40-Year-Old Man Has Too Much Fun With College Students, Wife Steps In

A supportive partner shouldered the household bills for nearly a decade while her boyfriend returned to college close to 40, chasing the degree he missed after high school. Progress came with strong grades and solid plans ahead, yet tension rose when he bonded with early-20s classmates who saw him as one of their own.

He dove into the missed college parties, late nights, and sleepovers, leaving chores untouched and her handling everything alone during long workdays. Gentle talks failed, so she quietly asked one friend to give him space for focus and responsibilities.

A woman supported her boyfriend through college at nearly 40, but can’t stand his partying with young friends.

40-Year-Old Man Has Too Much Fun With College Students, Wife Steps In
Not the actual photo.

'AITA for revealing my bf's real age to his college friends?'

I am 40 and my bf is turning 40 too as well very soon. We been a couple for almost a decade now, living together since right before covid.

When the pandemic hit, he lost his job and I kept us afloat with my own salary while he tried to get by,

until he decided to go back to college because he never got any degree after high school.

We discussed it, I was ok with him not working in order to support his studies.

At first he really struggled with focusing and concentrating and almost gave up

but I noticed his improvements, encouraged him, and now he really is on a good track for excellent grades.

Later this year he will get this degree and has already some good ideas about what to do after.

What really has been bugging me lately, is the fact that for the past year he been going out with some "friends" he made at college.

Literally dudes in their early 20s, young adults, while he is twice their age.

Now, he can really pass for way younger than he is (you know that sub "13 or 30"?)

And I guess they took him for a late 20 something. What initially started with "I am going out to study with them" ended up him crashing

at somebody's place drunk because they partied too hard. I know he is not cheating on me, I follow them on Instagram and I see what they do.

Just guys being dudes I guess. The problem is I need him functioning because we have stuff to do around the house and I rely on him since I am...

We don't have kids, but you know, commitments and errands like adults.

When I confronted him about his behavior, he defended himself saying that he never got to experience the "college life" and he just wanted to have some fun.

I was ok with it initially but as the degree is approaching they really are taking it too far.

Now he is even talking about going for a vacation with them this summer. I was like "excuse me? Vacation with teenagers now?

Maybe you should bring me for supporting you during all this mess" he said he would,

but wanted to have one last shot at the college life he never had before parting ways forever with them.

Eventually I had enough, and I sent a message to one of the "dudes" saying if they can please leave him alone for a while,

because apparently I have to step up and be the only adult, besides he clearly cannot keep up with them and I am afraid this will affect his grades.

He cannot go out as much as they do, he has responsibilities being almost 40 and stuff.

Well, they distanced from him ever since, he was enraged when he found out and I said I would have preferred if he did it himself,

but apparently he was so enthralled by the college life that, for a moment, I really thought he self-convinced to be 20s again.

He stopped speaking to me, and said he wants to focus on his final exams.

A woman in her 40s has poured years of emotional and financial support into her boyfriend’s journey back to college after he lost his job during the pandemic. She kept things afloat, encouraged him through struggles with focus, and celebrated his progress toward a degree and better future.

Yet tensions boiled over when his new friendships with early-20s classmates turned into frequent partying, late nights, and plans that sidelined shared adult responsibilities.

Many see the boyfriend’s actions as a classic case of catching up on missed youth, especially since he can still pass for much younger. College life often involves heavy social scenes, and research shows college students frequently engage in higher levels of drinking and partying compared to non-college peers, with risks like missed classes or lower performance when binge drinking is involved.

His desire for “one last shot” at that experience before moving on makes sense on a human level. Midlife transitions frequently spark reflection on unlived paths. Yet the girlfriend’s frustration is equally valid: after years of solo financial heavy lifting and managing the home while working, she needed a functional partner, not someone regressing into carefree “guys being dudes” mode.

See also  Dad Mocked Wife’s Cooking For Years, Until She Served Him “Real” Rotten Beans

Midlife often brings career or educational pivots, with data indicating the average age for a career switch hovers around 39, and many in their 40s explore new paths for better opportunities.

Non-traditional students balancing school, work, and home life face unique pressures, and strong partner support helps, but mutual accountability remains key to avoiding burnout.

Psychologist Margie Lachman, a leading researcher on midlife development, has noted in her work that while the popular “midlife crisis” idea is often overstated, many navigate significant transitions in roles, relationships, and purpose during this stage.

She emphasizes that well-being tends to be stable or even improve longitudinally in midlife for most, rather than hitting a dramatic low, when people address challenges through adaptation rather than escape.

This perspective fits here: the boyfriend’s enthusiasm for college friends could reflect a positive drive for growth, but unchecked, it risked derailing the very goals the couple invested in together.

