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When Seniors Remarry
When
Seniors
Remarry
Late
in
Life
What
is
Different
and
What
Pitfalls
Could
Be
Avoided
By
Luise
Volta,
SubmitYourArticle.com
A
lot
has
been
written
about
romance
but
there
isn't
much
available
data
about
senior
romance.
It's
actually
in a
class
by
itself
and
needs
special
treatment.
First
of
all,
the
normal
hurdles
that
younger
couples
have
to
work
their
way
through
are
seldom
of
concern.
Careers
are
over
for
most
seniors.
Children
are
raised
and
have
left
home.
Home
buying
and
other
major
acquisitions
were
made
in
the
distant
past.
Well,
then,
it
sounds
like
all
should
be
quiet
on
the
romantic
front,
doesn't
it?
That's
not
necessarily
so.
Seniors
who
have
reached
an
advanced
age,
say
past
seventy,
have
often
established
some
very
strong
opinions.
One
person
put
it
to
me
this
way..."There
are
a
lot
of
ways
to
go
to
the
mailbox."
It
isn't
something
that
is
often
noticed
on
the
surface.
Habits
become
solidified
and
attitudes,
opinions
and
reactions
become
pretty
firmly
entrenched
without
much
fanfare.
Long,
comfortable
marriages
seem
to
support
the
"I
Did
It
My
Way"
that
Frank
Sinatra
once
sang
about.
Seniors
who
find
themselves
alone,
usually
because
of
the
loss
of a
partner,
don't
have
current
skills
at
dating
and
selecting
a
mate.
How
could
they?
And
what
worked
in
their
late
teens
or
early
twenties
is
usually
way
beyond
obsolete.
Unfortunately,
most
"don't
know
that
they
don't
know"
and
assumptions
are
usually
rampant.
Dating
often
becomes
a
stiff
affair
involving
a
meal
out
with
friends
or
alone
and
maybe
a
movie.
More
often
than
not,
a
marriage
is
contracted
with
no
baseline
of
reality
to
hold
it
together.
Each
partner
knows
how
things
should
be,
which
is
how
they
always
were
in
the
past,
right?
Wrong!
Issues
of
all
kinds
arise
when
no
serious
consideration
is
given
to
varying
points
of
view.
The
land
of
assumptions
is
the
direct
opposite
of
deep,
investigative
conversations.
What
should
be
seriously
addressed
are
attitudes
about
sexual
behavior,
the
handling
of
finances,
the
division
of
labor
in
the
home
and
yard
and
how
various
adult
children
are
going
to
be
involved.
And
that's
just
for
starters.
Even
when
this
is
done,
deep
honesty
may
be
by-passed.
Telling
it
how
it
would
be "lov-er-ly"...not
how
it
is
can
be
an
easy
trap
to
fall
into
when
trying
to
win
someone
over.
Often
adult
children
react
to a
late
in
life
marriage
of a
cherished
parent
differently
than
the
hopeful
parent
thought
they
would.
In
other
words,
they
may
be
hard
to
second
guess.
One
senior
couple
I
know
quite
well
sailed
into
marital
bliss
with
the
wife
being
promised
"nooners"
by a
husband
who
was
sure
she
would
be
the
cure
for
his
sexual
impotence.
He
also
guaranteed
that
his
grown
kids
would
love
anyone
he
loved
and
that
turned
out
to
be a
bust.
They
hadn't
talked
about
finances
because
neither
of
them
was
comfortable
with
the
subject,
so
another
hurdle
loomed.
A
decade
later
they
are
doing
very
well
but
it
looked,
from
my
vantage
point
at
least,
like
it
was
a
long,
uphill
climb.
What
seems
to
work
is
to
take
it
slow
and
easy,
and
see
what
evolves.
Neither
partner
can
be a
replacement
for
the
one
who
is
gone.
New
attitudes
may
have
to
be
considered
and
new
patterns
created.
When
seniors
marry
it
is
not
usually
a
rerun
of
an
early-in-life
romance
where
the
pieces
just
fall
in
place
automatically.
It
is
new
and
different
and
needs
to
be
treated
with
great
respect.
Seniors
are
wiser,
we
can
all
hope,
but
not
as
durable
in
most
cases.
The
resilience
of
youth
has
usually
come
and
gone.
Anyone
wanting
to
remarry
late
in
life
might
be
wise
to
talk
with
other
senior
newly-weds,
their
own
grown
kids,
a
beloved
minister
and/or
even
a
counselor.
Why
not
stack
the
deck
favorably?
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