The Province

How to end a bad date early

You can leave a first date after 20 minutes, but do it with honesty

- LISA BONOS

The experts don’t recommend leaving a first date after 20 minutes. But even they admit they’ve done it.

Francesca Hogi met a guy on Match.com and he was making bad jokes, sarcastic ones that weren’t going over well. With online dating, those first meetups are more of a pre-date than an actual date to just decide: Is this somebody I could go on a first date with?

So once Hogi knew the answer was no, she told him: It was really nice meeting you. I can tell that we’re not a match. I don’t want to waste your time, or my time.

He started to argue.

“He got really defensive,” Hogi recalls. “He was trying to make me feel bad, but all he did was make me feel more justified in my decision.”

Pop culture generally offers two resolution­s for bad dates. The ditch: Excuse yourself to the restroom and then slink out the back without saying goodbye. Or the duck: Fake a phone call from a friend who’s in need of help.

Those might make for laughs on screen, but neither is honest.

“I’m really big on not making excuses for leaving,” says Laurie Davis, founder of the Worthy One, which offers relationsh­ip coaching for women.

Don’t say: “I have an early meeting; I should get going. But actually just (speak) your truth,” Davis says.

Generally, first dates last about an hour. An awkward beginning or lack of immediate attraction are not reasons to storm off, says Hogi, a dating coach in Los Angeles.

“One mistake a lot of daters make is they’re expecting to know right away if they’re compatible with someone. That’s a limiting way to approach dating,” Hogi says.

She prefers to walk into an interactio­n, telling herself she’ll stay present for this 45 minutes to an hour.

“I’m going to give myself an opportunit­y to see if I can establish a connection with this person. Even if you’re not going to see the person again, doesn’t mean that date can’t be a valuable experience.”

But Hogi and Erika Ettin, a dating coach in Washington, D.C., both say if someone is being disrespect­ful or offensive, or makes you feel unsafe,

don’t feel bad about skipping out early. And if you think a date might not go well, better to go in with a hard out, Hogi says — like dinner with friends — than to make one up on the fly.

Ettin remembers being on a date where the guy made fun of her the entire time.

“A little playful teasing might be

fun if you know each other and you know each other’s sense of humour,” Ettin says, but her date was mocking everything about her: her job, her accent, where she’s from.

“When he started making fun of me to the bartender, I threw $10 down, said ‘I don’t need this’ and left,” Ettin recalls.

The date lasted 15 minutes.

 ?? — GETTY IMAGES ?? First dates are traditiona­lly awkward but they shouldn’t be an endurance contest. Don’t be afraid to be honest when you encounter someone who is behaving badly and end it quickly.
— GETTY IMAGES First dates are traditiona­lly awkward but they shouldn’t be an endurance contest. Don’t be afraid to be honest when you encounter someone who is behaving badly and end it quickly.

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