Neutral paths forward might include open, non-accusatory conversations setting clear boundaries around time, responsibilities, and social plans, perhaps even finding ways to blend fun with partnership, like occasional couple outings.

Ultimately, relationships thrive when both sides feel seen: the supporter deserves appreciation and teamwork, while the one reinventing himself needs space to grow without leaving the foundation behind.

Here’s what the community had to contribute:

Some users judge the OP as YTA for contacting the boyfriend’s friends and trying to interfere with his social life, calling it controlling or inappropriate.

[Reddit User] − This is tricky because your boyfriend shouldn’t have lied about his age,

but I personally think you messaging his college friends makes YTA.

Mostly because you don’t say what is slipping through the cracks because of his hanging out with them - it sounds more like you’re jealous that he is having fun...

I don’t mean anything over the top by saying jealous, I just can’t think of a better word for it.

I went back to college as a 23 year old and felt like I was ancient. My first day back someone asked me if I was a teacher.

It embarrassed me because most people my age were either graduated or about to. So I can kind of understand why he wasn’t up front with them.

Edited because I apparently have weddings on the brain and called the boyfriend husband.

loverlyone − Oof yeah, you’re not his mom. That was really controlling and inappropriate. YTA

TheSciFiGuy80 − YTA Going behind his back and doing that. Your mission was to destroy his friendship with these people.

That wasn’t going solve the problem. And now you are surprised he is mad and not talking to you? Shocker.

SgtMartinRiggs − YTA - if you had children he was pushing aside, sure, go nuclear. But as-is I think messaging the friend was absolutely nuts.

It’s great that you supported him this whole time, and maybe he’s an a__ for not being more grateful and regressing so hard.

But there’s also no way he knew your love and support was this conditional with the threat of destroying his social life.

RedshiftRedux − YTA people who seek to cause misery in others while they're experiencing joy are the worst people on this planet imo.

Some people say ESH because both the OP acted like a parent by contacting the friends and the boyfriend acted immaturely by lying about his age and partying instead of focusing on responsibilities.

See also  Her Brother Wanted Her To Delay Getting Her Driver’s License Until His Wife Passed Too, And She Refused

lilies117 − ESH Telling his friends to distance themselves from him was pretty petty and controlling.

Acting like a 20 year old out partying with the guys and going on vacation with them was pretty immature, irresponsible, and disrespectful

to the wife who is covering all the bills so he can play instead of focus on school. Did those guys even know he was married?

[Reddit User] − ESH You're an AH for acting like his mom instead of his partner.

You essentially texted his friends to say they can't play together anymore.

You've done a lot for him by stepping up financially to keep both of you afloat, but you can't control anyone but yourself.

Instead of trying to control his behavior by going around him to his friends,

you should've communicated with him directly in a non-confrontational manner

to explain why his behavior is not ok and set boundaries and expectations with him.

If nothing changes after you have a conversation with someone, it's time to reevaluate their place in your life.

I think he's also an AH for acting like he's a 20 year old and partying every day instead of focusing on school and taking care of his responsibilities.

As an almost 40 year old man, he should have his life together.

Others view the OP as NTA, arguing she is exhausted from supporting a 40-year-old man who is acting like a child and avoiding adult responsibilities.

Patient_Cockroach128 − im going to disagree with a majority of the people commenting and say NTA... it seems like to me you don’t have a boyfriend.

seems like he’s your kid or nephew or something. the way you have to mother him even though he’s extremely grown must be exhausting.

i don’t know if i would even stay with him after that embarrassing situation.

he’s a 40 year old man lying about his age hanging with college boys, prioritizing partying with kids half his age

instead of being an adult helping the woman he has been with for almost a decade...

you both live together. if he has time to do stupid college BOY sht as a grown MAN then he should've been using that time supporting the life you share...

the fact that he isn’t speaking to you because he’s all of a sudden “busy” with his schoolwork after you out him

for being an old weird fart to his college boyfriends is super childish. i really don’t understand how you want to stay with him after this.

i’d tell him to get his sht together or im leaving him. i would not want to continue supporting his ridiculous behavior...

Embarrassed_Fish_ − Wtf is wrong with everyone... NTA! Not only is she paying for it, he's 40 and should behave like an adult and not a 19 year old.

ncslazar7 − never got to experience the "college life" NTA, he's having an early mid-life crisis.

College kids that party don't have bills and mortgages like grown adults. He needs to stop being an AH and get an education, not alcohol poisoning.

In the end, this story shows how support and growth in a long-term relationship can hit bumpy patches when one partner’s midlife reinvention clashes with everyday realities.

Do you think reaching out to the friends crossed a line, or was it a necessary step to protect their shared future? How would you balance cheering on a partner’s fresh start while keeping adult commitments in check? Share your hot takes below!

Related Posts

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

© 2026 cuanhua | All rights reserved