I went on a date with a guy my friend set me up with. He showed up with flowers—real roses, not a quick grocery-store grab. Dinner was perfect. He was charming, opened doors, pulled out my chair, and made me laugh.
When the check came, I reached for my wallet. Big mistake.
“Absolutely not,” he said firmly, sliding his card down. “A man pays on the first date.”
I left thinking it was one of the best first dates I’d ever had. I went to bed smiling, convinced I might have met someone truly special.
But the next morning, everything changed.
When I checked my phone, I saw he had sent me a Venmo request—for half the bill. My jaw dropped. Along with it, a message:
“Had a great time last night! Just think it’s fair we split things equally if we’re serious about dating.”
I stared at the screen, torn between laughing and fuming. The same man who insisted “a man pays on the first date” couldn’t even last twelve hours before backtracking.
I didn’t reply. Instead, I canceled any thought of a second date.
Because here’s the truth: it wasn’t about the money—it was about honesty and consistency. And if he couldn’t stand by his word on day one, why should I believe he’d stand by me later?
Sometimes, the red flags wave quietly the morning after.