By Mandy Francis
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Mid-life marital bliss: Jennifer De Gray Birch and husband James
Jennifer De Gray Birch looked every inch the glamorous bride. If a teenage girl had imagined a fantasy wedding, it might well have been Jenniferâs. She wore a floor-length strapless designer gown in pale grey silk dotted with crystal clusters, and carried a bouquet of pink peonies and roses.
Her groom â" dark, handsome and clearly a man in love â" stood adoringly at her side, and the vintage car which ferried the newlyweds to their intimate wedding breakfast was festooned with flowers.
But perhaps best of all, Jenniferâs father was there to proudly walk her up the aisle. Beaming from ear to ear, he could not hide his delight. After decades of wondering if this day would ever come â" his daughter was finally getting marriedâ.â.â. at 40.
Now, 40 might sound a little mature to be dressing up as a blushing bride but itâs not that unusual these days.
According to a recent survey from the Office For National Statistics, the age a t which British women marry for the first time has been steadily climbing. In fact, the number getting married for the first time in their late 30s and 40s has almost doubled in the past decade.
And, despite their age, many are opting for the big white wedding they dreamed of as a little girl.
Jennifer, a 42-year-old babywear designer who lives in Billericay, Essex, with husband James, 30, and their 18-month-old son Sebastien, says she always hoped sheâd get married and have a family one day â" but admits it was never her intention to tie the knot quite so late in life.
âMy parents have been together for almost 50 years now â" they married in their 20s â" and theyâre a great example of a happily married couple. They still hold hands when theyâre out and about. I always hoped I could find that kind of lifelong, loving relationship for myself, too, but it took a while to find.â
Jennifer did come close to settling down a couple of times be fore she met James, an engineer, but as serious as those other relationships were, none of them resulted in marriage.
âI didnât really have a meaningful, long-term relationship until I was almost 30,â she says. âBefore that I was much too busy enjoying myself. Although many school friends got married and started having children in their early 20s, I just didnât feel the urge to do the same.â
Relationship coach Jo Dale, founder of the Dear Mrs Herbert website, which specialises in helping âsmart, professional women get confident and find loveâ, says Jenniferâs romantic history is typical of many women who âwake upâ in their mid-30s only to realise theyâve forgotten to nurture their personal life.
Jo says: âThese women donât deliberately put marriage and children on the back-burner when they start their working lives, it just happens. An exciting career can be all-absorbing and the years just fly by.â
When Jennifer was 29, she embarked on a serious relationship with a man she met through work. âBut he turned out to be quite possessive.â she says. âHe asked me to marry him after weâd been seeing each other for a couple of years â" but there was no way I could say yes, as I just knew we werenât right for each other. His proposal was the catalyst for me to end the relationship.â
But as she sailed through her 30s, Jennifer says the pressure to marry and have children became greater. âFriends Iâd been living the single life with suddenly started settling down and having babies, and that made me think much harder about marriage.

Blushing bride: Ali Knight with her spouse Stephen
âI remember going to visit one of my oldest friends just after sheâd had her daughter and noticing how similar her daughter looked to my friend as a child. It was a poignant moment. Time was moving on and I realised I really wanted to be part of the natural cycle of things, too.â
But even when Jennifer became involved in a steady, live-in relationship at 33 with an old acquaintance, she says something still stopped her making that ultimate commitment.
âWeâd been together for a couple of years, when he handed me a glass of champagne in a restaurant, with an amazing diamond-and-platinum engagement ring in the bottom of it.
âThereâs no doubt he was a lovely person â" a real catch â" but I knew deep down he wasnât âthe oneâ for me. I started crying as he put the ring on my finger, which unfortunately the other diners took to be tears of joy. While they were applauding, I was actually sobbing my heart out. It was dreadful.â
As a ny single woman knows, decent, kind, solvent men donât come round very often. So could it be that Jennifer struggled to settle down because she was just being a bit too picky for her own good?
Psychologist Mairead Molloy, who specialises in relationship issues, says another reason many women stay single for longer these days is that they often have unrealistic expectations about relationships.
âWeâve become a society of perfectionists. In the past we were happy to fall in love, get married and then do our best with that relationship, for better or for worse.
âThese days, women will complain that they canât meet anyone â" then tell me in the next breath that a man has to be the right height, have the right hair colour, the right job, the right car, almost the right DNA before he can even be considered for a date.â
Jennifer disagrees: âI donât think I was being unreasonably picky. Although I knew I really wanted children, and I was head ing for 40, I was always determined I wouldnât marry someone just to have a family.
âI wanted to meet my soulmate and I was prepared to hold out for that.
âIâve always kept myself fit and healthy, so I hoped my fertility would hold out, too. My parentsâ example has meant Iâve seen first-hand what a good marriage looks like, and thatâs what Iâve always wanted for myself.â
When Jennifer eventually met James through mutual friends, just before her 40th birthday, things moved very quickly.
