I'm clearly looking way too into this, but feel free to let me know if it has any merit. Also feel free to critique my approach.
There's a girl I see ocassionally at the gym, and we talk while we work out. She's always very personable and we seem to get along; I usually just bust on her for whatever her weekend stories are, and she laughs. I get a lot of IOIs from her and she seems cool...and very single.
Hadn't seen her in about 3 weeks, so manned up and decided to ask her out. She came over to talk to me but I was on the treadmill and too tired to talk, so she left and changed. On her way out I called her over and said we should have lunch later this week and asked for her last name. I said I'd email her later when I had time. She made a point to mention how her name was doubled up in the directory, so if she doesn't reply to an email, try the other listing, which I took as an IOI. (We work at the same company, so I can find her email through the company directory. We're in totally separate divisions and never have to work together, so there are no issues there, in fact I've never seen her except for at the gym.)
I emailed her Wednesday afternoon and suggested we meet up on Thursday, and she replied that she had to work through lunch because she was leaving early, and was taking Friday off. I replied, just saying, nice, what's the long weekend for? She did not reply.
I'm kind of weird with email because I am literally on it -all- day long. My position involves a lot of communication with different divisions throughout the day, and it's weird to me when people take a full day to respond. It seems like a company-wide thing, and although she has a totally different job in a different area, responded to my initial email in like 20 minutes. I thought I was being sly by taking 2 hours to respond. I know, hilarious. But, that's why I am looking too much into the fact that she did not reply after that.
Is this girl a potential flake? I totally understand how email is a bad communication medium now, but it made sense at the time because the company uses it like crack.
Feel free to bash my over-analysis as much as possible, but I'd appreciate some constructive feedback.
There's a girl I see ocassionally at the gym, and we talk while we work out. She's always very personable and we seem to get along; I usually just bust on her for whatever her weekend stories are, and she laughs. I get a lot of IOIs from her and she seems cool...and very single.
Hadn't seen her in about 3 weeks, so manned up and decided to ask her out. She came over to talk to me but I was on the treadmill and too tired to talk, so she left and changed. On her way out I called her over and said we should have lunch later this week and asked for her last name. I said I'd email her later when I had time. She made a point to mention how her name was doubled up in the directory, so if she doesn't reply to an email, try the other listing, which I took as an IOI. (We work at the same company, so I can find her email through the company directory. We're in totally separate divisions and never have to work together, so there are no issues there, in fact I've never seen her except for at the gym.)
I emailed her Wednesday afternoon and suggested we meet up on Thursday, and she replied that she had to work through lunch because she was leaving early, and was taking Friday off. I replied, just saying, nice, what's the long weekend for? She did not reply.
I'm kind of weird with email because I am literally on it -all- day long. My position involves a lot of communication with different divisions throughout the day, and it's weird to me when people take a full day to respond. It seems like a company-wide thing, and although she has a totally different job in a different area, responded to my initial email in like 20 minutes. I thought I was being sly by taking 2 hours to respond. I know, hilarious. But, that's why I am looking too much into the fact that she did not reply after that.
Is this girl a potential flake? I totally understand how email is a bad communication medium now, but it made sense at the time because the company uses it like crack.
Feel free to bash my over-analysis as much as possible, but I'd appreciate some constructive feedback.