It started like something out of a romantic movie. Her brother had set her up with one of his pickleball friends — Andy, a polite, well-spoken man who had “been single too long.”
After some hesitation, she agreed to go. Andy showed up at her door with flowers. At dinner, he was attentive and respectful — pulling out her chair, asking questions about her work, and never interrupting. He even insisted on driving her home afterward, saying, “A gentleman always makes sure his date gets home safely.”
As she walked inside and waved to him from the window, she thought she might have finally found a man who was truly different.
But the next morning shattered that illusion.
At 7:13 a.m., her phone buzzed with a message from Andy. Expecting a sweet “Good morning” text, she opened it — only to find a long paragraph accusing her of being “ungrateful” for not inviting him in after the date.
He wrote that he’d “spent good money” on dinner, that “any decent woman” would’ve shown appreciation, and that he “wasn’t looking to be used for free meals.” The text ended with a chilling line:
“I’m done wasting my time on women who don’t understand how dating works.”
She sat there, stunned. The charming, polite man from last night had vanished — replaced by someone entitled and manipulative.
Later, she told her brother what happened. His face fell. “You’re not the first woman he’s said that to,” he admitted quietly.
The experience was a wake-up call — a reminder that sometimes the red flags don’t wave on the first date. Sometimes, they arrive the next morning — neatly packaged in a text message.
Her takeaway?
“Politeness doesn’t equal respect. Real gentlemen don’t keep score — they give kindness without expecting it as currency.”