âI flew out to Ibiza to celebrate my birthday with some girlfriends in September 2009 and James flew out to join us for a few days,â she recalls. âWe fell in love on that trip.
âI remember him saying that if we still felt the same way about each other in three monthsâ time we should get married â" and thatâs what happened. He proposed in the December and I said yes immediately.
'Not that long ago, a woman risked being labelle d a spinster if she was still single at 30'
ÂâAlthough I had a few reservations about the age gap at first, they soon disappeared. I just found I wanted to be with him all the time.
âI came off the Pill straight away as I thought it could be a year or two before Iâd get pregnant â" but to our surprise I fell pregnant immediately. We were both thrilled.
âOur wedding was quickly organised for the end of May 2010 because we wanted to be married when Sebastien was born.
âTwo years on, I can honestly say Iâve finally found my soulmate.â
Jennifer chose to be married before her son was born, but itâs not unusual for women to have a family without tying the knot these days. That lack of pressure to get married, Jo Dale says, also contributes to women leaving marriage until later.
âNot that long ago, a woman risked being labelled a spinster â" pitied, evenâ" if she was still single at 30. It was a scandal to have a child outside marriage. But, quite rightly, that simply isnâ t the case now.â
When 45-year-old novelist Ali Knight finally walked down the aisle last month, sheâd already been with her fiance Stephen, 40, for a decade and has three children with him â" Joseph, nine, Luke, seven, and three-year-old Isabel.
The children walked her down the aisle of Marylebone Register Office in Central London before a Routemaster double-decker bus took them and their guests back to their favourite West London pub for a five-course Italian lunch for 85 people.
âOf course, there were lots of comments and ribbing from people about how it was âabout timeâ we got married,â says Ali. âBut everyone was thrilled for us. The day couldnât have been more perfect.â

Fulfilling their special day: Despite their age, many are opting for the big white wedding they dreamed of as a little girl
So what led Ali â" previously a self-confessed marriage-sceptic â" down the aisle?
âI got pregnant accidentally when I was 35, just two months after meeting Stephen,â she confesses. âOnce we established we were both keen to go ahead though, things moved at breakneck speed. We moved in together and only ever had the vaguest of discussions about marriage.
âIâve always been fiercely independent, so the idea of getting married made me panic â" Stephen just shrugged. Like many co-habiting couples today, we just told everyone it was something weâd do âlaterâ.â
Two more children followed and the couple found the time and money needed to organise a wedding were in short supply.
âBut a turning point came when Luke was in hospital with suspected meningitis,â says Ali. âThe nurses couldnât find me to comfort him because our surnames were different. I realised I was fed up with having a different surname to the rest of her family and not knowing how to introduce Stephen in public. I wanted to call him my husband. I guess Iâve grown upâ
Relationship psychologist Mairead Molloy says the creeping realisation that weâre not getting any younger can help to push dyed-in-the-wool singletons to settle down. She also believes the current economic troubles are also a catalyst for the marriage boom among mid-lifers.
âThe recession has left everyone feeling a little insecure,â she says. âItâs quite natural to hanker after the comfort and security that marriage can bring. When times get tough, thereâs always a return to traditional values.â
Financial security was certainly one of the reasons Clare Baker, 48, and her husband Stuart, 42, decided to marry four years ago.
âI was exceptionally shy as a child, so boys didnât really appear on my radar until I started working in the local bank when I was 17,â Clare says. âEven then, I had no confidence with the oppo site sex, Iâd just cling on to the wall and get tongue-tied. No one ever asked me out in my teens and 20s.â
Overweight and painfully shy, Clare remained dateless until her best friend got married in her mid-30s.
âThat was a huge turning point for me. I remember struggling to find an outfit to wear to her wedding.
âIt was awful â" I felt fat and miserable. I realised then that I really regretted not making more of an effort to settle down and have a family myself earlier in my life.â
So Clare joined a slimming club, lost 3st and moved out of her parentsâ home aged 39. âI suddenly became a much more independent and outgoing person,â she says. âI started to enjoy life â" and enjoy being single. I even went on a few dates, although none of them became serious.â
But a debilitating bout of ME soon after she turned 40 meant the new, independent Clare could work only part-time. She was struggling to pay her bills when she met Stu art in 2003 through an online dating site.
âStuart was my knight in shining armour, really,â says Clare. âHe helped me pay off my debts, suggested I sold my flat â" and we moved in together. As much as it was romantic, it also made financial sense for us to pool our resources.â
Five months after they met, Stuart proposed and the couple married five years later.
âMy life has changed beyond all recognition now,â says Clare. âStuartâs eight-year old daughter, Scarlett, has come to live with us recently so not only have I become a wife in my 40s, but a mum as well.â
But it seems, despite these womenâs happy, new-found marital status, old, independent habits still die hard.
Ali Knight admits she still has her own bank account and Jennifer De Gray Birch still uses her maiden name at work. Clare Baker says sheâs found it hard to let go of the final strands of her single self, too.
