
Kelly was thrilled for her first date with Eric, recommended by her best friend Mia and Mia’s boyfriend, Chris. The evening sparkled: Eric brought roses, gifted her an engraved keychain, and charmed her over dinner, insisting on paying the bill. Kelly left feeling smitten, certain she’d met someone special.
The next morning, her excitement crumbled when Eric sent a detailed invoice—not for money, but for emotional “payments” like compliments, selfies, and a second date, treating affection like a transaction. Stunned, Kelly shared it with Mia, who was horrified and passed it to Chris. Disgusted, Chris crafted a sarcastic counter-invoice, charging Eric for “wasting Kelly’s time” and demanding his silence. When Kelly forwarded it, Eric responded defensively, blaming her for not valuing a “great guy.” She replied with a thumbs-up emoji and blocked him.
The date, initially a dream, became a laughable lesson. Kelly kept the keychain as a quirky memento of her oddest date ever. Her new rule? If someone insists on paying, ensure they don’t expect a different kind of bill later.