If I've learned anything from sex scandals, it's that texting somebody you're hoping to sleep with can be dangerous. Especially if you're married. Or famous.
But this isn't about dumb Tiger Woods. This is about the rest of us, and those normal, baby-step texts surrounding a first date that can often go horribly awry. Before, you'd just get a girl's number, and if it was real, you'd set up a date with her and see her then. But now we have texting/IMing/emailing and, good lord, Facebooking each other. There are so many opportunities to be misunderstood!
These days, if you're going on a date with someone new, chances are you've "talked" to this person electronically before you even get to make awkward conversation about your "crazy" work week over salmon croquettes and the second least expensive bottle of wine on the menu (can't look completely cheap!).
But I implore you: stop. Don't text me, IM me, Gchat me or -- heaven forbid -- Facebook me after we've established our first-date time and place.
Let me explain.
It dawned on me recently on a particularly silent first date, while chewing a mouthful of appetizer, that I'd already been on a first date with this girl. Not literally, of course -- just without the rubbery calamari. She and I had emailed about a half dozen times, swapped multiple texts and, in a moment of weakness, exchanged a minor flurry of G-chats.
It's not that I had nothing left to say to her -- just nothing within the realm of easy, first-date rapport. Have you ever done this? Just blazed through all the simple biographical stuff before your first meeting, only to be left on your first date staring holes into a breadbasket?
Texts -- the 'Spoiler Alert' of Sexual Tension
Let me propose something radical here -- I say we stop with the incessant emailing, IMing, texting and Facebooking (more on this in a sec) before we actually know each other. A simple, quick phone call establishing the logistics of the date is best. But no one likes phone calls anymore! God forbid you call someone and leave a voicemail! You might as well heave a bag of caramelized rat feces through their bedroom window. (To be fair, I haven't actually called a woman before a first date since everyone was using flip-phones and wearing bootcut jeans, but I'm going back to it.)
The first date is supposed to be an adventure, right? There should be a bit of improv, and the emotional highs and lows that come with finding out that somebody is allergic to fennel, or that they also love "Ghostbusters II." I want the chance to charm my way back into your good graces after I casually comment that Ivy League schools are asshat factories only to find out you went to Princeton.
Isn't half the fun the blind grope for commonalities and the strange conversational wormholes that form from a piece of surprising information ("Your dad's a Southern Baptist and a GLAAD member? INTERESTING! Why don't you tell me more about it!")?
Pre-date texts can be exciting, in that they're often short, sweet and a little bit of courtship. But too many faceless communiqués dampens the potential intrigue and sets a dangerous precedent. Also, it's difficult to know when to stop. Who wants to be the last person to send a text, especially if you took a flier with a fart joke? There's nothing worse than hitting 'send' and enduring nothing but hours of silence after. (Cue countless women writing me telling me no Real Man would send a fart joke. Um, you're probably right.)
I Don't Want to Be Your Facebook Friend
Facebook may be the biggest minefield of all. Even though I don't communicate a lot through Facebook, my social networking presence is still a random compendium of information about me, including embarrassing "tagged" photos of yours truly holding over-large cocktails. It isn't so much a comprehensive representation of who I actually am than proof that my friends take too many pictures. If you're a potential date and are cruising my page, you may take the photo from that one time I wore a sombrero as cause for concern that I have a closet full of coordinating ponchos.
What do you do if your prospective date friend requests you? Stall. Unless you manage your Facebook page with German precision, I highly advise waiting a bit until you let someone into the wild world of your Thanksgiving 2009 photo album.
Tell me if I'm being a Luddite about all of this. I agree -- there's something moderately relieving about getting a bit of banter going and determining that you actually have things in common before that first date. But I think there is a limit to the amount of info you want before you actually face someone, and I think that limit is low.
The first date isn't supposed to be easy -- it's supposed to a little mysterious and totally nerve-wracking. The heady brew of the unknown can be all-too-easily diluted by electronic, low-risk conversation beforehand. Correct me if I'm wrong, but I think those innocent texts, emails, IMs and Facebooks have the potential to turn a scary, sexy, high-value risk into a contest of who can chew the quietest.
[Redacted] writes for Lemondrop when he's not breaking fragile hearts and avoiding Victorian diseases all over the Eastern seaboard. You can send him hate mail and love letters here.













