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How to creep out the entire internet, lovelorn banker edition

Try dressing as a nun. Then maybe he'll go away.

Dating can be tough. It can be especially tough if your personality is a mixture of petulance and insecurity. And even tougher if you think you can argue someone who’s not interested in you into a second date with an angry, accusatory, sometimes hilarious, sometimes deeply unsettling 1600-word email. And no, I’m not speaking hypothetically here.

The email in question, written by a young investment banker named Mike to  an unfortunate woman named Lauren after one less-than-great date, was posted on Reddit a couple of days ago, and has already gotten a lot of internetty attention, but some of you may not have seen it, so I thought I’d give it a little fisking anyway. Settle in; it’s going to be a long and bumpy ride. (Note: What follows below is most of the email; I’ve cut out a few passages here and there.)

Hi Lauren,

I’m disappointed in you. I’m disappointed that I haven’t gotten a response to my voicemail and text messages.

Well, we’re off to a not-so-good start. Perhaps she is, as they say, just not that into you?

FYI, I suggest that you keep in mind that emails sound more impersonal, harsher, and are easier to misinterpret than in-person or phone communication. After all, people can’t see someone’s body language or tone of voice in an email. I’m not trying to be harsh, patronizing, or insulting in this email. I’m honest and direct by nature, and I’m going to be that way in this email.

Gosh, I wonder why Lauren didn’t get back to him.

By the way, I did a google search, so that’s how I came across your email.

Google-stalking – always a nice touch. There’s no better way to charm a nice lady than by tracking down her personal information online.

I assume that you no longer want to go out with me. (If you do want to go out with me, then you should let me know.) I suggest that you make a sincere apology to me for giving me mixed signals. I feel led on by you.

Uh, what? She’s ignoring you, dude. She doesn’t want to go out with you. Seems to me she’s sending you a pretty unmixed message here.

Should she have responded to your voicemail and/or texts? In an ideal world, perhaps, but she may have sensed that you’d react precisely how you’re reacting now, and didn’t want to have anything more to do with your creepy, entitled bullshit.

And now Mike the banker makes his, er, “case” for why she should go on a second date with him:

Things that happened during our date include, but are not limited to, the following:

-You played with your hair a lot. A woman playing with her hair is a common sign of flirtation. You can even do a google search on it. When a woman plays with her hair, she is preening. I’ve never had a date where a woman played with her hair as much as you did. In addition, it didn’t look like you were playing with your hair out of nervousness.

You were flirting!! Hair-twirling = sex! If you don’t realize it you can google search it!!!

-We had lots of eye contact during our date. On a per-minute basis, I’ve never had as much eye contact during a date as I did with you.

Eye contact is an Indicator of Interest. IOI! IOI! If you didn’t want to bear my children why did you look at me, with your eyes????

-You said, “It was nice to meet you.” at the end of our date. A woman could say this statement as a way to show that she isn’t interested in seeing a man again or she could mean what she said–that it was nice to meet you. The statement, by itself, is inconclusive.

Well, not really. This is what people say to be polite at the end of a disappointing date, when they don’t want to see you again.  If she wanted to see you again, she would have said something about making plans for a second date.

-We had a nice conversation over dinner. I don’t think I’m being delusional in saying this statement.

We had a conversation! You did not flee in horror! Therefore you must have my babies!!!

In my opinion, leading someone on (i.e., giving mixed signals) is impolite and immature. It’s bad to do that.

And sending someone who clearly wants nothing to do with you a long, creepy, accusatory tirade is polite?

Normally, I would not be asking for information if a woman and I don’t go out again after a first date. However, in our case, I’m curious because I think our date went well and that there is a lot of potential for a serious relationship. 

Dude, you do understand that she has to actually like you too in order for there to be a relationship?

I think we should go out on a second date. In my opinion, our first date was good enough to lead to a second date.

You cannot argue someone into a second date! That’s not how it works.

Why am I writing you? Well, hopefully, we will go out again. Even if we don’t, I gain utility from expressing my thoughts to you.

Gain utility? Really? DATING IS NOT MICROECONOMICS!

In addition, even if you don’t want to go out again, I would like to get feedback as to why you wouldn’t want to go again. Normally, I wouldn’t ask a woman for this type of feedback after a first date, but this is an exception given I think we have a lot of potential.

Well, banker dude. You’re getting some feedback now. All over the internet.

If you don’t want to go again, then apparently you didn’t think our first date was good enough to lead to a second date. Dating or a relationship is not a Hollywood movie. It’s good to keep that in mind. In general, I thought the date went well and was expecting that we would go out on a second date.

So your argument is that she should go out with you, even though she doesn’t want to go out with you, because life isn’t perfect and you’re probably the best she really deserves?

Way to sell yourself, dude.

If you’re not interested in going out again, then I would have preferred if you hadn’t given those mixed signals. I feel led on.

Well, she’s not really responsible for you thinking that every woman who twirls her hair in your presence wants to have your babies.

We have a number of things in common.

Oh dear, sounds like we’ve got another “logical” argument coming up here.

I’ll name a few things: First, we’ve both very intelligent. Second, we both like classical music so much that we go to classical music performances by ourselves. In fact, the number one interest that I would want to have in common with a woman with whom I’m in a relationship is a liking of classical music. I wouldn’t be seriously involved with a woman if she didn’t like classical music. You said that you’re planning to go the NY Philharmonic more often in the future. As I said, I go to the NY Philharmonic often. You’re very busy. It would be very convenient for you to date me because we have the same interests. We already go to classical music performances by ourselves. If we go to classical music performances together, it wouldn’t take any significant additional time on your part.

Um, what?

I have no clever remark to make here, other than that Lauren is probably going to have to avoid going to the Philharmonic ever again, on the off chance she might run into banker Mike.

According to the internet, you’re 33 or 32, so, at least from my point of view, we’re a good match in terms of age.

YOU ARE RIGHT AGE. INTERNET SAYS SO. THEREFORE YOU MUST DATE ME.

 I could name more things that we have in common, but I’ll stop here. I don’t understand why you apparently don’t want to go out with me again. We have numerous things in common.

Also, you both require oxygen to live. Lauren, can’t you see that you and banker Mike are soulmates?

I assume that you find me physically attractive. If you didn’t find me physically attractive, then it would have been irrational for you to go out with me in the first place. After all, our first date was not a blind date. You already knew what I looked like before our date.

Banker Mike: You said you wanted feedback. Here is some feedback. She was apparently not horrified by your physical appearance. It may be your horrible personality that needs some work.

Perhaps, you’re unimpressed that I manage my family’s investments and my own investments. Perhaps, you don’t think I have a “real” job. Well, I’ve done very well as an investment manager. I’ve made my parents several millions of dollars. That’s real money. That’s not monopoly money. In my opinion, if I make real money, it’s a real job. Donald Trump’s children work for his company. Do they have “real” jobs? I think so. George Soros’s sons help manage their family investments. Do they have “real” jobs? I think so.

You’re fighting a losing battle here, dude. Just as you cannot argue someone into liking you, you cannot argue someone into being impressed that you manage your parents’ money.

In addition, I’m both a right-brain and left-brain man, given that I’m both an investment manager and a philosopher/writer.

And I’m the Queen of Denmark.

That’s a unique characteristic; most people aren’t like that. I’ve never been as disappointed and sad about having difficulty about getting a second date as I am with you.

Oy. As if this email wasn’t stalkerish enough already.

I’ve gone out with a lot of women in my life. (FYI, I’m not a serial dater. Sometimes, I’ve only gone out with a woman for one date.)

This last bit I have no trouble believing.

I suggest that we continue to go out and see what happens.

I suspect that Lauren has already played out various scenarios in her head already, and that none of them end well.

Needless to say, I find you less appealing now (given that you haven’t returned my messages) than I did at our first date. However, I would be willing to go out with you again. I’m open minded and flexible and am willing to give you the benefit of the doubt. I wish you would give me the benefit of the doubt too.

So now you’re being noble and “open minded” for trying to pressure a woman who wants nothing to do with you into a second date?

If you don’t want to go out again, in my opinion, you would be making a big mistake, perhaps one of the biggest mistakes in your life.

Now you’re just making my skin crawl.

I spent time, effort, and money meeting you for dinner. Getting back to me in response to my messages would have been a reasonable thing for you to do. In addition, you arrived about 30 minutes late for our date. I’m sure you wouldn’t like it if a man showed up thirty minutes late for a first date with you.

Here’s a solution, dude: How about she never goes on another date with you, ever. Then you won’t ever have to worry about her being late ever again.

If you’re concerned that you will hurt my feelings by providing specific information about why you don’t want to go with me again, well, my feeling are already hurt. I’m sad and disappointed about this situation. If you give information, at least I can understand the situation better. I might even learn something that is beneficial.

I hope you find the feedback that the internet has now provided you to be helpful.

If you don’t want to go out again, that I request that you call me and make a sincere apology for leading me on (i.e., giving me mixed signals).

Now we’re back on this again.

In my opinion, you shouldn’t act that way toward a man and then not go out with him again. It’s bad to play with your hair so much and make so much eye contact if you’re not interested in going out with me again.

Damn you, foul strumpet, and your devious hair-playing ways! Google it! GOOGLE IT!!!

I would like to talk to you on the phone.

I think you’ve pretty much guaranteed that this will never, ever happen.

Even if you don’t want to go out again, I would appreciate it if you give me the courtesy of calling me and talking to me. Yes, you might say things that hurt me, but my feelings are already hurt. Sending me an email response (instead of talking on the phone) would better than no response at all, but I think it would be better to talk on the phone. Email communication has too much potential for misinterpretation, etc.

Not much to misinterpret here, Mike. You’ve made it absolutely crystal clear that you’re an undateable creep.

Let me be serious for a moment. Forget about Lauren. Hell, forget about women in general for a while, and work on yourself. Get some therapy; you can afford it. Work through your bitterness, your petulance, your highly unattractive mixture of entitlement and insecurity. Stop being a “Nice Guy” and learn to be genuinely nice.

And don’t ever, ever, ever write another email like this one.

 

 

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Kyso K.
12 years ago

Actually, David could delete all three of these most recent comments from me, because that was some sloppy ‘splaining on my part.

AbsintheDexterous
12 years ago

no more mr nice guy –

Please stop with the Internet Diagnoses. This does not help people with actual, clinical diagnoses, which are determined and treated by professionals. This also does not help people who are ambushed by complete assholes who do not have any mental disorders whatsoever. One can be ass without being mentally ill or autistic. One can also be mentally ill or autistic without being a dick.

Plus, there are enough creepy people out there in the world who ignore social cues so that they can get what they want. These people are manipulative assholes regardless of anything else they may or may not have going on. What we have in evidence is that Mike Investment Banker is a douche. We do not have any other evidence that indicates any disorders, unless you think Asshole Syndrome is in the DSM-IV.

Pecunium
12 years ago

Re the curve: The Guardian reports the following numbers:

How many sexual partners have you had?

None 3%
1 15%
2 11%
3 10%
4 9%
5 9%
6-10 20%
11-15 8%
16-20 6%
20+ 9%

The average Briton has had 10 sexual partners. There is a distinct gender split with the average among men almost double that of women (13 and 7 respectively). The 35-44 age group is the most promiscuous (average of 13) while over-65s have had the least number of sexual partners (average of 5). People in Wales are the most promiscuous (13) while those in Yorkshire and Humberside have the fewest sexual partners (6). Only 23% of Britons have had more than 10 sexual partners (32% of men and 15% of women).

The majority of those who have been unfaithful to their current partner have cheated on more than one occasion. Only 33% of those who have been unfaithful to their partner say infidelity occurred ‘only once’. Women are more likely to have strayed on just one occasion – 40% of women who have been unfaithful say it has only happened once compared to 29% of men.

So a wider poll shows an expected bell curve, with the peak of the bell at 10. The poll Whatever referred to says that the “average” for women aged 21 is at the higher end of of the average for the entire population. This Guardian Poll also says that 15 percent of the population hasn’t started to have sex by the age of 21, so their “average” is based on 85 percent of the population, which means the skew is even more outside the expected deviations; even accepting the potential for greater sexual activity on the part of their readership.

Which of the following best describes how frequently you have been unfaithful? (asked of those who have been unfaithful)

Only once 33%
Rarely 25%
Occasionally 27%
Regularly 15%

Men are more likely to have been unfaithful than women (22% and 13% respectively). Londoners are the least likely to cheat (7%) while the Scottish are most likely to be unfaithful (34%).

Which contradicts the report in Whatever’s survey.

The Telegraph says that a study showed the average for women aged 24 is 5.65.

That was based on an actual study, commissioned by Lloyds Pharmacy, so I have a greater belief in its probable accuracy.

CassandraSays
CassandraSays
12 years ago

Kyoso K, I’m not sure quite how to put this but…in my experience, there actually were a whole lot of kids during my high school and college years who those kinds of numbers would have applied to. It’s not nearly as unusual, statistically speaking, as you’re making it out to be, and the insistence that no really most girls don’t actually do that isn’t sitting well with me, especially in a space like this.

CassandraSays
CassandraSays
12 years ago

And The Guardian agrees.

6-10 20%

That’s not an insignificant number of people – it’s one in 5. Hardly rare birds.

Pecunium
12 years ago

Cassandra: Not rare birds, but if one is five is in the 6-10 range, then an average of 10 says the sample is skewed, or the results are being misrepresented.

CassandraSays
CassandraSays
12 years ago

I definitely think that the results are being sensationalised. I just don’t care for the “they’re so unusual!” stuff. They’re really not THAT unusual, and it feels slut-shamey.

Pecunium
12 years ago

I mean I had more than that, but I know I was a rare bird; given both the lower average in the US, and my different social environment.

Pecunium
12 years ago

It’s a mixed bag, one in five is a non-trivial number. What it says is the readership of More(?) is a more sexually active/adventurous group than the population at large. I wasn’t trying to say they were unusual, merely that the group being measured isn’t representative of the population at large.

SaruGoku
SaruGoku
12 years ago

DKM [email protected]:

“There are too many man-haters, feminists, and just plain hateful women out there anyway, who see you, and your sex drive, as the enemy! There are also too many oversexed, nymphomaniacal, give-it-up-to-anyone (except you) uber-sluts out there as well! Modern women are either, as a rule, hopelessly frigid, with man-issues to boot, even downright lezzies, on the other hand, are nowadays hopelessly oversexed and human STD transmission factories. Use at own risk–even with condom!! Of course, long before you can cultivate a “relationship” with uber-slut, she is off and running with somebody else, sometimes a whole bunch of somebody elses…”

So back we are to gross generalizations. In fact, some of us have no partners at all, while some of us have many. This happens because a. We are individual human beings b. We have the right to choose with whom and when we have sex c. We all have widely differing sexual needs and preferences. Personally, I prefer to be completely monogamous but I’m there are lots if people who can feel happy and comfortable with multiple partners or serial monogamy. As far as I’m concerned it’s all good as long as everyone is happy, of age and knows what’s going on.

Also: if some of us are unfortunate enough to catch an STD, then it must have been transmitted to us by a previous partner, who is statistically more likely to have been male. They don’t show up by magic; you have to have to catch them, a small fact that you seem to have overlooked.

“This is not intended to be a counsel of despair, but maybe we men should look into self-sufficient (fantasy/masturbatory) alternatives.

There are beautiful glossy, full color prints of paintings of sweet old-fashioned girls, suitable for framing. There are collectable dolls, some of which are quite lovely. They are not (yet) cybernetic, but if you are gifted with imagination, you can give them very feminine names, personalities, etc. If you want to cuddle with something warm and soft, fluffy plush toys can do until something better comes along. These are, or course, like little lady lovely collectable dolls, NOT as good as real women, when women were worth something, but they ARE better than nothing!”

Now that’s just sad. You’ve painted yourself so far into that corner that you’ll never get out.
You do realize, I hope that most men would not see this as an acceptable alternative and would rather have a living, breathing partner. Just because you have a doll fetish doesn’t mean that all men share it.

“Sooner or later, the message will get through to women, and they will realize that feminism and “unisex” is a blind alley, they will take pleasure and pride in their natural genetic based XX type femininity, and love and harmony will return to relationships. But a lot of women need to learn a lesson first!”

You may not like “modern women” but lots of men do like us for a variety of good reasons. Indeed many of us have husbands and long term partners who are quite happy with us. I know you have a little fantasy of us dying unwanted and alone in gutters ( You seem to have a thing about gutters) but that seems unlikely. Indeed, I don’t think feminist women are going to end up that way more often than non-feminist ones. You, however, do seem likely to end up that way (though probably without the gutter) and I just hope that you consider your misogyny to have been worth it.

SaruGoku
SaruGoku
12 years ago

[email protected]:

That’s interesting and really put’s paid to Whatever’s claims. What was the sample size?

KathleenB
KathleenB
12 years ago

Meller: So it’s perfectly okay for your to say horrible things about women in general, and feminist women in particular, but point out that the majority of sexual assaults and domestic violence are committed by men (an actual, verifiable FACT) and we’re suddenly demonizing every single man on earth. The double standard, it burns.

ps: never had an sti, never transmitted one, never cheated on my husband, never whored around. you really need better insults, because these are really flying off the mark.

CassandraSays
CassandraSays
12 years ago

I still think that “fuck you, I have my dolls and my plushies and if you don’t become what I want soon you’ll be sorry!” is the most hilarious tantrum from an adult that I’ve ever witnessed.

Kyso K.
12 years ago

I don’t think that there aren’t many people with lots of partners, but I think the variance is so large that just saying ‘average’ is pretty meaningless. And I find it suspicious that the ‘average’ for under-21s approaches and/or exceeds values provided for the average lifetime partners for people slightly older.

Lots of people do have pretty vanilla lives, and promoting an ‘everyone’s actually doing it but you, and like crazy!’ is no better than saying ‘no one’s doing it so you’re a slut.’ If the distribution is bell-curvish and roughly 50% of the population is above/below average, then both sides can get that message no matter what the number is. If the variance is large, and we pretty much know it has to be, then any one person can take that number, apply it in the context of their own lives, and feel good or bad or lonely or superior or whatever. So I don’t really care what the number is, as long as it’s accurate and presented well enough. Two things I suspect More magazine considers of less importance than selling magazines.

Also, ‘me and my friends all boned like crazy’ is exactly why we have to pay attention to how the sample was drawn. Because for every you, there could be an equally large group saying ‘man, I never got any.’ My high school had really prudish groups, groups of friends that spent the whole 4 years in one giant partner-swap, girls who liked to go and party with the college guys, and religious girls. Everyone one of these subgroups was big enough to think they represented the ‘average’ and everyone else was weird.

Soapbox aside, they asked a bunch of teens and young adults about their sex lives and got a number that is extremely plausible yet shocking (!) enough to make for great seamy magazine reading. 18-year-old me would have selected ’25+’ on that survey just to fuck with them. I stand by my original request of wanting to know exactly how they picked their sample before I decide to repeat this statistic as a fact.

Polliwog
Polliwog
12 years ago

I definitely think that the results are being sensationalised. I just don’t care for the “they’re so unusual!” stuff. They’re really not THAT unusual, and it feels slut-shamey.

I don’t think it’s fair to equate saying “that number sounds above average” with “that number sounds so unusual,” but I get how it might feel that way.

And, honestly, speaking as someone who didn’t have sex until adulthood, the counter-argument actually feels virgin-shamey to me – but I recognize that that’s not the intent. I think there’s just so many stupid messages about sexuality in our society, especially aimed at young people, that basically everyone ends up feeling sensitive about the issue in one direction or the other, because whether you have “too many” partners or “too few,” there’s always someone out there willing to tell you how terrible that supposedly makes you.

KathleenB
KathleenB
12 years ago

Cassandra: So true! That’s somewhere on the level of holding your breath until the other party gives in. Or you faint from lack of oxygen. My 1.5yo nephew throws better tantrums than that, and he’s not quite talking yet!

CassandraSays
CassandraSays
12 years ago

It’s the depiction of people who have a statistically not all that unusual number of partners as ‘me and my friends all boned like crazy’ that I’m objecting to. You really don’t see how that plays into damaging narratives about women and sex? There are a whole lot of people who want to push the idea that women should have as few sexual partners as possible, and that language plays right into their way of thinking.

On Meller, the thing is that in order for his tantrum to be effective women have to care deeply if he and men like him abandon us in favor of dolls and plushies. I see no evidence of that being a realistic expectation.

Monsieur sans Nom
Monsieur sans Nom
12 years ago

no_more_mr_nice_guy babbles bullshit about aspies and will continue to do so because he has no incentive to be respectful towards an unrecognized, politically unapproved group. I do grow tired of liberal hypocrites(like his ass) who constantly make fun of asperger syndrome while crying a river about “justice for the homos and the wimminz”………>_>

CassandraSays
CassandraSays
12 years ago

To clarify, notice how I never said “wow, you people who weren’t having sex in high school are so unusual!”, especially not to anyone in particular? But that is being said, in the opposite direction, even though in fact the numbers seem to be somewhat similar in terms of 10-ish partners versus 0 partners.

PosterformerlyknownasElizabeth

Also society didn’t go out of it’s way to try to sniff out any husband dalliances as horrible humiliating to the wife scandal as American feminist indoctrinated society does now.

I can think of more than one politician from the 19th century that would be very surprised to hear this.

Kyso K
Kyso K
12 years ago

‘me and my friends boned like crazy ‘ only seems damaging a) if i assumed everyone arguing with me were all ladies and b) that boning like crazy is objectively wrong. Niether of these assumptions were true fom my end. Of course people having all the consensual fantastic sexytimes they want/can is a good thing. I just think that ‘common experiencre for sex-postive community on feminist blog’ should not be confused for the average experience of a far more general population. I can change my wording to ‘comparatively boning like crazy’ if that helps.

If we accept that 15% of people don’t have any sex before 21, and that another 35% or so will have fewer partners than average, how hard does the rest of the sample set have to work to bring the sample mean to nine different partners? Harder than 9 partners per person. Quite a bit harder. I’d believe it for all age groups inclusive, but just teens? Only if the UK lacks video games, college entrance exams and strict parents.

CassandraSays
CassandraSays
12 years ago

Or you could just drop “boning like crazy” altogether, since it’s been pointed out that some of the people thus described don’t appreciate it.

Shora
12 years ago

Kyso: In retrospect, part of the reason I jumped in reply with my own experiences was because, like Cassandra said, it sounded at teensy bit slut shamey, so I was a little defensive.

But I totally agree with polliwog that the opposite (EVERYONE is having sex!! WOOHOO) is a little virgin shamey.

So I think the moral of the story is “Who cares how much sex everyone else is having? Don’t worry about it, go do you, and be safe.”

Pecunium
12 years ago

SaruGoku: The sample size was 2,000.

regarding the narrative of, “normal”, one of the most common conceptions is (and this seems to be true across all the studies I’ve seen) that everyone else is getting lots, and you aren’t getting any.

By 21 I’d had about a dozen partners. I know that in high school I had more partners than most of my contemporaries. I was also probably having less actual sex than most of the people in my school who were having sex, because women my age weren’t interested in me, so it required being in places where the women who were interested were able to get what they wanted out of it. Which meant that repeat performances were scattered.

I think that for under 21 (and certainly under 18) the situation is going to be much like that, the trade off of regularity will lead to fewer partners, and vice versa.

But I also don’t think that numbers mean much of anything.

Shora
12 years ago

‘me and my friends boned like crazy ‘ only seems damaging a) if i assumed everyone arguing with me were all ladies and b) that boning like crazy is objectively wrong. Niether of these assumptions were true fom my end.

You may not havemeant it that way, but sometimes certain turns of phrase have additional implications, which is why it’s important to choose words carefully and to be gracious when someone points out a trickily problematic bit of word usage.

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