avatarGillian Sisley

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Abstract

id="e6b2">I expressed my passion for travel. He had no desire to leave the country. I talked about my love for writing, he replied that he had trouble with his words and expressing himself.</p><p id="b1cd">It didn’t take long to realize that the chemistry just really wasn’t there for us.</p><p id="3b4b"><b>Our date was falling flat.</b></p><p id="702d">And to make matters worse, my mother happened walked into the restaurant with a work friend and saw me across the room. A big, devious smile spread across her face as she innocently walked over and said,</p><blockquote id="3d92"><p>“Well hi honey, how are you? And who is <i>this</i>?”</p></blockquote><p id="c759"><b>Mortifying.</b></p><p id="4186">I didn’t tell my mother that I was going on this date, and I’m sure she joyously saw that moment as instant karma for my secrecy.</p><p id="a1c3">The date finished with a hug, and I headed back to campus for my next class.</p><p id="0c4a">I would later tell people this exact quote:</p><p id="195d" type="7">“He was a super nice guy, a total gentleman, but we didn’t click. He was pretty boring, and I’m not sure he’s likely to ever do anything exciting in his life.”</p><p id="be15">I realize that’s harsh, but that was the honest feeling of the entire encounter and how I’d sized him up as a person over our burgers and fries.</p><p id="6014">He texted me the next day asking if I would be interested in a second date. I replied that I didn’t feel the chemistry was there for us, but I wished him the best in his search for a lovely lady who would be the right fit for him.</p><p id="dd1e">He replied back, quite politely, and we never talked again after that.</p><h1 id="3c2d">The light bulb moment.</h1><p id="44bd">It was 6 months later, and a friend who also attended my university sent me a message with a link to an article, and said something along the lines of, “<i>OMG, WTF</i>.”</p><p id="e5e2">I opened the article and read it. It was extremely shocking, because these kinds of gun threats aren’t at all common where I live. That could be said for most of Canada as a whole.</p><p id="af74">I read the name of the accused in the article over and over, because there was something about it that seemed familiar.</p><p id="1a83">But that was odd… how would I know a 30-year-old med student?</p><blockquote id="2b2d"><p>Ding</p></blockquote><p id="e03c">And then it hit me, and<i> I flipped out</i>.</p><p id="6130">I was also so incredibly confused, because like I said, I thought he was the most ordinary, <i>if anything a little boring</i>, person I had possibly ever met in my entire life.</p><p id="b673">Yet there he was — plastered on the front page of our national newspapers, with a plan to kill 20+ people who attended my university.</p><p id="1de7"><b>What in the actual f*ck.</b></p><h1 id="af62">I later found out that he saw me as “the problem”.</h1><p id="af05">We would learn in the coming weeks from news reports and updates that he was vocal about his frustration with going on first dates that never led to a second.</p><p id="9546">He was angered that women didn’t seem to want to date him, and particularly hated the women who wouldn’t go on a second date with him.</p><p id="11e0"><b>He was angry with the entire system and made his plan of attack.</b></p><p id="410e">Thankfully, he was foiled when he confided in his psychiatrist about how he was planning to get revenge, and she reported him directly to the police.</p><p id="ff10" type="7">I truly believe that he felt out-of-control to the point of scaring himself, and there was a part of him that honestly wanted to be stopped and caught.</p><p id="5861">That said, apparently, I’m one of the wo

