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The Coffee Date Is
Your First Real Step In Getting To Know Someone
Here’s the scenario:
Maybe you’ve recently met the
person, decided that they are worth a little bit more of your time
to get to know a little better, there can be no better way than a
carefully planned coffee date.
Your date should be for the
mid-late afternoon, an hour or so after lunch, or early evening an
hour or so before dinner time. The essentials being that the coffee
date takes place in daylight hours and is set for 20 to 30 minutes,
no longer.
You appearance should be dressy casual, a nice shirt/sweater, maybe
clean jeans (new-ish not tattered) or khaki pants. No 2 piece suits
for the man, no dresses or skirts for the ladies, you want to be
comfortable, remember, it’s just coffee, right?
Prepare yourself for a long 20 minutes of chit chat and
asking/answering questions. Preparation includes deciding what to
ask and how you’d answer the same. Don’t worry about saying things
like “Isn’t that a third date question?” instead of feeling that you
need to answer everything. Try to keep the questions open ended and
the other person talking. Surprisingly enough, people do like to
talk about themselves more that hearing about others and you’ll
easily come off a winner by letting the other person talk. Of
course, this could backfire if they are “boorish” and have a
self-importance personality that was not previously displayed, but
at least you’ll know more about the person and it’s only 20 minutes
out of your life rather than an entire evening (or heaven help us, a
lifetime!)
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Keep away from talking about
religion, politics and environmental issues. Stick to a plan of
current events, parental upbringing topics and growing up
remembrances as safe topics of conversation. Be sure to read today’s
newspaper to have some material to fall back on if there happens to
be any silent periods or lulls in the steady flow of your
conversation.
Questions such as these are a great starting point for your
conversation:
1. What would you say had the biggest influence on you when you were
growing up?
2. Did both of your parents work?
3. Where did (do) you spend your summers?
4. Did you ever (do you) have pets?
5. Do you watch any TV shows regularly?
6. What’s the last movie you went out to see?
7. What type of music would I find in your CD player?
8. What’s the last book you read (or who is your favorite author)?
9. What would be your dream career?
10. What is the most modern piece of technology you own?
These open ended questions will allow for a variety of follow-up
questions that will show themselves to you as your meeting
continues. You will discover their personality, their worldliness
and drive for possessions and travel. Any of these can be good or
bad traits, depending on what you find desirable in a person.
When your designated time to end the coffee date nears it is safe to
either state that you really don’t have much in common, but thanks
for having coffee with me, or to plan a next meeting/date in a
couple of days.
Your coffee date should have this type of definite end to it so
there are no hard feelings and uncomfortable confrontations later.
Under no circumstances should you go beyond the time you allowed for
this date.
Be sure that any family/friends you told about this date are
notified when it ends and told how things worked out. Never go to a
first date without telling someone and planning a “safe call” when
it is over. Your “safe call” can be them calling you to make sure
you are OK, or you calling them to say the date is over and you are
going home or returning to work, whatever. This is extremely
important.
Meeting someone and getting to know them are two different and
distinct stages of any relationship.
We wish you well on your baby steps into a new relationship!
This article is ©
2002 cheerful attitude web design,
http://www.aLoveLinksPlus.com and Robert Lee. It is available
for reproduction in any format and for posting on your web site or
for use in your newsletter as long as you maintain this copyright
notice and send an e-mail to
webmaster@alovelinksplus.com reporting your use of this article
prior to publication.
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