|
Ask her for a valentines date the night before, see what happens
FWIW dh and I are happily married and we have never made a big deal about Valentine’s Day. It’s not a requirement for a good relationship. |
| I think you can do better because she is not a catch. A woman in her late 30s never married who would rather spend time with friends than her bf yeah she is not a catch. Let her drown in her delusional mind that she is such a catch that snapping her fingers in her late 30s mind you will usher in an army of tall beautiful and rich men who will fight among each other for the one in a lifetime pleasure to date her. |
Is the ring for you? |
This. Do the 13th or 15th. |
This. I remember making some sort of lame excuse to my then-boyfriend of 8 weeks (now husband of 18 yrs) that I had to study....then had a Sex in the City marathon with my roommates. Vday is a lot of pressure for a new relationship. And I felt that way at 26. Luckily my bf didn't get offended and we just had dinner a few days later. |
| Talk to her. Valentines Day is not a big deal to me. The two of you just need to get on the same page. You assumed she would want to do something and she may have viewed it as just a Friday evening. Either way is okay but you have to tell each other what is important to each of you. The other person has no way of knowing. |
Ding ding ding. Especially since it's a Saturday night. Also, going out for Valentine's Day is amateur hour. It's generally an awful experience. And be glad she doesn't treat her friends like backup plans and cancel on them because a boy asked her out. |
|
She’s not into you
Seeing others Valentines isn’t a big deal to her |
|
She’s just not that into you.
She might be put off by someone having such strong feelings about having to observe a Hallmark holiday. |
I watch women’s basketball. Softball, too. I am male. Does that make me a lesbian? Can we not with these ridiculous tropes? |
|
It's lame to bail on friends for a guy. Most of us learn this lesson in middle school.
And a late-30s woman is probably past the point of wanting to make a big deal over VDay, so just ask her to dinner on the 13th instead. |
| If you are feeling like her friends, hobby, job, etc. all come before you, then that’s just who she is. If that isn’t what you are looking for, then find someone else. Otherwise, you two will just make each other miserable. She will always feeling like you are smothering her, and you will always feel like she is retreating from you. |
I assumed they were lesbians and OP was a woman. |
Feb 14 is just a day. You can take her on a date in the 11th or the 16th and still be romantic. |
| Maybe she thinks that Valentine's Day is a meaningless Hallmark holiday. You say you often plan nice dates for the two of you--I'm sure she appreciates that, as well as the everyday kindnesses you likely show her. Ask her out for another day. The date doesn't matter, it's the spirit of loving kindness that does. |