+1000 This is mistake number 1 and is to be avoided. Same with religion. Keep it to yourself on the first date. |
| It’s seems like maybe you’re coming into the first date with a checklist of items you need to get through. Don’t approach it that way. Approach it like you just met the person (bc you did!) and you are falling into a natural conversation with them. Say you met a guy at a grocery store and started chatting. Would you immediately feel the need to clear the air re politics? I doubt it. Would you feel the need to talk about your travels straight away? No, you’d just follow the flow of the conversation. |
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You sound like an interesting and accomplished woman! Are you swiping right on similar men? Anything less and those men will be intimidated.
Next, wear formfitting clothing, as said above... men are visual. Last, have a drink! I can come off as reserved and unapproachable ... so I always make sure I look sexy and I smile a lot and I have a drink to loosen up a little. I usually get asked out on 2nd dates. GL! |
| Try a dating coach for feedback |
Agree with this. First date should be no more than an hour. Coffee, one drink, etc. Do not commit to a dinner or anything more than an hour. |
| I’m an attorney and I use to lie about this on my profile and claim to be something else the first date or two. I think it helped. |
Agree, and if they stay after their 20s, and get married/have kids, they move to close-in Bethesda. — female languishing in 20816 |
Ick. |
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Not to sound mean, but if guys are not asking you out again...then you're either 1) not attractive or 2) not mentally stimulating.
Men, and dating in general, require two things: sexual attraction or mental stimulation. For men just sexual attraction is good enough. |
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What do you mean, sometimes you get up the courage to ask on the first date if you will see Each other again?
That sounds....odd. Don’t do that. That’s his job, to ask you out again. That makes you seem a little desperate. If you want to send a thanks, it was fun meeting you! Kinda message afterwards that is fine, but don’t ask whether he’s going to want to see you again on the first date. That’s weird. |
Hey look, I've found the problem. You're bragging about how great you are, and then talking about how you love traveling. So what they hear is "I think I'm awesome, so you should think I'm worth you taking me on fancy trips." I'm sure you'll say that's not how you mean it, but that's how it's coming across. |
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Try an experiment on your next few dates -- only ask questions and listen and ask follow ups, and only respond to his questions. Don't tell stories unprompted.
Just try it and see what happens. |
Every Basic B*tch OLD profile has "love to travel" in it. Also, you love to laugh, and you love to eat food, right? Tell me something I don't know. |
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Maybe these guys are doing you a favor. If you are a talkative person who wants someone politically and religiously compatible who will listen to her talk about her travels, then be blunt about that in your profile and try to look for people who fit the bill. The guys you are dating are clearly not the right ones, and going on 2-3 more dates with them just keeps you away from whoever will be right for you.
If you really like some of the ones you have dated, though, and you would want to change your conversational habits to be in a relationship with them, then you should change, possibly even with the help of a dating/social skills coach. I get it--I was raised in NY and my family are loud and chatty and interrupt A LOT. I have had to retrain myself a lot to communicate will with others, and I still have a long way to go. Luckily I found a spouse who will put up with it (and who now does some of the things I'm trying to cut back on myself, sigh...) but it's up to you whether you want to change or want to hold out for someone who doesn't want to change. Either is ok! |
That you love "exploring the city" |