Bored Panda works better on our iPhone app
Continue in app Continue in browser

The Bored Panda iOS app is live! Fight boredom with iPhones and iPads here.

Guy Is Left Completely Creeped Out By Fiancée, She Doesn’t Understand What His Problem Is
Man looking out from balcony, feeling creeped out after finding out girlfriend's secret.

Guy Overhears Fiancée Bragging About Her “Stalking 101 Course,” Realizes How They Actually Met

36

ADVERTISEMENT

A common question many couples hear all the time is, “So, how did you two meet?” And usually, the answer is something cute or wholesome. Well, one guy thought that was the case with his fiancée too.

But her recent confession about how they actually started dating shocked him, and now he’s creeped out by her. He took to Reddit to ask what he should do next, and even the internet was divided. Read the full story below.

RELATED:

    The guy thought his relationship with his fiancée was pretty normal

    Image credits: Beachbumledford / Envato (not the actual photo)

    But after her confession about how they actually started dating, he’s now questioning everything he thought he knew about her

    ADVERTISEMENT
    ADVERTISEMENT
    ADVERTISEMENT
    ADVERTISEMENT
    ADVERTISEMENT
    ADVERTISEMENT

    Image credits: micens / Envato (not the actual photo)

    Image credits: ThrowRAstalkinggf

    Going to extreme lengths for someone you love has always been romanticized in fiction, but in real life it can feel very different

    Image credits: Summit Entertainment (not the actual photo)

    Many of us probably enjoy stories where characters are so infatuated with someone that they go to extreme lengths just to be with them, and we find it incredibly romantic.

    Think about Tim in About Time, who used time travel to perfect every interaction with the woman he loved. Or Edward in Twilight, who snuck into Bella’s room to watch her sleep before they were even together. And Ariel in The Little Mermaid, who got so obsessed with Prince Eric that she gave up her voice and grew legs just to be near a guy she saw once from a distance.

    We applaud the dedication and sometimes even wish someone would go that far for us. But part of the reason we feel that way is because it’s fictional. If someone actually did any of this in real life, it would be a very different experience. Which begs the question, where exactly is the line between romantic and just plain creepy?

    The man in this story is trying to figure that out himself. He learned that his fiancée had spent months studying his routine and deliberately showing up wherever he went. She even pretended to lose her phone just to get him to call her number and have a reason to be around him.

    She didn’t see a problem with any of it. The man, however, was left feeling very uneasy about the whole thing. And readers were just as divided. Some felt it was a massive red flag that shouldn’t be ignored. Others thought it really wasn’t that deep.

    Where exactly does love end and stalking begin?

    Image credits: Andrej Lišakov / Unsplash (not the actual photo)

    To get a better sense of whether something like this counts as love or stalking, let’s look at what professionals have to say.

    The Stalking Prevention, Awareness, and Resource Center (SPARC) defines stalking as a pattern of behavior that causes fear for one’s safety or leads to significant emotional distress. That can include things like following someone in public or repeatedly showing up where they don’t expect you. By that definition, what this woman did would technically qualify.

    Another thing to consider is the motivation behind someone’s actions and how they carry them out. Daisy Warner, writing for Medical News Today, explains that both love and stalking can involve being persistent with someone and knowing a lot of their personal information, like their routines or where they live. 

    But when two people love each other, all of that is mutual. You share that information willingly and the feelings go both ways.

    Stalking, on the other hand, is a form of taking power and control. A person might seek out someone’s personal information without their knowledge and pursue them without any reciprocation. 

    The attachment isn’t built on genuine care for the other person. It comes from an unhealthy fixation, and the person on the receiving end often has no idea it’s even happening.

    That doesn’t stop a lot of people from doing it, though. Nowadays, many consider some forms of stalking to be completely harmless. According to one survey, 64% of people admit to cyber-stalking a potential partner before a first date. And 24% don’t even hide it, openly telling their date that they looked them up beforehand.

    In these situations, people really have to consider how they feel. If someone’s behavior makes them uncomfortable or unsafe, they shouldn’t minimize those emotions out of fear of overreacting. 

