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“I Want a Weekend Man, Not a Lifelong Partner – A 52‑Year‑Old’s Unfiltered Take”

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28October2026
Dear Diary,

Lets move in together.
Why?
How come? Were grownups.
And thats exactly why I dont get it why?

If anyone had told me at thirty that at fiftytwo Id be fending off gentlemen who, after a few weeks of dating, suddenly feel an urgent need to merge refrigerators, budgets, flats, dirty socks and all the other joys of cohabitation, I would have thought the world had lost its mind. In my younger days it was the reverse. Men feared commitment, sharing a kitchen and any talk of the future. Now the tables have turned. As soon as a bloke spends a month or two with me, he conjures up a strange vision: a joint lease, a combined internet bill, a shared laundry room, and the everpresent question of who will fetch the milk. The oddest part is that none of them can clearly explain why they think it benefits me.

My name is Thomas Whitaker, Im fiftytwo, divorced for fifteen years. I have an adult daughter, my own flat in Manchester, a steady job, a circle of friends, two weeks of holiday a year and a surprisingly tranquil life. In the evenings Ill eat icecream straight from the tub while bingewatching a drama until two in the morning. On weekends I can sleep in until midday, leave a coffee mug on the kitchen table and ignore any lecture about tidying up, skip making a Sunday roast if I dont feel like it, and, most importantly, I never have anyone hovering over my shoulder asking, Whats for dinner tonight?

The problem is that many men seem to treat my independence as a temporary glitch that must be corrected by their presence. At first theyre full of admiration Youre so selfsufficient, fascinating, selfcontained. A few weeks later their praise reveals a hidden agenda: they genuinely hope my autonomy will one day start working for them.

The first alarming call came from Edward. Edward is fiftyeight, welldressed, can chat intelligently about his trips abroad and, impressively for a man over fifty, knows how to use a napkin at a restaurant. We dated for about a month cinema, walks, café brunches, a weekend in the Cotswolds. Then one evening he said, Listen, could you pop over to my place after work?

Why? I asked.

To cook something.

What would you like me to cook?

Dinner.

It turned out Edward was simply tired of living alone. Not emotionally, but practically. His fridge sat empty, his oven refused to churn out a roast without assistance, his washing machine demanded a human hand. At some point I realised he saw a relationship as a form of domestic outsourcing.

Edward, why dont you just cook yourself? I asked.

He looked at me as if Id suggested he perform heart surgery.

Because youre a woman.

A startlingly succinct argument, one that shuts down any further discussion if you dont think too hard about it.

After Edward came Simon. Simon, fiftyfive, loved to complain about materialistic women that was his favourite hobby. Every conversation, after a few minutes, would swivel back to tales of how hed been used for his money. The irony was palpable; he drove a car older than many university students and counted every penny at the supermarket checkout.

On our sixth date he invited me over.

Come Saturday, he said.

Alright.

Just pick up some groceries on the way.

What do you need?

For dinner.

You want me to bring the food?

Yes.

What will you do then?

Ill meet you.

I still think Simon was an underrated genius. Few can devise a date where the woman does the shopping, the cooking, and then thanks the man for the invitation.

Simon, whos paying for the groceries?

What for?

You have a job, dont you?

Thats when I realised the word materialistic was being applied exclusively to everyone else.

A pattern emerged. Men liked my flat, appreciated its order, liked that I always had food, fresh towels, clean sheets and a working boiler. They liked my life. Yet most were convinced that once a relationship began I should extend my service to include them as well.

The most amusing was Victor. Victor sprang into the idea of living together with the enthusiasm of someone whod just discovered a way to cut expenses dramatically.

Imagine how economical it would be to live together, he said.

When a woman of my age hears the word economical, she instinctively reaches for a calculator.

In what way? I asked.

One fridge, one broadband, one council tax.

For whose benefit?

For us.

I smiled.

Victor, where do you live now?

In a rented flat.

And me?

In mine.

And suddenly the arithmetic became oddly interesting.

So youll stop paying rent, move in with me, slash costs and be happy?

Yes.

And wheres my benefit?

The question silenced him for a couple of minutes as a complex mental calculation unfolded a calculation I never got to see the result of.

The funniest episode involved Geoffrey. He was sixtyone, impeccably polite, and thoroughly exhausted by solitude.

Its hard being alone, he confessed.

I nodded sympathetically.

Its easy for me, he added, then stumbled.

Men usually expect a different reaction sympathy, solidarity, a shared sense of loneliness. When a woman calmly says shes fine on her own, the system glitches.

And now we reach the core issue that irks many men.

I do want a woman, but not to wash his shirts, iron his trousers, bake Sunday soups, hunt for socks under the sofa, or listen to endless stories about why he cant book a doctors appointment himself.

I want a partner for conversation, for trips, for walks, for the theatre, for travel, for a good evening, for intimacy, for emotion, for joy but not as a permanent housemate.

Men get upset by this stance. They label me selfish, spoiled, overly independent, claim I cant build a relationship. Yet none can articulate why a partnership must inevitably translate into extra chores for the woman. Why does a man get a companion, confidante, lover, housekeeper and chef all in one, while the woman is supposed to consider his mere presence a reward?

Sometimes it seems men simply havent caught up with how the world has changed. They still cling to a script written three decades ago, when a woman found it easier to accept an inconvenient marriage than to live alone. Today, many women my age have careers, homes, friends, grownup children, mortgages paid off and lives wellestablished. When a man appears, the question is straightforward: will my life be better with him?

If the answer is no, why bother?

So, Im honest: I need a woman for the weekends. For the rest of my life Im already wellsettled. And you know whats most surprising? Every time I say that, men take offense. Yet, if you think about it, its the most sincere compliment a relationship can receive, because I want someone by my side not because I cant manage alone, but because I enjoy their company.

Moving in together just to give someone a free chef, cleaner and lifemanager? No thank you. I closed that vacancy fifteen years ago and Im not reopening it.

**Lesson:** After fifty, relationships become a choice rather than a necessity. The key question isnt how do I avoid being alone? but does sharing my life actually enrich it? When the answer is negative, its perfectly reasonable to keep the door shut and enjoy the independence youve built.

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