The unnamed husband seeker who sent out the email obtained by Agency Spy had just finished reading the best-selling feminist book "Lean In" by Facebook's COO Sheryl Sandberg. It was 11 PM on a Sunday night and she realized this was the second self-help book she had read in month, she was still single and she had just sprinkled dish soap on leftover pizza so she wouldn't eat two more slices. Things were not looking well, but there was hope for her still. If Sandberg's book had taught her anything it was that she needed take a more proactive role in finding love. After all, if she wanted to get a better job, she wouldn't just sit in the lobby of an employer's building and wait for someone to offer it to her, so why should finding a husband be any different. But instead of going out and meeting new people she decided to write an email to all her friends, offering to give them $10,000 on her wedding day if any of them manage to introduce her to her future husband.
"I'm writing you today because I've decided to make an aggressive action plan on finding that one fella that I get to hang out with forever," the woman writes in her email. "And I've recognized two things that are important to this plan: (1) a great percentage of marriages are the result of introductions by friends and (2) most people do not give a lot of thought about introducing one of their single friends to another one of their single friends. I get it. Introducing me to my husband is just not high on your to-do list. But I think I have an idea that might change that…" You guessed it, this is where she offers to reward her "closest friends" with cold hard cash.
"I will personally give ten thousand dollars to the friend who introduces me to my husband.
Here is how the referral program works:
- Step 1: You set me up on a date with a man
- Step 2: I marry that man
- Step 3: I give you $10,000 on my wedding day
Agency Spy has redacted the email author's name because they "don't want to add insult to injury if this idea backfires", but says its sources claim she is "dead serious" and that she's "already gotten 100 potential dates".
Offering to pay your friends a sizable reward to get a husband seems a bit wrong, but you have to admire this woman's honesty and her go-all-out attitude, right?
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