H
hwriggles4
Guest
This is good advice.I think you can get away with not using the word date if that’s implicit in the situation (for instance, meeting somebody off of an online dating site or getting set up for a blind date by a friend).
However, if it’s a person that you know well already but just as a friend or acquaintance or classmate or former coworker, I think it’s important to emphasize that this is an actual date and you are taking them out. Otherwise, they might not understand that you were at all attracted to them. They might assume that it was supposed to be a minor platonic social event or even (heaven forbid!) professional networking. That’s one of the reasons why I think coffee by itself is kind of a terrible date idea for people that already know each other pretty well–coffee is just too platonic and prosaic and associated with the working day.
Last year, a sociology professor at Boston College gave an assignment to her students. These students had an assignment to go out on a date. The criteria was:
- The date had to last at least an hour. Going for a “one on one” lunch, dinner, a walk around campus, or sightseeing in the Boston Commons together, was acceptable
- The asking out for the date had to be “in person”.
Responses were good. Some of the ladies said it was nice just to get to know someone in a low stress environment, without strings being attached.
FYI - I was in a fraternity at one college in the 1980’s (that helped me get out of my shyness) and once a semester I had to ask a girl to be my “date” for a formal. I would always have a few girls in mind at least two to three weeks before, mostly for courtesy reasons (and if I did get turned down I had time to ask someone else), since a formal event requires some preparation, where a girl may need some time to either borrow a dress from a friend or buy one if she doesn’t have a formal dress in her closet. I’m sure the ladies reading this will appreciate the extra time - since being asked to a formal three days before can show that a guy was a procrastinator.
I recall quite a few ladies liked to attend formals, particularly if they liked to dance (and they got a free meal too). If a guy didn’t have a steady girlfriend, it was a little more relaxing (and less awkward) if you asked someone you knew a little already (a girl you had class with, a girl you knew from campus ministry, or someone you met through a friend), since a “first date” or a “blind date” can be an awkward situation at a formal, especially if she doesn’t know anyone else who is going.
Some colleges I’m sure still have weekend dances and socials on campus. Most will come in groups, unless it’s a formal or semi-formal type event that sells tickets for couples. I recall some colleges having dances for fundraising efforts.
Back when my uncle was at West Point in the olden days (1950’s), dances were held quite a bit on Saturday nights. West Point was all-male in those days (dates for cadets were allowed on campus on Saturdays in the late 1960’s, and could use the library, etc. as long as they were with their cadet boyfriend - I don’t think they were allowed in the dorms). Quite a few ladies (if the cadets didn’t have dates already) would arrive on a bus from some of the all girls schools like Vassar, Smith, Radcliffe, Bryn Mayr, and there was an all-girls Catholic college down the street from West Point (it closed in the late 1970’s, nursing was a big program, and it was run by an order of Franciscan nuns), and several cadets married girls they met at these dances and at the Catholic school. These dances also helped the cadets develop social graces and social expectations for officers, which involved “gentlemanly conduct”.
One girl gave me some good advice when I was younger - never take a “first date” (a girl you just met) to a wedding, a family function, or a company party - that’s awkward.