horseshowmom
DIS Legend
- Joined
- Jul 21, 2000
- Messages
- 10,287
A friend's daughter was invited to the Winter Formal at West Point the end of January. Here's the background:
The girl dated this boy 3 years ago, and it ended badly due to some character issues of his (lying, sneaking, etc.).
Fast forward to December, he (now a Sophomore at West Point) contacted her and asked if he could see her while he was home for Christmas. He told her how embarrassed he was by his previous behavior and how ashamed he was that he had behaved that way (that he had grown up) and asked if she would be willing to get together. She told him that she was only interested in being friends but that she would see him.
They saw each other a lot over the holiday. She went with him to his family's Christmas out of state, and he went with her to hers.
He invited her to the Winter Formal Weekend (or whatever it's called). He told her that he would take care of her room (knew she wasn't willing to share a room with him). Her mother discussed it with me, and I told her that I would go with her if it were me. This girl hasn't traveled a lot and has NO experience with anything like NYC (and I still didn't trust the boy even though her mother was very impressed by his change - thought he had grown up). She's a really nice young girl from a very rural area, and I didn't want her to find herself in a bad situation.
The boy knew the mother was planning on going too (not going to be involved with them at all). She was going to pay for the room too since she was going. He said that was great and told her all about the stuff she and the younger child could find to do.
My friend bought 3 plane tickets (two for her and her daughter and an extra one for her younger child so she would have some company to go do things with) at a cost of $1000. This was around the first of January.
Fast forward to this weekend, and suddenly he's not calling anymore. Girl finally gets him on the phone, and he says he's not ready for a long distance relationship. She told him that they weren't in a relationship to start with. Long conversation short, he's not interested in having her come after all.
My personal take on the situation is that he thought he could manipulate the situation, but things didn't work out the way he planned.
I think he owes the mother $1000. The tickets were bought with his encouragement. Justice court here says that he is liable, and he can be made to pay if he doesn't choose to do so on his own (mother checked).
Mother is mad and wants her money. Daughter is upset (and embarrassed, I'm sure) and wants her to drop the whole thing.
Mother also wants to call his commanding officer (feels like honor should mean something at West Point). She's also furious that he behaved so brazenly (as she said, from now on she'll remember that old saying about how if somebody shows you who they are, believe them). Daughter doesn't want to get him into trouble at WP.
I told the mother that I would respect daughter's feelings concerning WP, but I would get my money back regardless.
I'm speechless that somebody would pull this.
The girl dated this boy 3 years ago, and it ended badly due to some character issues of his (lying, sneaking, etc.).
Fast forward to December, he (now a Sophomore at West Point) contacted her and asked if he could see her while he was home for Christmas. He told her how embarrassed he was by his previous behavior and how ashamed he was that he had behaved that way (that he had grown up) and asked if she would be willing to get together. She told him that she was only interested in being friends but that she would see him.
They saw each other a lot over the holiday. She went with him to his family's Christmas out of state, and he went with her to hers.
He invited her to the Winter Formal Weekend (or whatever it's called). He told her that he would take care of her room (knew she wasn't willing to share a room with him). Her mother discussed it with me, and I told her that I would go with her if it were me. This girl hasn't traveled a lot and has NO experience with anything like NYC (and I still didn't trust the boy even though her mother was very impressed by his change - thought he had grown up). She's a really nice young girl from a very rural area, and I didn't want her to find herself in a bad situation.
The boy knew the mother was planning on going too (not going to be involved with them at all). She was going to pay for the room too since she was going. He said that was great and told her all about the stuff she and the younger child could find to do.
My friend bought 3 plane tickets (two for her and her daughter and an extra one for her younger child so she would have some company to go do things with) at a cost of $1000. This was around the first of January.
Fast forward to this weekend, and suddenly he's not calling anymore. Girl finally gets him on the phone, and he says he's not ready for a long distance relationship. She told him that they weren't in a relationship to start with. Long conversation short, he's not interested in having her come after all.

I think he owes the mother $1000. The tickets were bought with his encouragement. Justice court here says that he is liable, and he can be made to pay if he doesn't choose to do so on his own (mother checked).
Mother is mad and wants her money. Daughter is upset (and embarrassed, I'm sure) and wants her to drop the whole thing.
Mother also wants to call his commanding officer (feels like honor should mean something at West Point). She's also furious that he behaved so brazenly (as she said, from now on she'll remember that old saying about how if somebody shows you who they are, believe them). Daughter doesn't want to get him into trouble at WP.
I told the mother that I would respect daughter's feelings concerning WP, but I would get my money back regardless.
I'm speechless that somebody would pull this.
