How long is too long to wait before saying, âI love youâ? For some folks, it seems the first date is long enough.Â
One woman actively swimming through the dating pool had those three little words said to her after meeting her date in person for the first time, and what she had to say about it has sparked a huge debate about love and affection across the internet.
âI went on a first date with a dude a few days ago,â wrote X user @yumyumeg) in a post from Jan 11., 2025. âIt was such a good date just for me to get home and he called me and said he thinks he loves me. Legit hung up mid convo and blocked him.â

The short post about her experience has racked up 21M views, 8.2K reposts, and 133K likes in 3 days. But itâs within the 2.4K comments that has the internet divided on what transpired.
Many people sided with @yumyumeg and approved of her actions.
âI need to reach this level,â wrote X user @tonichauntel.
âHe tryna love bomb you,â replied X user @okaydeni, which got 15K likes.
However, many thought @yumyumeg was too harsh in her decision to block. âThese will be the women that will end up alone,â replied X user @hoodoonurse, a response that received 12K likes.

âMen know when they love a woman very quickly,â said X user @spicyliltoaster. â Women are a huge reason why men donât show their emotions and carry deep burdens to their graves.â
Why saying âI love youâ on a first date is a turnoff
As @yumyumeg notes, the date wasnât a total bust. Daily Dot reached out to the viral poster and learned that her date took her to a nice Italian restaurant.Â
âHe greeted me with roses,â she explains via Instagram DM. âHe was charming, the conversation flowed easily, not to mention he made me laugh. Everything seemed natural.â
However, the conversation she had after the night ended didnât sit well. âIâve actually been love bombed before with someone who told me he loved me after the first week and consistently bought gifts the first month,â she added.Â
âI was able to identify immediately that this isnât normal. Thereâs no reason for someone to be telling me they love me after 2 hours of conversation.â
What is love bombing?
According to Psychology Today, âlove bombingâ refers to âa pattern of overly affectionate behavior that typically occurs at the beginning of a relationship, often a romantic one, in which one party âbombsâ the other with over-the-top displays of adoration and attention.â
Typically those being love-bombed are showered with gifts and/or compliments, and âdeclaring love early onâ is not unheard of, according to the article.
A representative sample survey conducted by Shane&Co. found that 70% of Americans have been love bombed, and that women tend to fall victim to love bombing more than men.Â
70% of those surveyed had also heard the words âI love youâ spoken in less than a month of their new relationship.
Itâs behavior @yumyumeg has experienced before, and one that is even considered to be a form of emotional abuse, according to the National Domestic Violence hotline.
âHe became extremely controlling and possessive,â she told the Daily Dot. I eventually ended things which resulted in being harassed via social media, emails, and things sent to my house.â
âIâm honestly shocked how many people attacked me for having a boundary to protect myselfâ
Thoughts about love bombing are common elsewhere across social media, with some who feel the sentiment is overblown by younger, more sensitive generations.
ââIf someone tells you they love you after a couple dates theyâre using abusive lovebombing tactics you to manipulate youâ probably not, tbh,â posted @lllliatttt on X on Jan. 13, 2025, raking in 4.4M views and over 3.6K comments debating the statement.

X user @ichthys30 seems to agree that love bombing isnât as bad as some make it out to be. âAbsolutely insane that Zoomers rebranded love at first sight as âlove-bombingâ,â the explained. âClearly the most anxious, uptight, immature, pathologizing, risk-adverse generation ever born.â
âIâm honestly shocked how many people attacked me for having a boundary to protect myself,â @yumyumeg tells the Daily Dot. âI think itâs extremely sad how angry men are online with all the hate comments I have received. My perception is the same.â
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