I will turn 40 in May. I realize that 40 is not considered old. But my problem is that I have failed to meet any of the important life milestones all my peers achieved when they were much younger.
I already missed out on dating and having sex with young women when I was young. And even if I do attract a partner in the future, because of my age, I will still have never been with a woman under 40. Additionally, I now have a hernia, abnormally low T-levels, and erectile dysfunction. So I am physically incapable of having sex even if I could attract a satisfying partner. Women my age typically have had all the children they are going to, and those children are already old enough to be in high school or college. This means that no matter what, it is too late for me to ever have any children present in my life.
I never had any career or financial success. For over a decade after graduating college I drifted from one low-paying unsatisfying dead end job to another and went through some prolonged periods of unemployment and homelessness. I have no money and own no assets or property. I do not own a home. I still rent a room in someone else's house. I cannot even rent an apartment because my credit is bad and I have evictions and broken leases on my record. I have no family, which means I cannot get any type of loan that requires a cosigner. I owe over $175K in student loan debt, and my degree is in a field that is not financially lucrative. I will be starting my first career after 40, with no previously existing savings, which means I will never be able to afford to retire.
I was vital when I was in my 20. I could walk and run for miles. I leapt over entire rows of stair every time I came down from my apartment. I may have been to clumsy to be good at sports, but I could still play volleyball or football with my friends for hours. But now I'm always tired. I feel exhausted after work every day; my body is always aching and I can't even walk properly. I weigh over 280 lbs. and I suffer from diastasis text I and an abdominal hernia. I can barely run a 100 ft lap with feeling winded and needing a break.
At some point, if I survive long enough, I'll be too old to work. But I will have no money for a retirement home and no family to take me in. What will I do then? And what about all the severe health problems I'll inevitably have by that point?
The reality is that all my best times are already behind me, and I have nothing left to look forward to in life from here on. There's nothing left for me but a slow and lonely decline toward death.