Anonymous wrote:I may be in the minority here (đź¤), but I think you had every right to call your date out.
From what you posted, it sounds like she purposely mislead you in the hopes that you wouldn’t notice or that you would like her personality so much that you would overlook her weight.
Since your initial meeting was based on deception - I can see how you would have been upset at her lack of integrity here.
She has no one but herself to blame for what you told her.
And yeesss…….
Videochat any prospective dates prior to meeting up in person!
Anonymous wrote:You could have been more diplomatic, OP. I don't think this was a situation where it's OK to hurt someone's feelings. People who deceive in their profiles generally get the message... but there's no need to be so aggressive about it.
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: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:not wrong
she posted misleading photos that do not represent her as she currently is
Anonymous wrote: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
Men see dates as paying into a sex fund. If she doesn't put out, or if you're not interested, you see it as a waste.
It's not. It's an opportunity to work on your own dating form, because y'all think you bring a lot to the table and most of you really don't. A date that doesn't "go anywhere" isn't a waste, it's an experience. It helps you refine your own lens, or reflect on what your lens is actually like.
For example, the pp is the sort of "man" who'd use "fatty fatfish" to describe a woman. That's a character defect: fatphobia. If he were smart, he'd get more than $100 worth out of some self-evaluation and empathy training which would make him more attractive to a future date.
Instead, he'll stew about how bitter he is that his $100 "investment" didn't pay out in a stranger's bedroom.
When we say "men are trash" this is the trashy behavior/mentality we're talking about, "gentlemen".
Anonymous wrote:You’re not the a-hole. She knew exactly what she was doing, posting the misleading photos. I once showed up to a date with a guy who had clearly posted photos from 8+ years prior - he looked MUCH older in person and was balding. I didn’t call him out, but that was a one and done because I resented the deception (and it was an ice cream date so it wasn’t that long and I like ice cream…). I don’t blame you for not wanting to waste your time.