Only if you share your girlfriend with your DH. |
I agree that it was kind of tacky but I wouldn't rule out a second date just because of it - especially if you felt like there was any chemistry. I'm big on good manners but I am somewhat uncomfortable with a guy paying for drinks/dinner on a first date, especially if it's a really expensive place. I grew up very poor and this was very difficult for a lot of guys. Now, I know this guy is Big Law but I'm still uncomfortable with it because I don't want to feel like I owe anyone anything. If there are subsequent dates, I don't mind so much because there's a mutual attraction and I know him better. I also don't mind treating him to things. Weird, I know. |
Guy paying made more sense when the male was the primary provider.
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Oh. heck. no. I would have been willing to cut the guy some slack if he has been (as some of the pps have mentioned) a poor college student or entry level/first job at a non-profit saving the environment or abused children or whatever. But a Biglaw guy both makes decent money and is sophisticated enough to understand how to impress someone. (Not that other people aren't sophisticated too, just that to make partner you have to attract clients. To attract clients, you have to know how to make a good impression. It's just a safe bet this particular guy has some pretty good people skills in order to make it where he is career-wise.) Anyway, I can assure you that if this guy was over the moon for you he would have picked up the tab. This is the dating stage where the people who like each other try to make a positive impression. Even if he is totally enlightened and egalitarian, his people skills are good enough for him to know that many women might interpret not paying the check as cheap. He doesn't know you well enough to know if you will or won't think that, so why is he taking the chance? |
I can't remember a first date where the man did not insist on paying, even though I always offer. I thought it was part of trying to impress the woman, somehow saying 'I'm the man, I can take care of you'. I know this sounds slightly caveman, but it is what it is. So, either he doesn't care too much about impressing you, or he thinks that money is not part of making the impression. What would bother me more is his sentence: that he always prefers to split on first date. It's like I'm still not worthy enough of having my part of the dinner covered, or haven't been elevated to a worthy investment of 50-100 dollars that I may have consumed. I feel that it is particularly true if he chose the dining location. |
I'd definitely take it as a sign he's going on dates with a bunch of different people and not really that interested. |
As a guy, I am turned off by you being turned off because I took you up on your offer to split. My rule of thumb is that if I ask you out, I pay on the first date. In fact, I recently went out with a single mom and offered to pay for the babysitter. I told her that it should not be totally her responsibility. It can be an awkward situation in this day and age and what I like is the woman helping out on subsequent dates. For example, we go to a movie, I pay for the tickets and she offers to cover the snacks or we get a coffee afterwards and she says, my treat. |
Turnoff. |
As an old, well paid timekeeper, he should know that time is money. No second date for him! |
Well, yes. Yes, it does. At least according to a PP. |
I didn't read into that at all. |
+1 |
I have a male friend who has done this (not automatically paid on the first date) and he just doesn't know that it's better to pay. I had to explain that to him, and he's been better about it.
I'm extremely independent - paid for my own college, own my own home, and I'm great about paying on dates. But I tend to let the guy pay on the first date because it seems to be the norm and some guys feel weird if you don't let them pay. (I'll generally pick up the after-dinner drinks or pay for dinner on the 3rd date.) I do always offer, though, and 99% of guys will not let me pay. |
In yuppieland, dating is a job interview. |
Do you grow your own food? Make your own clothes? Survive comfortably without electricity? If so, the congrats. I believe you. If not, then you aren't really as independent as you think, and you should really stop wearing that slogan as a badge of honor. That's probably why you are still dating around. |