This article was first published at Role/Reboot. You can read the original article here.
I’m 41 years old and way too old to have a boyfriend.
I haven’t had a boyfriend since I was in my 20’s. And, here I am two decades later single and dating the same man for almost a year. Technically, he is my boyfriend. We are beyond dating. We are in a committed relationship shaping a vision, a contractual agreement of a life together.
But, each time I move to introduce him or refer to him in conversation, I back away from the word “boyfriend.” The term makes me cringe. I know it’s just semantics and I’m certain the singles out there who desire a relationship are shaking their heads in disbelief, “Really? You’ve found the one and are fixating on semantics?”
I am fixating. I’m struggling to find a term that feels age appropriate. I remember what it means to date boys. But I am in a relationship with a man. The term boyfriend feels anachronistic. It in no way communicates how this man I now love exists in my life and how he so deeply matters in the life of my children—who were abandoned by their biological father. I stumble over the word boyfriend to find a term that honors what he means to me, to us. And the stumble goes something like this…
Partner? Sounds too contractual, devoid of intimacy.