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“We’re modern people, right?—So I suggested we move in together, but with a catch: expenses 50/50, and all the housework’s yours, since you’re the woman… The room fell silent. I was stunned…”

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Were living in the twenty-first century, after all, I said, suggesting we move in togetherwith one condition: we split expenses fifty-fifty, but all the housework is yours, because youre a woman There was a sudden silence. She was dumbfounded.

Wed been seeing each other for six months. It was that golden period when a partners small faults seem adorable, and the future appears nothing but bright and promising. Henry seemed almost perfect to me: smart, well-off, well-read, always impeccably dressed. We spent weekends at cosy cafés, wandered through parks, discussed films, and it felt as though our interests and ideas aligned perfectly.

But soon, I realised we were looking at life from different angles. I imagined a relationship as an equal partnership, but for him, it was simply a shortcut to comfort without any extra effort.

The conversation about living together came up over a casual supper. He poured the tea and suddenly said, Look, isnt it time we stopped shuttling between our places? Renting two flats is silly. Shall we move in together? We can find a nice two-bed closer to the city centre.

I smiledId been hinting at this step for ages. But the words that followed made me set my cup aside and take a better look at the man I thought I knew.

Lets be clear about the ground rules, he continued in a business-like tone, as if negotiating a supply contract rather than starting a family. Were modern people. The budget should be separate, and any shared costsrent, bills, groceriesshould be split fifty-fifty.

I nodded. It sounded fair enoughequality and all that.

How will we divide the housework? I asked, expecting the same fifty-fifty logic.

Henry looked momentarily awkward, then flashed a disarming grin. Natures sorted that out for us. Youre a womanhomemakings in your blood. So its your responsibility to cook, clean, do the laundry. Ill help when I feel like ittake the bins out or fix a shelf if it falls off, but youd handle the bulk of it. Isnt it natural to want to be the lady of your own home?

There followed a heavy silence. I stared at him, trying to piece all this together.

Why pay a cleaner when you have a beloved partner?

I decided there was no point arguing and chose to respond in his own terms.

Henry, I understand you, I said calmly. You want financial partnershipfair enough. You want good housekeeping: tasty dinners, clean shirts, spotless floors. But, just like you, I work full-time. I dont have the energy or inclination to spend my evenings supporting the household.

He tensed but kept listening.

So heres my counter-offer, I went on. If we split expenses, lets do this like civilised adults. We can hire a cleaner twice a weekfor cleaning, ironing, meal prep for a few days. Wed split the costs, too. That way, everything stays tidy and delicious, and no ones overwhelmed. Id still take care of the homely touchescandles, curtains, all that.

His expression changed: first surprise, then annoyance, then detachment. I could see his mental calculator ticking over, and clearly he didnt like the total.

Why bring a stranger into the home? he grimaced. Thats just extra spending. Cant you just cook dinner for your husband? Thats caring, not a chore.

Suddenly, as soon as it concerned the real value of a womans labour, everything became about love and destiny. Cooking dinner was care, but splitting grocery costs was just business.

Henry, I said gently, if Im cooking dinner after an eight-hour workday, while you play games or watch TV, its not careits exploitation. We agreed on separate budgets, so everything gets split. Either we divide the tasks, or we pay someone to do them. I wont accept a situation where I pay just as much as you, but work twice as hard.

He said nothing. The rest of dinner passed in tense silence, and he said he needed time to think.

Next morning, there was no usual Good morning text. By evening, I got a brief message about being delayed at work. Three days later, he vanished completely. No replies to calls.

A week later, I heard through mutual friends: You split up because youre money-obsessed and not domestically inclined. That I only cared about money, and wasnt ready for family life.

It hurt at first. Half a year of dating, plans, illusions. But gradually, relief took over.

His disappearance was the best answer to all my doubts. He didnt want mehe just needed a comfortable nest, free of effort.

Henry was goneand thank goodness. I hired a cleaner for myself. I come home to a tidy flat, brew my tea, and understand: what a blessing it is not to serve someone who doesnt value you.

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