When Letting Someone Pay for Dinner Didn’t Go as Planned

May be an image of 1 person and text that says 'I went on a date with a guy my friend set me up with. He showed up with flowers (not a grocery store bunch, actual roses). Dinner was perfect. He was charming, opened doors, and pulled out my chair. When the check CATE, I reached for my wallet. big mistake. "Absolutely not," he ne said, sliding his card down. "A man pays on the first date." walked away thinking it was one of the best first dates ever. That was until the next morning, saw that he'd sent me a when'

When my best friend Mia set me up on a blind date, I didn’t know what to expect. Eric showed up with roses and a small gift — a keychain

with my initial. At dinner he was charming, attentive, and insisted on paying the bill. I left thinking it might have been one of my best first dates.

The next morning, my phone buzzed. Expecting a sweet text, I opened it to find a professionally formatted invoice.

Eric had listed every gesture as a “service,” complete with charges and expectations: roses, gift, opening doors,

even a “guaranteed second date.” At the bottom it read: Payment is expected in full. No refunds.

Stunned, I sent a screenshot to Mia, who was equally shocked. Her boyfriend Chris, Eric’s longtime friend,

decided to respond with a fake invoice of his own — charging Eric for “wasting my time,” “introducing him to a wonderful woman: permanent block,”

and “pretending to be a gentleman: public apology.” When Eric fired back angry texts, I sent a thumbs-up emoji and blocked him.

Later, Mia laughed, “At least we’ll have this story forever.” I kept the keychain

— not as a reminder of Eric, but as the funniest souvenir from the strangest date of my life.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *