Several years ago, I met a woman online who I thought I could and would marry. She was beautiful and cultured, warm, and witty, a Ph.D. psychologist with a beautiful and generous heart.
Our first date went magnificently as we discovered shared passions and favorite authors and a shared vision for a life of spiritual and physical adventure. Within hours, we found each other in each other's arms, making out.
She blinked at me like one of those characters in an old Warner Bros. cartoon -- and I half-expected to hear that old familiar accompanying Bugs Bunny ploink-ploink of a high piano key. It shouldn't be that much of a shock, more and more people are holding off on being intimate after the first date, statistics from the Pew Research Center found.
I continued..."We're not going to be intimate until we can look in each other's eyes and say, 'I love you' and mean it from the depths of our hearts." I could practically feel the heat of her yearning hit me like a wall of fire as she realized what I was saying.
I was saying that I value you so much that I don't want to waste our first time being intimate in a moment of anything less than love. I was saying -- I want our connection to be set sweetly inside a woven nest of love.
I was saying that my goal was to know her, and not just get into her alluringly hip-hugging pants. The fire of our mutual attraction was volcanic, and I wanted it channeled, so it could fuel something that could last forever rather than simply pop its top -- and dissipate.
Especially if they met you online, they don't know if you're a hothead, a raging egotist, a player, or an insensitive jerk.
In other words -- they don't know yet if they are safe. What they DO know is that you probably want her intimately, if not during appetizers, then by the end of the night. Certainly at the end of the mythical "third date."
So if you meet a woman who you think is a "keeper," the kind of woman with whom you might want to build not a mere pile of sweaty sheets in the morning, but a lifetime (of sweaty sheets) and happy memories, then let her know where your priorities are from the start.
I've adapted this teaching in my coaching practice for those of my clients who are genuinely seeking a life partner. Try a version of this on a first date:
"I want to say something so we can just relax and discover who each other is. Though I find you wildly attractive, I'm not going to try to kiss you tonight take you home or even elope to Vegas. Tonight is just an opportunity for us to share our truths, our visions, and what we want to create in this life -- and to see if we inspire each other, even a little. So if I don't "make a move" or try to kiss you, please know it's not because I don't want to, but I want to save that first kiss -- if this ends up being what I hope it will be - for when we feel truly connected."
It shows that you're not a Grabby McGrabster, not a predator, not needy, not trying to simply "score." It allows her to relax. It shows that you care about who she is and whether you two match up in your concerns, passions, and vision of life.
The bit about Vegas? Well, a little humor goes a long way in letting everyone relax. And it happens to be about the most romantic thing you can say to a woman you genuinely consider might be a lifetime partner. That said, I want to add two caveats...
You have the chance to show that you are serious about the human being she is, as well as showing that you have standards that you want to see if she meets. Be happy a girl has standards, as that quality will lead to a happier relationship, research from 2017 confirms.
And you thereby become the kind of man who is not an opportunist, but rather who knows how to make the most of a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity. Happy dating!
RELATED: 10 Tiny Ways To Compliment A Woman On A First Date (Without Sounding Creepy)