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Legit excuse for turning down a date?

JimDandy

Well-known member
May 17, 2004
3,082
656
113
68
Lower Mainland, B.C.
Wait until you are my age (early 60s but all the SPs I see tell me I look younger - they would not lie would they lol ?) and then you will just stop asking out women, if you are like me. I find I am almost entirely attracted to women 20+ years younger than me ( a side effect of seeing relatively young SPs ) and it really is not appropriate to ask out women that much younger unless you are famous or wealthy ( preferably both ), neither of which applies to me ;-(

Having said that, about 6 months ago I was having a pleasant conversation with a young lady (25 to 30 years old) working in a coffee shop. We really seemed to make a connection. I briefly forgot about our age difference and asked if she might be interested in sharing a coffee or a meal some time. She said yes and I gave her my # and asked her to contact me, in that way she could just not contact me if she was just being polite. I really did think she would call/text ( no fool like an old fool ) but she did not. I had reason to be back in the coffee shop a few weeks later. She brought up that she had lost my # but had found it again, implying that she still intended to contact me. I said something to the effect that she did not need to make an excuse, in a friendly "I understand" kind of way. After that we spoke several more times and we were pleasant with each other each time, but she never did contact me. She may not be in Vancouver any longer since her visa was about to run out when I saw her last, which was several months ago.

JD
 

ddcanz

curmudgeon
Feb 27, 2012
2,689
19
38
right here and now
There's this cute assistant property manager for the downtown office tower I work in. They manage a couple of buildings. She knows me because we she was in for a meeting that one of our staff requested regarding emergency procedures. I was there because I'm the fire warden for our floor since I don't travel like our other staff do, so I'm generally always there.

I got the courage to ask her for coffee. I prefaced it that I was going to ask her a mildly annoying question and it was nothing to do with the building. I clearly caught her off guard as she hesitated for 2-3 seconds. I said I told you it was mildly annoying. She gave a laugh and then said well, you're a tenant in the building and I work for the building so....

I can't remember if she finished the sentence off or not when I said sure, no problem. She gave me the thanks for asking line.

If she was seeing someone, she'd probably would have just said that. I later thought about it and figured she was possibly fumbling around for an excuse, although at the time I thought she might have been debating whether or not to say yes. I was being optimistic when she didn't flat out say no!

So my question is - is that a legit excuse? I'm thinking it's not necessarily so - I do not deal with the building/landlord whatsoever, i.e. I'm not at a level in our company where I deal with the landlord regarding building issues, etc. etc. The most would be me pointing out an elevator issue (i.e. we got stuck for a minute before we pried open the doors)

Opinions?

PS - what's the deal with the Perb time stamp?? It was 2:10am when I posted.
How old are you anyway?
Still in grade school?
Asking if a rejection is legitimate?
Obviously in this case it certainly was- pretty sure she did herself a huge solid passing you up if this is the sort of thing you dwell on and need to reach out about.

PS - And your ".. I told you it was mildly annoying.." remark?
Women just LOVE being told......
 

clu

Active member
Oct 3, 2010
1,270
14
38
Vancouver
... I was having a pleasant conversation with a young lady (25 to 30 years old) working in a coffee shop. We really seemed to make a connection. I briefly forgot about our age difference and asked if she might be interested in sharing a coffee ...
Meaning absolutely no disrespect to your story, I'm inexplicably amused at the idea of asking a person working at a coffee shop out for coffee. :)
 

sybian

Well-known member
Dec 23, 2014
3,559
916
113
Kamloops B.C.
Meaning absolutely no disrespect to your story, I'm inexplicably amused at the idea of asking a person working at a coffee shop out for coffee. :)
Yeah I caught that one as well, and had a good chuckle...
JimDandy....you might be surprised how many younger women are interested ( legitimately) in seeing a Gentleman 10 or 20 years their senior.
I've dated more women 15 to 20 years younger, than where in my own age bracket...
 

rlock

Well-known member
May 20, 2015
2,287
1,370
113
A plain & clear "no" or "yes" should be all a woman ever needs, without having to muddy things with any conditional ambiguities, or resorting to rejection overkill. A woman shouldn't have to squirt ink like an octopus trying to escape.
That's pure idealism though, I know it's not what most ladies experience - far too many jerks out there, not how the world works right now. (Noting that "how the world works" does not actually work.)

I just figured:
If a clear and respectful "no" has been delivered, the ball is in his court; if the guy then throws a tantrum, that's his fault, not hers, and proves she was wise to decline him. If he takes the clear "no" like a man, he may be a dateless man, but at least still a man.

Most guys do respect honesty. Sociopaths neither appreciate it nor are capable of it. And they can't imagine not getting what they want. They're the ones who fuck it up for the rest.

In the meantime, this thread just confirms for me it's generally better when the women do the asking.
 
Last edited:

Abby Ryds

I'm here to please u
Oct 15, 2018
117
1
16
Burnaby
no

There's this cute assistant property manager for the downtown office tower I work in. They manage a couple of buildings. She knows me because we she was in for a meeting that one of our staff requested regarding emergency procedures. I was there because I'm the fire warden for our floor since I don't travel like our other staff do, so I'm generally always there.

I got the courage to ask her for coffee. I prefaced it that I was going to ask her a mildly annoying question and it was nothing to do with the building. I clearly caught her off guard as she hesitated for 2-3 seconds. I said I told you it was mildly annoying. She gave a laugh and then said well, you're a tenant in the building and I work for the building so....

I can't remember if she finished the sentence off or not when I said sure, no problem. She gave me the thanks for asking line.

If she was seeing someone, she'd probably would have just said that. I later thought about it and figured she was possibly fumbling around for an excuse, although at the time I thought she might have been debating whether or not to say yes. I was being optimistic when she didn't flat out say no!

So my question is - is that a legit excuse? I'm thinking it's not necessarily so - I do not deal with the building/landlord whatsoever, i.e. I'm not at a level in our company where I deal with the landlord regarding building issues, etc. etc. The most would be me pointing out an elevator issue (i.e. we got stuck for a minute before we pried open the doors)

Opinions?

PS - what's the deal with the Perb time stamp?? It was 2:10am when I posted.
No is a one word sentence. Took me 30 + years to figure out. i get rejected a lot but my ego still hurts sometimes.
 
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