Sex and The City (1998-2004) was shamed through all six seasons for being attracted to younger men, and taking pride in it.

Could it be that people are just tired of the trope

today? That they’ve watched Leonardo DiCaprio date woman after woman under the age of 25, even though he’s nearly 50? That seeing older women living just-as-successful lives as their male counterpar­ts have caused those sad-aunty jokes to fall flat? Perhaps women no longer want to feel guilty about their own pleasure.

Someone tell the men. Because Bumble’s data says nothing of how the average single man feels about an older woman partner. Either way, with age gaps of 10 to 15 years or more, brace for misconcept­ions, says Pune-based counsellor Harshita Chaudhri. “Just because someone is older doesn’t mean they’ll be the more mature partner,” says Chaudhri, “and the younger partner may not be the flighty one.”

How often you’ve travelled around the sun matters less than the kinds of experience­s you’ve had. Emotional and financial stability, political leanings and one’s own expectatio­ns from couplehood shape a relationsh­ip much more than an age gap. And approval matters. “Approval from friends and family can help sustain a relationsh­ip,” says Chaudhri. “Disapprova­l can make it harder for us to feel invested.”

Perhaps it’s not the chronologi­cal ages of a couple that matter but the mental maturity of everyone else. If it’s legal and consensual, who dates whom isn’t anyone’s business. Leave the cringey age-gap listicles back in the 1990s. Stop asking people how old they were when their partner was 16. One’s age is hardly one’s defining quality. Unless one’s partner, regardless of age, is starting to look like a hostage!

 ?? ?? Ryan Reynolds, 47, and Blake Lively, 36, married in 2012 and have four children. In most relationsh­ips, age gaps are rarely a defining characteri­stic.
Ryan Reynolds, 47, and Blake Lively, 36, married in 2012 and have four children. In most relationsh­ips, age gaps are rarely a defining characteri­stic.
 ?? ??
 ?? ?? Priyanka Chopra Jonas, 41, and Nick Jonas, 31 (top) seem to have made things work as a successful couple with a significan­t age difference. In The Reader (above) Kate Winslet plays a woman sleeping with a young, naive boy.
Priyanka Chopra Jonas, 41, and Nick Jonas, 31 (top) seem to have made things work as a successful couple with a significan­t age difference. In The Reader (above) Kate Winslet plays a woman sleeping with a young, naive boy.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India