‘œThe best way to find your perfect match is to meet love halfway.’ ‘“ Author Unknown

Starbucks first dates moneyOne of our straight friends is trying to date online and in her words, ‘œIt’s been a disaster.’ Last Saturday night, she spent five miserable hours on a marathon first date.

‘œFive hours?’ I asked.

She explained they met for a casual dinner, walked around the corner to a gallery event, and then ended up in his truck for a make-out session. The guy was forty-four.

I didn’t know that people still made out in their cars. Apparently they do. Call me old. Or prudish. It’s not that I’m above it’¦ I recall plenty of roadside make out sessions when I first started dating Partner #1 but I was twentysomething and that was classified as frolicsome recreation back then. I haven’t done it since.

Anyway, our poor friend escaped his clutches and so the other night I gave my lecture on Internet dating. I consider myself a seasoned survivor’¦ after all; I was trolling the worldwide web for women long before it was mainstream.

Furthermore, Jeanine and I happen to be a ‘œPlanetOut personals’ success story and people are always surprised to learn this. In between Partner #2 and connecting with Jeanine, I had an active profile (emphasize: active!!) for almost a year.

My friend, Laura, had a profile posted at the same time and we devised this sort of dating buddy system where we compared postings and pictures of our Los Angeles pursuits. Laura (who happens to be skinnier and better looking) got more dates and needed a spreadsheet to keep all the women straight. I had my own system whereby I focused on one woman at a time.
I applied a process to my dating methodology and it went something like this:

  • If they don’t have a picture posted require a photo by email.
  • Exchange one or two emails ‘“ never any more ‘“ and then make a plan to meet. Women are notorious for falling in lust through words and if you let the emails linger too long a false sense of intimacy develops. After you meet and realize there isn’t any chemistry, it can be a little weird thinking back to all the suggestive stuff that you both wrote.
  • Plan a first date – during the late afternoon on a weekend. Make sure it’s nothing more than meeting for a coffee. If you meet and the connection is spectacular ‘“ with conversation lasting for more than a couple of hours ‘“ then it might naturally transition into cocktail hour at the restaurant next door and a bona fide date.
  • If it’s a bust, then you can call it a day after 45 minutes and still have a free evening.

Back to our straight friend. I’m not sure why she committed to dinner on a first date. Who wants to make this kind of investment with someone you don’t even know?

I always considered the expense. Dinners could get expensive especially if you’re trying to meet someone new every weekend. Coffee costs a couple of bucks. If the coffee date was a success then I would plan a second date where we’d meet for dinner ‘“ but only if I thought it was worth the money to meet again.

That being said, I did break this rule when I first met Jeanine. We lived 50 miles apart which in LA rush hour miles is like 2 and a half hours. Because it was such a long way to drive, Jeanine suggested that we make it more than just a Starbucks. We met for dinner and three hours later the conversation was still spectacular. Our dinner was less than 100 bucks because we split a meal ‘“ this was Jeanine’s suggestion and something I love and appreciate about her to this day.

She was a keeper and definitely worth the first date investment.

What about you? What are your dating rules? First dates, second dates? Who pays for what? I always enjoy reading your comments below.