Anonymous wrote:50lbs overweight is a deal breaker for me too. That's either a health or mental wellness issue going on that I want no part. I'm into fitness and health and expect my partner to be into those things as well. We are talking spending 2-3 hours at the gym daily, active lifestyle, growing my own foods, etc.
Anonymous wrote:I had been chatting with a woman online for several days and we agreed to meet for a drink. She had several photos on her profile, two of which were full body length. When I arrived, I almost didn't recognize here because she was about 50 pound heavier than her photos depicted. I'm not sure if they were old or if she manipulated the camera angles, etc, but I told her directly: "You don't look like your photos online and I feel like this is not a good way to start a potential relationship". She then told me that I'm a shallow jerk and that I should get to know her for who she is. I then ended the conversation and left, and blocked her.
I can't help but wonder if I was wrong to call her out, but I felt really deceived, and it wasn't the weight, but the lying and manipulation that bothered me. I know people will say that next time to talk on video chat first before the date and I'll certainly be doing that going forward. Was what I said wrong?
Anonymous wrote:Well it depends— is every single aspect of your OLD profile completely attuned to avoid being seen in a flattering light? Like does your profile add a centimeter to your height, round your salary up to the nearest $10,000, or not mention debt? If so YTA because you’re a hypocrite and you needed to be polite.
If no one could possibly feel disappointed by you in real life vs on your profile than NTA.
Anonymous wrote:She then told me that I'm a shallow jerk and that I should get to know her for who she is.
Meanwhile, she gets to meet someone who looks exactly how she expected them to look, under a premise that she's not shallow.
She's a jerk.
She then told me that I'm a shallow jerk and that I should get to know her for who she is.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You posted the same thing two weeks ago.
Nope that was me. I was decent enough to stay and even pay for the brunch.
This guy is not me. In hindsight I should have called out my fatty fatfish date and walked out / saved $100 on a go-nowhere brunch date.
But the fatty moms of dcum as expected support the fatfish lying and deceptive OLD girl geez
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You posted the same thing two weeks ago.
Nope that was me. I was decent enough to stay and even pay for the brunch.
This guy is not me. In hindsight I should have called out my fatty fatfish date and walked out / saved $100 on a go-nowhere brunch date.
But the fatty moms of dcum as expected support the fatfish lying and deceptive OLD girl geez
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I had been chatting with a woman online for several days and we agreed to meet for a drink. She had several photos on her profile, two of which were full body length. When I arrived, I almost didn't recognize here because she was about 50 pound heavier than her photos depicted. I'm not sure if they were old or if she manipulated the camera angles, etc, but I told her directly: "You don't look like your photos online and I feel like this is not a good way to start a potential relationship". She then told me that I'm a shallow jerk and that I should get to know her for who she is. I then ended the conversation and left, and blocked her.
I can't help but wonder if I was wrong to call her out, but I felt really deceived, and it wasn't the weight, but the lying and manipulation that bothered me. I know people will say that next time to talk on video chat first before the date and I'll certainly be doing that going forward. Was what I said wrong?
I do think your comment was a jerk comment. She did not “manipulate” you, she posted flattering photos. I think you really jumped to conclusions about her intent.
Anonymous wrote:You posted the same thing two weeks ago.