    For anyone who genuinely believes they’re being stalked, the One Love Foundation recommends documenting the behavior and sharing what’s happening with people you trust. They also suggest reaching out to support organizations or law enforcement.

    What do you think? Did this woman cross the line, or was it just a creative way of shooting her shot? Share your thoughts in the comments.

    The man later shared more details in the comments

    Some readers agreed that the stalking was creepy and weird, and felt he had every right to be uncomfortable

    Others, however, thought it was innocent enough and said he might be overreacting

    Poll Question

    Total votes ·

    Thanks! Check out the results:

    Total votes ·
    Share on Facebook

    Explore more of these tags

    Oleksandra Kyryliuk

    Oleksandra Kyryliuk

    Writer, BoredPanda staff

    Read more »

    Oleksandra is an experienced copywriter with a master’s degree in International Communication. Having covered everything from education, finance, and marketing to art, pop culture, and memes, she now brings her storytelling skills to Bored Panda. For the past six years, she’s been living and working in Vilnius, Lithuania.

    Read less »
    Oleksandra Kyryliuk

    Oleksandra Kyryliuk

    Writer, BoredPanda staff

    Oleksandra is an experienced copywriter with a master’s degree in International Communication. Having covered everything from education, finance, and marketing to art, pop culture, and memes, she now brings her storytelling skills to Bored Panda. For the past six years, she’s been living and working in Vilnius, Lithuania.

    What do you think ?
    Nota Robot
    Community Member
    9 hours ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    I'm with CantalouCantaloupe. If you're interested, you ask him out. None of this "it's the guy's job to make the first move"-BS anymore please. It's 2026 ffs, not 1966.

    Earonn -
    Community Member
    4 hours ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Agree. We ladies have mouths, we can talk.

    Load More Replies...
    B Parke
    Community Member
    6 hours ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    This sounds like the plot of a lot of movies where they frame it as something "cute" but in real life it leans more towards "ick"

    LakotaWolf (she/her)
    Community Member
    Premium
    10 hours ago

    This comment is hidden. Click here to view.

    Nope, nope. This isn't "high school where you learn your crush's schedule" like some commenter said. These are grown adults, nearly 30 years old. If Kim was so interested in OP, why not literally ask him out? Her sister lived across the street; Kim would have had ample opportunity to ask him out normally like a normal person instead of creepily following him around. Yes, it was stalking. It should not be cutesy-fied or "Sheldon"-ized to just "she learned his schedule and arranged to bump into him." She learned when he went to the grocery store and FOLLOWED him there in order to run into him. That is the definition of surveillance. It may have never descended into the realm of "unwanted" or "harassing" contact, but that doesn't make it dismissible or acceptable. If the genders were reversed, people would have pitchforks and torches out.

    Load More Comments
    Nota Robot
    Community Member
    9 hours ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    I'm with CantalouCantaloupe. If you're interested, you ask him out. None of this "it's the guy's job to make the first move"-BS anymore please. It's 2026 ffs, not 1966.

    Earonn -
    Community Member
    4 hours ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Agree. We ladies have mouths, we can talk.

    Load More Replies...
    B Parke
    Community Member
    6 hours ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    This sounds like the plot of a lot of movies where they frame it as something "cute" but in real life it leans more towards "ick"

    ADVERTISEMENT
    LakotaWolf (she/her)
    Community Member
    Premium
    10 hours ago

    This comment is hidden. Click here to view.

    Nope, nope. This isn't "high school where you learn your crush's schedule" like some commenter said. These are grown adults, nearly 30 years old. If Kim was so interested in OP, why not literally ask him out? Her sister lived across the street; Kim would have had ample opportunity to ask him out normally like a normal person instead of creepily following him around. Yes, it was stalking. It should not be cutesy-fied or "Sheldon"-ized to just "she learned his schedule and arranged to bump into him." She learned when he went to the grocery store and FOLLOWED him there in order to run into him. That is the definition of surveillance. It may have never descended into the realm of "unwanted" or "harassing" contact, but that doesn't make it dismissible or acceptable. If the genders were reversed, people would have pitchforks and torches out.

    Load More Comments
    Related on Bored Panda
    Popular on Bored Panda
    Trending on Bored Panda
    Also on Bored Panda
    ADVERTISEMENT