Is it possible for a man in his 40s to become friends with a female coworker who is college aged? And I am talking about them being friends not "friends"
You've already had this thread a couple of days ago, fuck off
I wouldn't.
what the fuck would you have in common apart from work?
either you're immature or borderline pedo
do you expect her to introduce her "cool, way older friend" to her friends?
fucking idiot
>>17422434
Not at all, they can be friendly towards each other but as actual friends? No. They share nothing in common at all. They are two totally different levels of maturity, completely incompatible. The only way they could be "friends" is if the older man is immature or a borderline pedo as another anon said, or the girl just thinks much too highly of herself and thinks she has anything in common with a guy that old because she's "mature for her age", which wouldn't be a real friendship either way.
>>17422434
The biggest thing is what you may have in common.
I'm in my late 50's and worked with a woman in her 20's and we became good friends. Part of the reason was she was adopted and I'm an adoptive parent so a lot of our conversations, including going out t lunch together, centered around that (and technology interests that we had in common).
But in reality, we had far more many differences than things in common.
>>17423962
Not OP but is this possible say if both parties do not share something in common but are interested in each other's culture?
>>17422434
Sure.
The majority of manchilds on here will disagree with you but there is no problem with it.
I've had much older friends for most of my life. Even as a teenager I would seek out older mentors.
Some people just mature faster than others and are capable of having mature friendships without age restrictions.
>>17424034
Shut up this isn't true