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Being with a freeloader beneath my worth. You can’t live with such people, nor let them multiply. Proudly, a woman offered me her hand on my proposalYet as we walked away together, the echo of his empty promises dissolved into the crisp night air, leaving only the promise of a future we could finally claim.

Being a halfpayer was beneath my dignity. You cant live with people like that and let them multiply. Im proud to tell you this, the woman said when I made my suggestion.

Youre a woman, thats your natural role. Youre the keeper of the hearth. She replied, And youre supposed to be the provider, but youre a halfpayer. So I cant live with someone like that, and I cant let people like you breed.

What do you mean? Im proposing a normal, adult relationship.

No, Michael. Youre looking for a convenient life for yourself.

Well, youre a woman. Managing the home is natural.

So wheres the provider? Is it 5050 now, too?

The words hit me like a bell in my ears. Its one thing when a woman declines calmly, without drama, simply because were not compatible. Its another when she looks at you as if youre a petty swindler, a fiftyfouryearold man who tried a cheap scheme and got caught. What hurt most wasnt the rejection itself, but the contempt in her tone, as if 5050 were a diagnosis, a brand, a reason not just to refuse but to treat the whole encounter like a sanitary inspection.

My name is Michael, Im fiftyfour, divorced, with an adult daughter whose maintenance payments stopped years ago. My exwife lives on her own and seems to be getting along fine, especially considering how many years I carried the endless family obligations: repairs, mortgages, loans, holidays, purchases, a cottage, fridges, washing machines and the whole grind that turns a man into a functionbring, pay, fix. After the divorce I made a firm decision: I would not step onto the ride called the man must provide again. Not because Im greedy, but because Im tired of being a walking ATM.

I met Ellen on a dating site. Shes fortynine, wellgroomed, calm, with a solid job, and free of the perpetual drama about exgoats and abusive men that half the women over forty now recite by the book. We messaged for about three weeks, then started calling, met a few times, went to cafés, walked in the park, and I thought I had finally found a sensible adult who understood that at our age relationships arent about a prince on a white horse but about comfort, peace and mutually beneficial coexistence.

From the start I was honest about my expectations. At fiftyfour, romance surprises are out of season. I told her plainly: I need a calm partnership, no mindgames, no demands to prove love, no attempts to tap my wallet for a second youth. Ive already paid my dues. Enough.

She listened, nodded, even agreed on some points, and I relaxed. Finally, a grownup woman who sees a relationship as a partnership, not a sponsorship. One evening we were at her flat, sipping wine and chatting, and the conversation drifted toward living arrangements.

Ellen has a spacious threebedroom flat in a good neighbourhood. I have a modest onebedroom flatclean, decent, but tiny. I suggested what seemed logical for two adults.

Look, I said, we could stay in your place and I could rent out mine.

She asked calmly, And then?

Simple. The rent goes into our joint budget for food. We split the council tax and utilities. Grocerieseither each person pays for themselves or we pool what we need. Everything fair.

At that moment I saw her expression change, not dramatically, not theatrically, but the warm interest in her eyes faded and something else took its place. She set her glass down and asked,

So youre saying I should live in my own flat, do the housework, and also chip in financially?

I didnt understand the reaction.

Whats so odd about that? Were both adults.

Then she said something that hit me like an electric shock.

Being with a halfpayer is beneath my dignity.

I thought Id misheard.

What do you mean?

She looked at me, perfectly composed.

Literally, Michael. Ive lived with men like you before.

The phrase men like you felt like a label for a whole class of defective, cheap, inconvenient men. I bristled.

Im proposing a normal, adult relationship.

She smirked.

No, youre offering a very comfortable life for yourself.

Now I was genuinely confused. I wasnt asking her to support me, buy me a car, pay my loans or feed me for free. Id suggested a straightforward, honest arrangement. But Ellen seemed to see it differently.

You want to live in my flat, rent out yours and live off that rent, while the household chores automatically become yours.

I answered, Well, youre a woman. Thats natural.

She stared at me as if I were a talking cockroach.

Whats natural? she asked. Being the keeper of the hearth? She laughed, a cold, hollow laugh.

So I should cook, wash, tidy, create a cosy home, and you just exist alongside me?

The twist irritated me.

Why just exist? Im contributing too.

To what?

To the council tax, the groceries

She cut me off. Whose flat? Yours. Whose household? I started to get angry.

Youre exaggerating. The womankeeper of the hearth!

She then delivered the line that still burns inside me.

You should be the provider, Michael. But youre a halfpayer. So I cant live with someone like that.

I froze.

What does that even mean?

She took a sip of wine and finished calmly, It means people like you shouldnt be allowed to multiply.

My face flushed. I was fiftyfour, a grown man. I sat in a strangers flat listening to a woman nearly my age lecture me that I couldnt have children because I wasnt willing to support her fully.

I snapped, So you need a sponsor?

She shrugged. No. I need a man.

And I am what?

Youre a man who wants an easier life.

That hit hardest. I truly believed I was offering a balanced model, not a lopsided one, not a return to a world where the man carries everything.

The longer she talked, the more I felt her ironclad certainty, as if shed already lived through this and knew exactly how it would end. She warned, First its lets do 5050, then youll end up eating more, the utilities go up, Ill be the one buying the little things, cooking, cleaning, while you only bring home the occasional bag of groceries and call yourself a hero.

I was furious.

You dont even know me properly.

She answered, I know this type of man very well.

Shed reduced me to a stereotype, a set of symptoms. I tried to explain that I didnt want to fall back into the old model where the man does everything and the woman merely creates atmosphere. Id lived that life; Id had enough. But the more I spoke, the more the respect in her eyes vanished. The loss of respect was the most painful partnot the refusal, not the argument, but the complete lack of regard.

In the past, women at least pretended to appreciate a mans honesty. Now, if you dont carry the woman entirely, youre instantly labelled a freeloader, a halfpayer. The irony is that Ellen earns almost as much as I do, has an adult son, her own flat, and lives comfortably on her own. Yet the expectation remains that the man must be the breadwinner. Equality lasts only until money has to be paid.

I left her flat angry, didnt say proper goodbyes, just grabbed my coat and went. All the way home the image of her wordspeople like you shouldnt be allowed to multiplyreplayed in my mind, as if I were genetic waste. Later that night I caught myself wondering whether it was the 5050 phrase that had struck her, or the fact that I had already assigned roles: she would handle the home, I would provide help.

Women nowadays, it seems, crave only money, looking for sponsors. Yet after fifty people are good at calculating who benefits from whom. The most infuriating part was that she never tried to keep me, never called, never messaged, as if shed simply diagnosed me and moved on.

Sometimes I still ask myself: can we, at our age, simply propose an adult partnership without being instantly branded as greedy leeches?

The psychologists take: the clash is between two relationship models. The man sees a 5050 financial split as fair after years of being the sole provider, but he still expects the woman to shoulder the domestic load. The woman perceives an imbalance: money may be equal, but chores are not, so she rejects the proposal outright.

The lesson I finally took from it is that a true partnership respects both financial and domestic contributions. Equality isnt just about splitting the rent; its about valuing each persons effort, whether its a paycheck or a tidy kitchen. Only when both sides feel seen and appreciated can a relationship truly thrive.

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