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men who “motivated” him to plan a mass killing and collect the firearms necessary to make that happen.</p><h1 id="9f6e">Final word.</h1><p id="e4ec">It’s still hard to stomach that online dating connected me with a sociopathic potential mass killer, and that I was once sitting across from him for several hours, and <i>hugged him</i>.</p><p id="86f6">Needless to say, my online dating chapter didn’t last very long after that, <b>and this experience has turned me off of it for good</b>.</p><p id="9d8f">Today, I use this story as a cautionary tale to any of my friends who are considering online dating. If there’s any message to take out of this, it’s the following:</p><p id="19b9" type="7">You never truly know a person just from messaging back and forth, or from the first few in-person meetings.</p><p id="8082">People show you what they want you to see.</p><p id="c7ad">They hide what’s convenient to hide.</p><p id="0927">So if you needed your daily reminder of the misogyny which still is very prevalent in our world, there you have it!</p><p id="8529">This is precisely why women do not feel safe in our society.</p><p id="4944">So next time you’re online dating, consider this cautionary tale and take these anecdotes with you:</p><ul><li>Always meet in a public place</li><li>Don’t be too quick to trust</li><li>Listen to your gut</li><li>Absolutely utilize your right to say no and walk away</li></ul><p id="3420">I’m glad I adhered to these rules — I don’t know what could have happened otherwise.</p><div id="5384" class="link-block"> <a href="https://readmedium.com/to-the-guy-on-the-internet-who-tried-to-school-me-in-how-to-be-a-proper-woman-f51b83caa54d"> <div> <div> <h2>To the Guy On The Internet Who Tried to School Me in How to Be a “Proper” Woman</h2> <div><h3>There’s nothing I love more than the unsolicited advice of entitled men.</h3></div> <div><p>medium.co</p></div> </div> <div> <div style="background-image: url(https://miro.readmedium.com/v2/resize:fit:320/1*EFWRwNfZOH-z6kvvVdbUzw.jpeg)"></div> </div> </div> </a> </div><div id="8c26" class="link-block"> <a href="https://readmedium.com/her-hymen-is-not-yours-to-police-803fa641ab34"> <div> <div> <h2>Her Hymen is Not Yours to Police</h2> <div><h3>Rapper T.I.’s investment in his 18-year-old daughter's vagina is ‘violation of autonomy’ at its core.</h3></div> <div><p>medium.com</p></div> </div> <div> <div style="background-image: url(https://miro.readmedium.com/v2/resize:fit:320/1*yIWWYoZRQy96I71o-me-jQ.jpeg)"></div> </div> </div> </a> </div><div id="8004" class="link-block"> <a href="https://readmedium.com/my-partner-is-responsible-for-our-sex-life-179d5e1e98ee"> <div> <div> <h2>My Partner is Responsible for our Sex Life</h2> <div><h3>I’m entirely on board with this arrangement, and here’s why.</h3></div> <div><p>medium.com</p></div> </div> <div> <div style="background-image: url(https://miro.readmedium.com/v2/resize:fit:320/1*dtTeSuJwn5g9o8IGQz236g.jpeg)"></div> </div> </div> </a> </div><p id="3c15"><b><i>Never miss a single beat — sign up for my monthly newsletter to get the scoop!</i>👉 <a href="https://bit.ly/33XgtKT">https://bit.ly/33XgtKT</a></b></p></article></body>

I Went on a Date with an Attempted Mass Murderer

The date was incredibly normal considering what he was capable of.

Photo by Clem Onojeghuo on Unsplash

Online dating is weird.

Online dating is uncomfortable.

Online dating can be really dangerous.

I was innocently on a dating app after about a year of being single, and realizing I had no prior dating experience other than my first, garbage ex-boyfriend.

I wanted to get out there and test the waters. I was interested in meeting new varieties of people, and getting a little bit of experience in the dating/flirting department.

I promised myself that the moment online dating stopped being fun, I would quit.

I probably went on 3–5 dates per month for a 4–5-month stretch.

It became clear to me that, while it was still fun, I wasn’t finding this method of dating beneficial for finding the right fit for me in a partner.

But before quitting, I would go on several memorable dates, with several very memorable people.

One of which included a date who would later that year be arrested and held for an attempted plan to execute a mass shooting at my university.

If you’d like to read up on the event before digging into my story, you can find that information here:

The date was awkward at best, but nothing out of the ordinary.

I was a 20-year-old undergrad, he was a 29-year-old med student.

I can’t remember initially what drew me to him to keep chatting on the dating app, but I imagine it was because he presented himself as very kind and polite.

He was normal. Painfully normal, even.

I found him averagely handsome— not that looks really matter, but it did play into my entire perception of him being a plain-old-joe, and nothing out of the ordinary.

