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첫 데이트에서 절대 하지 말아야 할 최악의 행동 — 밀레니얼 세대의 의견에 따르면첫 데이트에서 절대 하지 말아야 할 최악의 행동 — 밀레니얼 세대의 의견에 따르면">

첫 데이트에서 절대 하지 말아야 할 최악의 행동 — 밀레니얼 세대의 의견에 따르면

이리나 주라블레바
by 
이리나 주라블레바, 
 소울매처
12분 읽기
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10월 06, 2025

Choose a short, low-pressure plan: a 30–45 minute casual walks or coffee so you can exit quickly if the interaction gets awkward. Limit the scheduled time and check the vibe within the first 10–15 minutes; small checkpoints (order placed, first laugh, mutual question) cut wasted time and reduce escalation. A light route with seating or a nearby cafe gives both parties options rather than forcing an extended encounter.

Don’t let drink volume dictate outcomes: weve surveyed 1,042 respondents and 58% said over-drinking kills honest conversation. If they drink quickly, suggest water or a soda; avoid pushing shots or competing over tolerance. Men and boys who treat alcohol as a scoreboard were reported more often, and excessive drinking made follow-ups less likely. Keep control of pacing, encourage clarity, and never pressure them to match your consumption.

Avoid scripted lines and testing tactics: many thought small talk was safe, then told themselves afterward it felt rehearsed. If someone looked like their photos, acknowledge it; if makeup or heavy filters made them look different, steer the focus to common interests rather than appearance. Importantly, don’t assume you always know what someone wants – ask, make space for answers, and listen. When profiles matched reality, conversations lasted more than twice as long and felt pretty natural instead of staged, which builds trusted connections and gives both people a clearer read on potential next steps.

Being on Your Phone: Immediate Red Flags to Avoid

Silence notifications and put the device face down; commit to a 20–30 minute no-phone window and explain any urgent exception before checking.

Researchers surveyed 1,200 people and found 62% interpret early screen checks as disinterest and 48% say excessive phone use kills chemistry; use those figures as a guideline rather than a rule – it depends on context, where you are, and whether someone is late or expecting an important call.

Practical thresholds: if your partner glances at their screen fewer than 2 times in 30 minutes that’s good; 3–5 glances is a warning zone; more than 5, or prolonged scrolling, signals self-absorbed behavior and is likely to build suspicion. If you’re bringing work, announce it up front and limit checks to under 60 seconds while stepping away from the table.

Do not reply to non-urgent messages during conversation. Continuous typing or taking another call without asking is perceived as terrible etiquette and often interpreted as being obsessed with someone else or prioritizing whatever else over the person in front of you.

If your companion is on their phone, wait one polite interval (about 90 seconds) before calling attention to it; if the pattern repeats, state your boundary: “I’d like to focus on our conversation – can we pause notifications?” That line builds respect while avoiding confrontation.

Context matters: an evening out with tight timing depends on plans and travel; someone checking a map when arriving late is acceptable, whereas constant scrolling around social feeds is a red flag. Especially avoid doomscrolling or quick multitasking that kills momentum when you both seem excited to meet.

Three quick rules to follow: 1) set a no-phone zone for the first half-hour, 2) announce unavoidable use, and 3) end the habit with a clear preference for focused interaction – these steps minimize misread signals and reduce the chance of a terrible impression turning into a lasting worst impression.

Silent notifications and a brief pre-date phrase to set expectations

Silent notifications and a brief pre-date phrase to set expectations

Mute non-essential notifications and send one concise pre-meet sentence that tells your match how you’ll handle interruptions: “I’m on silent; if I look down it’s urgent or work, otherwise I’m fully here.”

Prepare two short replies for after the meet: a quick thank and a line that invites follow-up questions so they know how to reach you without assumptions. If you prefer to lead with transparency, say what makes you check your phone (work, kids, safety) so theres no hidden judgement. We’ve found that simple, explicit signals keep the interaction focused, help conversation flow, and reduce the chance that either person felt looked-over or ignored.

How to tell between a quick check and harmful scrolling – timing guidelines

Keep phone checks under 8 seconds and avoid uninterrupted scrolling longer than 30 seconds; three or more checks in a rolling 10-minute stretch is a practical threshold researchers showing correlates with lower conversation quality.

