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Featured Love Date
Article Of The Month
(January)
Memorable
Dates with just $20 by
Unknown
Share Your Romantic Ideas
While they say
that the best things in life are free it's pretty hard to make
an amazing first date impression with holes in your pockets.
Then again, playing it thrifty your first time out is probably
not a bad idea -- even if you can afford something a bit more
spectacular. Why is that? Well, a first date sets a precedent.
If you rent a limo and trip the light fantastic at a five-star
restaurant your first time out, how will you top that come your
second date?
Now, if you can afford that lavish lifestyle and find yourself
comfortable with the possibility that your date is more into
your pampering than you (and I don't mean that facetiously, if
you are really cool with that and accept it going in, spend
away) keep spinning that wheel of luxurious reinvention.
However, for
everybody else, it makes perfect sense to play it thrifty on a
first date. Yes, even if it's that special someone that "could
be the one." While I could have entitled this LoveDateIdeas.com
article "The Perfect Free Date" I've decided to generously arm
myself with a $20 spending limit to provide some form of
financial flexibility. Yes, your date may still fall for you if
you a penny-pinching spendthrift but if you expect to run off a
series of free dates into lasting relationship that will test
your creative boundaries even more than the rich cat with the
chauffer and the knack for fine dining.
Okay. $20 for a first date doesn't seem like a whole lot but the
catch here is that you couple something that is truly free with
a little extra something. What do I mean by that? Taking your
date to the library? That's not as dull as it sounds. By walking
the aisles together you can learn a lot about someone by sharing
your preferences or recollections of books you may have read in
the past. Yes, the library is brightly lit. There aren't too
many people who look good under library light (what, you thought
all librarians were homely? Perish the thought!). Yet it is a
unique -- and free -- way to spend time and test the limits of
hushed silence. After that, it's time to put that $20 bill to
work. Drive over to an ice cream parlor -- preferably that mom
and pop place than a national chain.
While most dates involve dinner, and that will eat up more than
$20 right there if you go to most casual to upscale table
service eateries, you can always schedule your date early in the
afternoon to take any dining pressure off (and, hey, if things
go well, continue). However, there is also the homemade meal.
Whether it's a romantic candlelit dinner at home or you're
making sandwiches to take on a picnic somewhere else (beachside,
by the airport, by a creek, traditional park) by making the
first meal homemade you control the budget. You control how much
you are spending. And while a few bucks will buy you enough
goods at the market for a memorable meal those same bucks spent
at McDonald's is bound to be ordinary.
So spend wisely. Take in a cheap attraction like bowling or
miniature golf and pair that with a packed picnic meal. Most
bowling alleys and putt-putt attractions have tables (or you can
just trek out elsewhere for the meal -- somewhere safe yet
romantic hopefully).
Check your newspaper for extraordinary events that are cheapies.
Maybe there is a free star-viewing event at a local observatory
or planetarium. Maybe there is an eclectic street festival worth
checking out. Maybe there is a dirt cheap community theater play
being presented. All these things will be cheaper than the
traditional "dinner and a movie" or the night out to the club
where the tab always winds up larger than you bargained for in
the first place. |