I asked him why he’d chosen medicine — he bluntly replied that it was mostly for the money.

I asked what his hobbies were — he told me he had two: curling, and competitive bridge.

In hindsight, I should have seen that he was a sociopath when he made it clear that a fun Saturday night for him was an old-fashioned bridge competition at the seniors home, and he wasn’t even 30 yet.

I expressed my passion for travel. He had no desire to leave the country. I talked about my love for writing, he replied that he had trouble with his words and expressing himself.

It didn’t take long to realize that the chemistry just really wasn’t there for us.

Our date was falling flat.

And to make matters worse, my mother happened walked into the restaurant with a work friend and saw me across the room. A big, devious smile spread across her face as she innocently walked over and said,

“Well hi honey, how are you? And who is this?”

Mortifying.

I didn’t tell my mother that I was going on this date, and I’m sure she joyously saw that moment as instant karma for my secrecy.

The date finished with a hug, and I headed back to campus for my next class.

I would later tell people this exact quote:

“He was a super nice guy, a total gentleman, but we didn’t click. He was pretty boring, and I’m not sure he’s likely to ever do anything exciting in his life.”

I realize that’s harsh, but that was the honest feeling of the entire encounter and how I’d sized him up as a person over our burgers and fries.

He texted me the next day asking if I would be interested in a second date. I replied that I didn’t feel the chemistry was there for us, but I wished him the best in his search for a lovely lady who would be the right fit for him.

He replied back, quite politely, and we never talked again after that.

The light bulb moment.

It was 6 months later, and a friend who also attended my university sent me a message with a link to an article, and said something along the lines of, “OMG, WTF.”

I opened the article and read it. It was extremely shocking, because these kinds of gun threats aren’t at all common where I live. That could be said for most of Canada as a whole.

I read the name of the accused in the article over and over, because there was something about it that seemed familiar.

But that was odd… how would I know a 30-year-old med student?

*Ding*

And then it hit me, and I flipped out.

I was also so incredibly confused, because like I said, I thought he was the most ordinary, if anything a little boring, person I had possibly ever met in my entire life.

Yet there he was — plastered on the front page of our national newspapers, with a plan to kill 20+ people who attended my university.

What in the actual f*ck.

I later found out that he saw me as “the problem”.

We would learn in the coming weeks from news reports and updates that he was vocal about his frustration with going on first dates that never led to a second.

He was angered that women didn’t seem to want to date him, and particularly hated the women who wouldn’t go on a second date with him.

He was angry with the entire system and made his plan of attack.

Thankfully, he was foiled when he confided in his psychiatrist about how he was planning to get revenge, and she reported him directly to the police.

I truly believe that he felt out-of-control to the point of scaring himself, and there was a part of him that honestly wanted to be stopped and caught.

That said, apparently, I’m one of the women who “motivated” him to plan a mass killing and collect the firearms necessary to make that happen.

Final word.

It’s still hard to stomach that online dating connected me with a sociopathic potential mass killer, and that I was once sitting across from him for several hours, and hugged him.

Needless to say, my online dating chapter didn’t last very long after that, and this experience has turned me off of it for good.

Today, I use this story as a cautionary tale to any of my friends who are considering online dating. If there’s any message to take out of this, it’s the following:

You never truly know a person just from messaging back and forth, or from the first few in-person meetings.

People show you what they want you to see.

They hide what’s convenient to hide.

So if you needed your daily reminder of the misogyny which still is very prevalent in our world, there you have it!

This is precisely why women do not feel safe in our society.

So next time you’re online dating, consider this cautionary tale and take these anecdotes with you:

  • Always meet in a public place
  • Don’t be too quick to trust
  • Listen to your gut
  • Absolutely utilize your right to say no and walk away

I’m glad I adhered to these rules — I don’t know what could have happened otherwise.

Never miss a single beat — sign up for my monthly newsletter to get the scoop!👉 https://bit.ly/33XgtKT

Self
This Happened To Me
Dating
Online Dating
Feminism
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