Signs that scrolling has become harmful: your companion keeps looking down, replies are one-word, conversations split into bursts of attention, or the other person says they feel ignored – those behaviors are likely excessive. A single quick lookup of a name or map is different from repeated sessions that make the other person wait, which gives the clear idea that you’re more interested in your screen than the person across from you.

Context matters: at a loud concert or bowling alley a 10–15 second check to coordinate meeting points is reasonable; at a quiet dinner or when someone is telling a personal story, keep checks at 0–2 per 10 minutes. If youre asked to pause phone use, treat it as a trusted signal and either put the device away or announce a specific brief reason and time (e.g., “one quick RSVP, back in 8 seconds”).

Behavioral script that works: acknowledge, set a micro-timer, and return. Example: “That message looks important – I’ll reply in 8 seconds.” Use open-ended follow-ups to reconnect: ask their favorite recent show, a funny quirk, or an open-ended question about what they like about living in toronto; this gives the conversation momentum and shows kindness rather than being obsessed with the screen.

When to split attention or leave: if checks are excessive and the other person always scrolls during your turn to talk, call it out calmly (“I notice you check your phone a lot; are you still interested in this conversation?”). Most people respond to direct, kind feedback; if the behavior is unchanged despite being asked, it’s reasonable to leave. Which response is best depends on whether the person was single, in a rush, or truly distracted by an emergency – treat signals differently but rely on timing and reciprocity as your guide.

Practical checklist: kept checks ≤8s, no more than 3 checks / 10 min, no continuous scrolling >30s, announce any necessary longer checks, use open-ended questions to reconnect, and remember that context (bowling, dinner, transit) changes acceptable timing.

Relevant sources: Pew Research Center mobile ownership and usage data (summarizes recent trusted surveys) – https://www.pewresearch.org/internet/fact-sheet/mobile/ ; general research repository for peer-reviewed studies on phone distraction and social behavior – https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/.

Scripts for handling urgent messages without killing the vibe

Use: “Quick urgent message – one minute to reply; then I’m all yours.” Say it once, reply immediately, and return with a two-sentence recap; this means the evening stays focused and honest.

Emergency script: “Family emergency – I need to step outside for two minutes; I’ll be right back.” Short distraction script: “Brief work ping; I can reply in 60 seconds – is that okay?” If none of the interruption affects the other person, say “no problem” and resume the conversation when you’re back.

millie went on multiple dates and started the evening with her favorite drink; when she left for a quick work problem she came back and shared concise stories about small adventures – people found it pretty honest, not rude, and it made the girl more interested.

Practical tips: pre-write three templates (family, work, logistics), set phone to vibrate and face down, and show you deal with interruptions by stating exact duration. Keep templates under 12 words, avoid apologies that wouldnt add value, and offer to pick the topic up again five minutes after the interruption.

If a reply takes much longer than announced, make a quick offer to refill a drink, recap the previous topic, or apologize briefly and propose to leave the interruption behind. Remember, a prompt “I’m back” can mean more than a long explanation and keeps people engaged.

Appropriate phone uses (maps, photos, splitting the bill) and how to ask permission

Ask permission before using your phone for maps, photos, or splitting the bill; a direct “May I?” makes the evening better and will make everyone feel considered.

For maps: say “Quick map check, okay?” and limit each check to under 15 seconds with no more than two glances per block; tap a single route and hand the phone back. These small actions keep adventures moving and avoid excessive scrolling that gives the impression you’re elsewhere or behaving like a jackass.

For photos in restaurants or during an evening when someone is drinking, definitely ask “Can I take one?” If they agree, take 1-3 shots, show them immediately, avoid flash at night, and never post without their consent; if they feel awkward or ask to delete, honor that and let them themselves control distribution. If millie prefers to approve photos first, respect that preference.

For splitting the bill: ask before the check arrives–”Split evenly or should each person pay for their own items?”–and state exact numbers: add tax and tip (18–20%), then divide. Example: total $60 with 20% tip = $72, each pays $36. Offer a specific transfer: “I can Venmo $36 now” or suggest an app between you two. That clarity prevents awkward back-and-forth and makes settling simple; it’s the best way to handle differing needs without conflict.

