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An Irishman's guide to dating an American girl

Top tips on how to win your date over


Irish dating advice - An Irishman's guide to dating an American girl
Irish dating advice - An Irishman's guide to dating an American girl
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The language of love can very, very easily get lost in translation. What may be perfectly acceptable when dating in Ireland can warrant a well-aimed slap in the face in the U.S.

Remember: it was America that invented “dating.” It’s not an Irish concept – but one that has been imported from across the Atlantic.

And even though it’s an American import, the rules for dating in the U.S. differ vastly in many ways than the rules for dating in Ireland.

As such, this brief guide is intended for the Irish male who finds himself at a loss at what to do when dating an American girl.

(We at Irishcentral.com take no responsibility for possible assaults, drinks over the head, etc. that can happen in the application of this guide. Use at your own risk!)

1. Try not to get too drunk

This especially applies when you are on a first date. Although Irish girls are often fairly unimpressed at the sight of their date slurring his words and talking to inanimate objects, in many cases, it is the Irish girl who is even more drunk than her partner for the evening, so this problem can be avoided, and the Irish male doesn’t have to be as careful in not getting too hammered. In general, however, American girls drink far, far less than Irish girls. And they can get pretty disgusted at the sight of their date making a total fool of himself.

This rule is probably the most critical in this guide – but is one that the Irish male typically grapples with the most. Remember: Americans often go on dates that are non-alcohol related – which can involve things such as “cups of coffee” and not going to the pub. The standard response from the Irish male to this activity in this situation might be: But where will my confidence come from?

It must come from within. When the date does take place in a pub or bar, the Irish male should take care to remember that the graph showing the relationship between pints and charm looks like this: it goes upwards initially, levels off after about three or four, and then at about six pints it takes a dramatic nosedive. In other words, it usually takes about six drinks before charm turns into sleaze.

2. Pay for everything

The U.S. may be the birthplace of the modern feminist movement, but when it comes to picking up the tab for drinks and dinner, American females are thoroughly old-fashioned. American girls will inevitably expect you to at least offer to pay for dinner, and if you do offer, most will gladly accept. The same goes for drinks. If you are on a first date, and you don’t offer to foot the bill, don’t expect a second. It doesn’t matter that she is better educated than you, earns more than you and is likely to outlive you. She'll still expect you to pay. That’s just how it is.

4. Play up the accent

If you have a fairly neutral Irish accent, then scrap it quickly – you won’t sound very “Irish” to the American girl you are trying to impress. Go and watch “Darby O’Gill and the Little People,” and try to talk like some of the characters in that movie. Sure, you won’t sound genuinely Irish – simply because no one in Ireland talks like that – but the girl you are on a date with won’t know that, and probably thinks that everyone in Ireland talks like Sean Connery in the 1959 classic.


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In my carefree days I met at least one young Irish lady who was careful that all her dancing partners were Irish and NOT of another nationality. One night at the City Center Ballroom in the spring of 1969, a girl whom I asked to dance hesitated for a moment as she looked to her friend for guidance. Then her friend whispered: "You can dance with him, he's Irish", and we had a great dance together.
During my many years of bachelorhood I've had a few 'romances' with young ladies who were born on U.S. soild (which some like to think makes the full-blooded Americans). The first of these was when I was a teenaged greenhorn and the lady involved was of Stottish and Irish parentage. Itwas SHE who suggested -in a not subtle way thatb we go on our first date. Many years later I met my future wife, a New England native of the Methodist faith whose ancestors arrived in the mid-1600s. She had recently been widowed and she invited me "to have tea with her". To make a long story short, we married 2½ years later. I should alsio mention that in dating or in any other situation, I never felt the need for booze or any or any other mind-altering drug.
 




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