A young woman has revealed how she had to text a
friend to call her and pretend there was an emergency just so she could
leave a horrible date with a man she had met online.
Cara Doumbe who was 18 at the time of the said date in 2019, said she was not a fan of using social media to meet prospective lovers but decided to give it a try.
She revealed how she used Tinder and got a guy, but regretted it afterwards.
Read her interview with Metro UK below…
"I installed Tinder right after I turned 18 in 2019, following the advice of some friends who thought I should give it a try for ‘experimental purposes’. Honestly, I wasn’t so excited to use dating apps for the first time, but I also wanted to form my own opinion on them."
“So,
a few weeks after the start of this online madness, I decided that my
next match with good vibes would be the last one getting my time and
attention before looking for dates elsewhere.”
Despite
refusing to get my hopes up, I still ended up being pleasantly surprised
with my supposed ‘last attempt’. His profile really stood out and you
could sense that he put effort into it, which is pretty rare on Tinder
for a guy. I liked the ‘free spirit’ impression that came from his style
and pictures; he looked fun to be around."
“We shared a
common passion for fashion, football, and sarcastic humour, so we
quickly decided to move our chat to Instagram where we discussed
clothing trends and sport news we were both passionate about for days
and days.”
"After two and a half weeks, we decided to meet.
What a mistake.
The first minutes of our meeting were awkward to say the least, with me actively trying to find a proper topic to recover the chemistry we seemed to have had online.
I slowly realised that his apparent shyness was actually him just waiting for subjects of conversation that he could monopolise.
He even had more things to say than me about my preference for cappuccino, which apparently came from my childhood… the more you know. He repeatedly cut me off to start ranting – not even bothering to pretend to be interested by my opinions and interests.
I convinced myself that this lack of balance was a form of clumsiness and not intentional, hoping that I hadn’t left my house on a cloudy day for nothing.
I slowly realised that his apparent shyness was actually him just waiting for subjects of conversation that he could monopolise
‘You look so much better in real life’, he suddenly blurted out of nowhere, shaking my previous hesitations away.
I
thought that he had finally realised that a date should be a two-way
street, until he added the words that transformed the whole thing into a
nightmare.
‘You’re really not photogenic. Me neither, and that’s why I don’t take pictures of my face’.
Needless
to say, I recalled the selfies I put on my Tinder profile in absolute
horror. I was embarrassed and deeply insecure about my appearance.
Not
wanting to appear irritated in case he would react poorly and further
dig a deep hole, I ignored what he thought was a compliment and moved
on.
However, the crude and unnecessary comments did not stop
there – from asking me with sexual undertones if I was flexible, to
criticising my short height, his mouth never seemed to close.
I’m not one to give up, but my patience was wearing thin and my mind was subconsciously racing to find a way to get rid of him.
Desperately
searching for a sign from the universe, I looked through the window and
saw that rain was on the verge of falling – the perfect excuse to cut
the date short.
When the time came to pay, his credit card was
declined. He then looked at me, with an absolutely relaxed look, and
asked me what ‘we’ should do.
I’m not sure what made me pay
his order without much questioning – either foolishness or some good old
Sunday Christian charity – but at least it brought me closer to going
home.
‘He can’t do any worse’, I thought as we started walking to the Metro after he ‘forgot’ to thank me for covering his order.
When
rain started pouring, he snatched my umbrella from my hand… minutes
after telling me that its fabric seemed cheap and that he didn’t want to
share it with me.
I couldn’t even string a sentence together.
He was so unbothered that he didn’t even catch my stunned expression
and continued ranting in the void.
That was it – I couldn’t
spend one more minute with this odd character. I wasn’t even pissed off
at this point, I just felt jaded and tired.
I discreetly
texted a friend asking her to help me to get me out of this situation
ASAP. He prevented me from hopping on the Metro for way too long with
his foolishness.
She called me almost right away, pretending that she needed me for a family emergency – her dog’s disappearance.
It was hard to stay composed when I had to tell him the lie after hanging up.
She actually lived 30 minutes away from my town and did not have a dog, but she got so carried away with her imagination as desperate times call for desperate measures.
Thankfully it worked and I left relieved. He didn’t seem puzzled by my sudden exit at all and told me that these things happen.
A few hours later, while I was conflicted with my attitude and my unwillingness to directly confront him, he texted to thank me for a ‘successful date’.
My regrets immediately disappeared as clearly,
none of my words would have helped against this senseless guy. I vaguely
texted him that our date was an original experience for me, but that
work prevented me from focusing on dating. Not an absolute lie, but not
the full truth either.
No comments:
Post a Comment