[Caution: I'll probably repeat this in one or more ways as I write this response: I'm not actually directing one bit of what I'm writing toward
@Bartato; I simply believe his willingness to bravely engage in such an interchange provides an opportunity for
all of us to question our constitutional approaches to implementing plural marriage.]
Again, not an attempt at directing your behavior, Bartato, but let's continue the thought experiment. Comparing a 25-year-older
or 10-year-older woman with a 15-year-younger woman is an uneven playing field. If you're asserting that you'd put a floor on age-difference younger than you at 15 years, what about a widow with all the qualities you described who is, instead, just 15 years
older? Not only would she also be less than a generation older than you, but she'd only be 31% older than you, whereas you would be 45% older than the 33-year-old woman. (And, by the way, the 73-year-old woman is just 52% older, which is less of a ratio difference from that 45% difference between you and the 33-year-old than its 45% is from the 31% difference between you and the hypothetical 63-year-old.)
Are you limiting your marital willingness to women 33 years old or older? If not, why bring up the 15 vs 25 or 15 vs 10 comparisons? If so, though, is that 33 floor going to increase by one-year-per-year as you age year-by-year during your search for plural marriage? Part of why I ask is because, absent an unattached ready-to-get-married-tomorrow, fully-fertile, salivating-for-a-48-year-old-married-man, fully-acceptable-to-both-you-and-your-wife, entirely-compatible-with-your-household-habits-diet-and-climate 33-year-old drops out of the sky today, it is likely that significant separate chunks of time will pass before you first meet your next wife, get to know her, introduce her to the legitimacy of polygyny, court her, successfully navigate resistance from your first wife, marry your 2nd wife and then successfully impregnate her, all of which will in all likelihood take at least a
few years -- and then at her age y'all will have to deal with the very real issue of geriatric eggs and problematic pregnancies.
Bartato, I'm not directing these questions specifically to you. In fact, questions just like these are questions I actively pose to myself. I'm 68, so they end up being different in certain significant ways (e.g., not too many years ago I concluded that, despite the fact that my stepfather sired two daughters when he was 67 and 68, it just isn't the norm, and both of those daughters spent almost their entire adult lives without a living father). For sure, if a 28-year-old childless widow stranger were to knock on my door and declare that she'd heard about me from so-and-so and feels compelled by Yah to ask me to give her serious consideration to become Kristin's sister wife, as well as to beg me to do whatever I need to do to make her a biological mother, I certainly wouldn't toss her out in the street -- but I'd also just as surely accept a free gift of a winning mega lottery ticket.
Neither are going to happen.
Not for me, and in all likelihood not for any one else reading this.
To be prepared for actual possibilities, it behooves us to stop clouding our eyes with unrealistic fantasies just because we can point to anecdotal-evidence exceptions to the rules of natural law. At your age or my age, if we truly want to produce more than perhaps one child with a new wife, we would need to focus our openness on women in their early 20s in order to, by the time we'd actually be able to get through the meeting/exposure/polygamy-teaching/courting/marrying/conception process, start producing children before her womb begins the very typical process of becoming uncooperative due to lack of having been activated back when her body was programmed to do so. At my age, seeking a wife 1/3 my age puts me in Jeffrey Epstein territory in the eyes of women/girls of such a target range. At your age, seeking a wife 1/2 your age -- unless you're a high-status multimillionaire -- generally speaking would still qualify you in the eyes of those young women as a creeper.
You spoke of sexual attraction. I'll never forget having a staff of about 40 college-age men back when I was about 30 and witnessing their gut-level disgust contemplating what it would be like for one of their similar peers on another staff to have sex with his wife: he was a29-year-old graduate student; his wife was 44. (Many of us here in the age range of 48 have current 1st wives who are in the age range of 44.) The experience of watching their reaction of incomprehensibility of sexual attraction to any 44-year-old woman shy of Sophia Loren was highly instructive to me, because most of them further declared that all women over 30 were gross. I knew in an instant that, while the 44-year-old also seemed old to me at the time, she certainly had to be hot to her husband -- and that what was in store for
all of us was learning as we ourselves aged that we were entirely off-base by concluding that older women couldn't inspire our little brains down there to rise to the occasion.
Yes, it is highly preferable to be
attracted to a woman we marry, but I will also suggest (as I regularly remind myself) that it's more a reflection of our own lack of imagination than it is any attractiveness deficit on a woman's part if we can't muster up arousal with
any of Yah's delicate female creatures, no matter what age they are.
On the other hand, if one's reproductive imperative is sufficiently strong that it or belief that a third (older) woman would interfere with the proper functioning or financial capabilities of one's family, at, say, one's age of 48, then targeting women 25 years one's junior isn't entirely unreasonable (especially if one is willing to bet the farm and avoid polygyny unless one hits the jackpot), but then one also has to acknowledge (as I can promise I earlier reluctantly acknowledged) that it isn't actually the specific age difference (and probably also isn't just the reproductive-capability component) that makes a 73-year-old woman unqualified to be one's wife.
Every bit of what I'm addressing involves natural, Yah-endowed motivations, so I intend no condemnation whatsoever. I just believe it's always useful for us to be honest with ourselves
and forthright about what those motivations are.