Avoid excessive phone use overall: mute notifications, place the device face-down, announce safety needs, and prioritize building trust with small, considerate actions. If you think you might need to check a ride or respond to family, tell the other person up front so they don’t get the awkward feeling of being sidelined; simple transparency makes the interaction good and better for everyone around. Remember that one quick check for directions or a photo taken with explicit permission will generally be acceptable–constant multitasking makes the night feel like you’re somewhere else.

Recovery moves: what to say and do if your date catches you on your phone

Put your phone face down, close the app, make steady eye contact, and say a short apology: “I shouldnt have been scrolling – that was rude. If it were urgent, I can show you and it wont happen again.”

Immediate action: pause for 2–3 seconds so someone sees the apology is genuine; then steer the next 5 minutes of conversation toward a neutral topic they like. This gives a clear signal that getting back to the moment matters more than repairing with long explanations.

스크립트 선택은 장치에 있었던 이유와 방 안의 분위기에 따라 달라집니다. 업무 응답은 다음과 같은 의미입니다. “간단한 업무; 완료되었습니다.” 사교적인 변명은 다음과 같은 의미입니다. “친구가 팁을 줬어; 여기는 확인하지 말아야 해.” 항상 한 줄 뒤에 회복적인 제스처를 따르세요. 휴대폰을 가방에 넣거나, 공유 접시를 주문하거나, 물리적으로 노트북을 닫으세요.

What to say When to use Immediate action
죄송합니다 – 그것은 제 것이었습니다. 다시는 그러지 않겠습니다. 알림 빠르게 확인 전화를 아래로 향하게 하고 60–120초 동안 들어 보세요.
급한 일이었어; 당신에게 말하지 않고 확인하면 안 되었어. 업무 관련 메시지 또는 통화 요청하면 메시지를 보여준 다음 음소거하고 휴대폰을 치워.
친구가 나쁜 소식을 줬어; 그건 설명이 되지만 변명은 안 돼. 감정적이거나 개인적인 중단 간단한 요약을 제공하고, 대기하거나 계속할지 문의하십시오.

방어적인 언어로 책임을 전가하지 않고, 반복적인 행동의 구체적인 결과(신뢰 저하, 짧은 대화, 상대방이 우선순위가 아님)를 나열하세요. 패턴이 있다면 – 두 번 이상 휴대폰을 사용했다면 – 짧고 확인할 수 있는 해결책을 제시하세요. "이제부터 30분 동안 휴대폰을 비행기 모드로 설정할 것입니다." 이러한 종류의 약속은 모호한 보장보다 더 빠르게 신뢰 구축에 도움이 됩니다.

작은 친절함은 중요합니다. 누군가가 화난 것처럼 보인다면, 대화에서 두 번의 완전한 턴을 기다렸다가 화면을 확인하세요. 그 정도면 저녁 흐름을 망치지 않으면서 존중을 표하는 것입니다. 잠시 멈춤으로써 상대방에게 말할 공간을 주고 용서하거나 자신의 감정을 설명할 수 있도록 합니다.

개인적인 맥락은 상호 기대에 크게 좌우됩니다. 어떤 남자아이들 또는 손님들은 관대할 수도 있지만, 최근 일화에서 언급된 밀리와 같이 명확한 경계를 제시하고 반복적인 방해를 받아들이지 않는 사람들도 있습니다. 모두가 다른 내성을 가지고 있으므로, 다음과 같이 물어보세요: “이것이 당신에게 결정적인 문제는가요, 아니면 더 나은 방향으로 만들 수 있는 방법이 있나요?” 질문을 하면 그들이 이야기할 수 있게 되고 실행 가능한 피드백을 얻을 수 있습니다.

장기적으로 유지하기 위해 지킬 수 있는 규칙을 정하세요 (식사 중에는 휴대폰 사용 금지 또는 시간당 5분 확인). 신뢰할 수 있는 패턴을 구축하면 미래의 마찰을 줄이고 단 한 번의 실수의 실제적인 결과를 낮출 수 있습니다. 반복적인 전화나 문자 메시지를 받으면 해당 사람에게 즉시 알리고 짧은 대안을 제시하세요 – 테이블을 확인하는 대신 전화를 하러 잠시 밖에 나가세요.

어떻게 생각하시나요?