âWeâve been married for four years, but itâs taken me a very long time to change all my documentation over to my married name,â she says.
âMy passport â" which is still in my maiden name â" feels as if it is the last remaining vestige of the old me. I love being married, but itâs hard to believe that once it expires next year, I really will be Mrs Baker â" in every aspect of my life.
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Sounds like your wife had a lucky escape. Talk about bitter. - PompeyLiz, Hampshire, 13/6/2012 12:20 ++++ No his wife probably hit a lucky jackpot with the legal system acting as personal bullying bouncers. The robbery has rightfully left him bitter but he is more enlightened than bitter now and he is sharing that enlightenment with other men. It seems very dumb to sign a contract you are not keen on and the major beneficiary of its termination is another party that is very keen on it.
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"both me and my husband agree that it has given us stability and respect." You poor things? Did people really give you no respect before that? I'm shocked. I get respect through my job - my clients appreciate what I do (which is a bit more than is necessary). I get respect from my friends, who appreciate the kind of support I give them. I get respect from shopkeepers, as I treat them with respect. As for stability, that just came with age. 35 moves in 5 countries and then I finally decided where to settle. Nothing to do with getting married. I feel a bit sorry for you.
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Its amazing ANY man gets married. Why enter a contract which the other party can break at will. One which entails financial abuse, emotional abuse and the harvesting of your sperm, finishing with the legally sanctioned theft of your children, property and income? Did it once. Big mistake never to be repeated. - Jules Akers, Stockport Sounds like your wife had a lucky escape. Talk about bitter.
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Depends what you want in life. If you want children, best to have a partner with whom you can share the important job of raising good people. But I know a lot of women who don't want children. We dont' have the mothering gene in us. And yet, we don't feel the need to run after men either as there aren't big man-shaped holes in our lives. Most of us are self-employed, and we have hobbies and interests. Most of us don't even have TVs. We know what do with with our lives. And men aren't necessary.
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I had broke up with a long term partner in my early 30's. That relationship was going nowhere and never produced any children though I was on the pill, we never discussed children. When we broke up I spent 5 years having a good time e.g. holidays all over the world but by my late 30's I was missing the fact that I didn't have a soulmate and family of my own. I started to envy other couples walking hand in hand and pushing prams. I assumed that if and when I did meet him he would have about 3 kids or so but that didn't bother me. Then out of the blue I met my now husband who as it happened was divorced but did not have any kids of his own! We now have two children who we both dote on. I really believe in fate and also wishing for what you want to help it along.
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welcome to the world of 'miss picky' looking for mr perfect, despite not being perfect themselves, they want guys who earn over £50,000, drive audi's, have jobs in the city, and are tall, handsome, blue eyed, with tans. when 'miss picky' realises that they aren't perfect enough to attract 'mr perfect' 'miss picky' becomes 'miss pick-anybody'
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- Ann, London, 11:38
It all depends on what you REALLY want out of a relationship, Ann. Start with asking that question honestly. Next, understand that, despite all this "soul mate" bilge womenâs brains have been filled with for years (nearly as destructive as the "multitasking" myth) there is NO perfect partner. Even if you BOTH seemed perfect in every way to each other, time will change you, sometimes in opposite directions.
Nowadays thereâs too much focus on "romantic" (physical) attraction being the prime thing, whereas inherent COMPLIMENTARITY - not SIMILARITY - is the key to long term success.
Also, choose your "friends" wisely as ALL are open to physical temptation at some (low?) point.
Remember that early on you are meeting each otherâs representatives, so many months - living together - will show the "real you`sâ.
Sad fact is, some women are attracted to "bad" man - itâs a "comfortable with" thing, based on t heir infatuations during childhood. Good hunting!
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That article and the words used is like something out of the Dark Ages and doesn't sit well with me at all especially the bit where it says 'And, despite their age, many women are opting for the big white wedding they dreamed of as a little girl'. Whaaaaaat? It's like the writer is trying to make out that for an entire woman's life, she is desperately wishing and hoping and praying that a man will put a 'ring on it'. More like 'put a sock in it' and stop making women out to be so needy and vacuous. - zz, uk, 12/6/2012 7:46 Believe me, it is not men that think of, or are interested in, a big and lavish wedding that has to be expensive, romantic and perfect. It is not men that tend to think of "where this relationship is going". So despite all your feminist hypertensive outbursts, the article is right. It is women that usually and overwhelmingly think of weddings, take that to the bank and live off the interest.
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- Charles, London, 12/6/2012 7:23 Lovely post, shame there wasnt more decent men in the world like this man :) - Mandy , UK~~~~~ Why thank you Mandy ! You just made my day ! xx
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- Charles, London, 12/6/2012 7:23 Lovely post, shame there wasnt more decent men in the world like this man :) - Mandy , UK~~~~~ Why thank you Mandy ! You just made my day ! xx
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