Comments:
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Monday 21 December
By Marguerite A. Bien-Aime
Sho you right!
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Monday 21 December
By Shannon
I think being able to adapt and change with the times is also attractive.
Being stuck on the "old ways" and refusing to evolve socially is a turn-off.
Think of how many old people you remember giving similar arguments.
Learn new skills, move forward.
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Tuesday 22 December
By Em
Oh blah blah- why are people so afraid to talk to each other. I'm 26, and I'd give myself a b+ if I was appraising. Look at my stupid picture my friends took of me blasted and riding a mechanical bull at a bachelorette party. I know I look awful. But I can't worry about keeping up with who look sat my facebook and when. I'm fun and witty and incredibly smart and have a great job, and if you are going to judge me on some bad pictures that you'll eventually see, I don't want you anyway. Hopefully, they'll just give us some fodder to talk about...
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Tuesday 22 December
By Stephanie
I had a guy ask for my facebook instead of my phone number. While I thought this was exciting at the time and the way that my generation was now trying to date having grown up with all of these technologies(I'm 22), I realized having his facebook took out all the thrill. He knew all the easy things about me once he got to my page and I knew the same of him. Worse, I also found out he was seeing someone else and trying to hide me (deleting reply wall posts?!). All this extra information and new ways of being in touch are creating all kinds of artificial forms of touch. hard to know who someone really is through these mechanisms, even after their 32nd status up date of being in the kitchen and now the living room.
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Wednesday 23 December
By Luke Fitzwilliam
If you don't hit it off with someone face-to-face, it's not because you emailed/texted/faxed/phoned too much before your first date. If it was gonna work out, it would work out regardless. And vice versa. People love to use outside factors (and "modern" life) as a crutch. It's chemistry! That said, it's nice to hear a guy making these silly excuses for once.
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Tuesday 22 December
By Dan
why are 5 year olds now writing articles?
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Thursday 24 December
By luckygirljen
I think that Facebook for the most part can show a person's real side. I agree that before a first date, it is a bit too soon. But if you hit it off either friends or more it is ok too add them.
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Saturday 26 December
By olewade
The requests that I don't understand are the friend requests from the girls my son dates (especially after their first date). What's up with that?
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Tuesday 29 December
By eva
lol.... ,thats true , I loved the article :)
sincerily .Eva
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Tuesday 29 December
By bryze
Touche...this was a much needed & rather insightful article...I have myself been going back & forth with an old crush of mine from school via Facebook & have no idea what our conversation would be like face to face considering that we've basically covered just about everything imaginable from family,friends,dislikes,bad experiences..etc.Though I do think if you are compatible you will always have something to do & or talk about...but letting that person know your entire life story before your 1st date is most likely going to hinder the mystery & excitment of it all...mystery,butterflies in the stomach,nervousness & saying goofy stuff is all apart of a perfect 1st date.I mean I would rather be face to face with the person in question when I find out the things we have in common...those momments are precious memories if that is your soul mate!
Thanx a lot for this much needed insight...I will most definitely use this for future reference!:-)
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Tuesday 29 December
By bryze
If in fact a 5yr old did write this article...he or she sure does have a bright future ahead of themself...lol!
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Monday 11 January
By zabette831
I can't believe I'm about to say this, but I agree: the first date shouldn't be easy! It is nerve wracking, and that tells you that its a worthwhile endeavor. If you want easy, stay home and watch bad TV on your couch! Also, for me, if the first date is also a blind date, I really don't want to have established some kind of false rapport through texting, IMing and all that, only to find out the guy has three heads and is going to flirt with the waitress all night. That's a lot of wasted effort! Lets text and all after the first date when we're excited about the possibilities we discovered on that nerve wracking but fun date!
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Wednesday 27 January
By Angie
Is the author of the article REALLY that lazy or unimaginative? Or maybe just bad at small talk?? You can text with a person as little or as much as you want over 5 years and not really know them.....if you texted moderately before the first date, then when you meet them, you can still ask them about their siblings, or the town they grew up in, or the bravest/kindest/funniest/most outrageous/craziest thing/etc they ever did....
It all goes back to the best advice my mother ever gave me: If a guy really likes you, he will make it happen, whatever it is.
If you are interested in more than just getting your dates panties, you will MAKE THE EFFORT.
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