When Matt offered to cover our rent, it felt like a dream. He said he wanted to take care of us, and I believed it was genuine love. I had no idea it came with unspoken rules and expectations.
Moving in together seemed like the right step. We’d been dating for two years, and we were already practically living together. Though I warned him my job at a shelter didn’t pay much, he insisted on paying everything himself.
He framed it as a loving gesture—“You’re the future mother of my kids”—and told me to save my money. I agreed, grateful but unaware of the imbalance that was forming beneath the surface.
The day we moved in, I went out to grab lunch. When I returned, all my belongings were shoved into a closet. His things dominated the entire apartment. When I asked about it, he said, “I pay, so I decide.”
That’s when I realized: this wasn’t a shared home—it was his space, and I was just a guest. Still calm, I called the one person who could get through to him—his father.
Matt’s dad arrived, handed him a dollar, and told him to dance—point made. “You think paying means ownership?” he asked. Matt was humiliated. I moved out that night with his dad’s help.
Now I live alone, surrounded by my things, in a space that’s mine. It’s not perfect, but it’s peaceful. I’ve learned love should be equal—never transactional.
And I’m waiting for a love built on respect, not control.