Woman Diches Date After Being “Called Out” For Not Wearing Lingerie And Heels To A Casual “Stay-In” Hang

Everyone has their own idea of what effort looks like in a relationship, but sometimes those ideas don’t align.

OP has consistently run into partners who expect a certain level of appearance, even in private or laid-back settings. For her, comfort is key, but for them, it seems to mean something else entirely.

A recent date brought this issue to the surface in a way she couldn’t ignore. What was meant to be a simple night in ended with frustration and a decision to walk away.

Keep reading to find out what led to that moment and why OP is now questioning whether she’s in the wrong!

Woman frustrated as men expect her to dress sexy even at home

Woman Diches Date After Being "Called Out" For Not Wearing Lingerie And Heels To A Casual "Stay-In" Hang
not the actual photo

'Am I wrong for not wearing something "sexy" when I'm in bed with a person?'

 

Often I find myself arguing with guys (friends/ ex boyfriends etc)

about not putting enough effort in getting dressed for bed.

During my last relationship, my boyfriend expected me to dress sexy everytime

before we were to chill in bed. This has been a trend with other men too

that I've dated or hooked up with. I'm posting this here,

because recently I went on a date in which we were supposed to stay in,

play some video games, smoke pot and eventually get laid

but the guy called me out for wearing my trackpants and sneakers.

It was annoying af and I ended up ditching him and coming back.

These expectations include wearing heels, expensive lingerie,

varied forms of jewellery, fancy attires and what not.

Very contrary to this I've been an easy going person

whose main focus is to stay comfy and therefore I dress accordingly.

I honestly feel that it's very unreasonable

and unfair to expect from someone to wear something sexy all the f__king time.

I don't understand this obsessive behaviour and these demands. Am I wrong!? ~ 27, F

Sometimes the issue isn’t about clothing at all, it’s about control, expectation, and who gets to define what “effort” looks like in a relationship.

In this situation, OP isn’t just frustrated about being asked to dress a certain way. She’s reacting to a repeated pattern where her comfort and authenticity are being overridden by someone else’s idea of attractiveness.

For her, showing up relaxed, casual, and real is effort, it reflects how she naturally exists. But the men she’s encountered seem to equate effort with performance: heels, lingerie, styling, presentation.

That mismatch creates tension, because what one person sees as “low effort,” the other sees as simply being themselves.

There’s also a subtle emotional layer here. When someone is repeatedly told, directly or indirectly, that their natural state isn’t “enough,” it can start to feel like conditional acceptance.

Not “I like you,” but “I like you when you look like this.” That’s where frustration builds. OP isn’t rejecting intimacy or attraction, she’s rejecting the idea that it should come with a dress code.

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From a psychological perspective, expectations around appearance in relationships often tie into social conditioning and desirability standards.

According to Psychology Today, many people internalize media-driven ideas of attractiveness, which can lead to unrealistic or performative expectations in real-life relationships.

When those expectations are imposed on a partner, it can create pressure and reduce authenticity, making the relationship feel more like a performance than a connection.

That helps explain why OP keeps encountering this pattern. It’s less about her doing something wrong and more about running into people who prioritize visual stimulation over comfort or mutual ease.

Meanwhile, OP values a different kind of intimacy, one that’s relaxed, unforced, and grounded in real presence.

Looking at it more broadly, neither preference is inherently wrong. Some people enjoy dressing up and see it as part of the experience. Others don’t. The problem only arises when one person’s preference becomes an expectation the other is pressured to meet.

In this case, OP isn’t failing to meet a reasonable standard, she’s choosing not to participate in something that doesn’t align with her.

And that’s the real takeaway here: attraction should feel like an invitation, not an obligation.

If someone needs a performance to feel attracted, they’re probably not a good match for someone who values comfort and authenticity and that’s not a flaw, it’s compatibility showing itself early.

Here’s what the community had to contribute:

This group focuses on the impracticality and discomfort of “sexy” sleepwear

LaLunaDomina − So, I am a woman and I have experienced this.

One boyfriend in particular wanted me to only sleep in short satin chemises

and could not fathom that getting wrapped up in a twisted slippery tube of fabric

while a wayward b__ast tries to escape beyond the poor spaghetti strap

which is straining to hold this whole show together was not actually comfortable.

And I like rebellious nighties. They just aren't practical for every day.

I have also had partners be annoyed I did not sleep n__ed. I live in Canada.

On the other side of things I also like women, and a sleepy,

makeupless woman in a tank top and baggy sweats can be the sexiest being alive.

You aren't wrong for wanting to just be comfy.

neophenx − Guy here and yeah that sounds unreasonable AF.

Like...you're just chilling at home. Dressing up once in a while can be fun

and exciting but just expecting it?

1) Those kinds of clothes often aren't comfortable,

and heaven forbid you ever want to be comfortable in your own home.

2) overdoing it would cause a bit of a desensitizing effect

where it loses the desired effect due to overexposure.

3) Turn it around on him: start complaining about how he doesn't dress sexy enough for bed.

Honestly I'm more curious about how this has been a consistent thing in guys you've known.

I can't think of any guy friends of mine who ever thought like this,

or if they did they were VERY good at hiding it by not bragging about their s__ lives.

And guys like this definitely sound like ones who'd brag openly

and unsolicited about their s__ lives.

Exotic-Platypus3646 − Not wrong. There’s zero reason you need to dress anything

but comfortable if you’re just lying around in bed.

Tell them to wear something manly to bed, maybe blue jeans,

suspenders and a plaid shirt, and see how comfortable they are.

These users point out the hypocrisy and double standards

Foreign_Astronaut − So, what astounding displays of sexy nightwear

are these men wearing to bed when they're asking this of you?

Because I'm guessing...stained t-shirt and saggy boxers.

MataHari66 − Way to take the sexy out of lingerie, a__hole.

I’d get mean and say something like “aren’t you a little young to need visuals to get it up?”

This group represents the “healthy perspective”

Commercial_Sir_3205 − Guy here ✋🏾 You're in my bed, next to me, that's all that matters.

I could care less what she's wearing. If she's comfy, that means she's feeling good

and will enjoy her time with me a lot more, a win win for both of us.

EliseCowry − Me who wears probably the ugliest bs, worst bed head, and sleep deprived...

and still get my ass slapped, motorboated, and kissed when he sees me.

You'll find it. Just wait. Men don't care.

ffjohnnie − Been married 33 years. My wife wears her favorite t-shirts

she stole from my drawer. Sexiest thing alive.

the_albanese − My wife wears a t shirt to bed. That s__t is sexy to me and I don’t mind it.

It’s the broken world we live in now 🤷🏻‍♂️

OP keeps running into the same expectation from partners, and it’s clearly clashing with how she naturally expresses herself.

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She values comfort and authenticity, while the men she’s dated seem to place a lot of emphasis on appearance and performance, even in relaxed settings. That mismatch alone is enough to create repeated frustration.

Walking away from situations where she feels pressured or judged shows she knows her boundaries. The real issue doesn’t seem to be effort, but compatibility and expectations that were never aligned to begin with.

Is OP actually “not trying,” or is she just refusing to play a role that doesn’t feel like her? And more importantly, how much should anyone change their comfort just to meet someone else’s idea of attraction?

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