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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Miss Manners: Personal contacts best to find dates

Judith Martin Universal Uclick

DEAR MISS MANNERS: I am a divorced woman, 64 years old, fit and healthy.

I have been single for more than 20 years and lately have felt the desire for another relationship, but dating at my age is very difficult. I know it sounds insensitive, but I don’t want to spend (waste) time dating a man, only to find out several months later facts about him that, had I known upfront, I would never have gone out with him.

I am professionally employed. I am by no means wealthy, but I manage my money. I do not have negative baggage and do not want to deal with another person’s problems, personal or financial.

Somewhere in my area, there must be one nice, normal man, who like myself is looking for an honest woman and a quality relationship. How does one kindly and swiftly get the message across right upfront that I don’t want to mend, fix, nurture, counsel, finance anyone? Is it appropriate to ask a man if he is unencumbered, debt-free, no criminal history, etc.? If so, how does one go about this?

GENTLE READER: Surely you realize that you live in the Internet era, when people advertise for romance by stating their demands upfront, and tools are readily available for conducting background checks.

Suppose you had to depend on relatives, friends, and civic, religious and educational organizations to provide prospects?

Oh, that’s right; you remember that from before your marriage. You want to tell Miss Manners how annoying you found all those unappealing prospects they provided. You may have even met your former husband through that system, and you remember how annoying he was.

But you probably didn’t meet jail-breakers, bigamists and indigents that way. For all its creakiness and exasperating inability to gauge attractiveness, the old system was pretty good on character and reputation. No doubt there were ghastly mistakes. In general, however, personal recommendations are probably more reliable than what people say themselves when there are no available witnesses to their misdeeds.