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Being with a half‑breed beneath my dignity; you can’t live with such folk nor let them multiply—proudly, a lady presented me her token on my proposal.
Im Michael, 54, divorced, with an adult daughter whos long since stopped demanding childsupport. My exwife lives on her own and, by all accounts, manages quite wellespecially if you consider how many years I spent shouldering the endless family duties: repairs, loans, holidays, buying new kitchen appliances, a country house, fridges, washing machines and the whole domestic grind that slowly turns a man into a walking, talking utility bill. After the split I made a crystalclear decision: the second time around I wasnt going back into the men must provide amusement park. Not because Im stingy, but because Im fed up being a human ATM.
I met Ethel on a dating site. Shes 49, wellkept, calm, with a solid job and none of those perpetual tirades about exgoats and abusive men that half the women over forty now seem to rehearse by the book. We messaged for about three weeks, then started talking on the phone, met a few times for coffee, strolls in the park, and I got the feeling Id finally found a sensible adult who understands that at our age relationships are less about knights in shining armour and more about comfort, peace of mind and mutually beneficial cohabitation.
From the outset I was blunt about my expectations. At fiftyfour, romantic surprises feel a bit like trying to light a candle with a torch. I said outright: I want a calm partnership, no brainwashing love tests, no attempts to plunge a mans wallet into a secondhand youth fountain. Ive earned my own retirement; enough is enough.
Ethel listened, nodded, even agreed on a few points, and I relaxed. Finally, a grownup woman who sees a relationship as a partnership rather than a sponsorship. One evening we were at her flat, sipping a modest bottle of red, chatting, and the conversation driftedquite naturallytowards living arrangements.
Ethel lives in a spacious threebedroom flat in a decent part of Manchester. I have a tidy onebedroom flat in Leedsclean, modest, but cramped. I thought it logical to suggest a compromise that seemed fair for two adults.
Look, I said, we could stay in your place and I could let my flat go to rent.
She asked, almost politely, And then?
Simple, I replied. The rent goes into a joint pot for groceries. We split the utilities 5050. Foodeither each person brings their own or we chip in together. All above board.
Thats when I first saw the change in her expression. Not a sudden flip, not a theatrical gasp, but the warm curiosity in her eyes dimmed, replaced by something else.
She set her glass down and asked, So youre offering me to live in my own flat, do the housework, and still chip in?
I was taken aback. Whats the problem? Were both adults.
And then she dropped the line that hit me like a stray electric shock.
Being with a halfpayer is beneath my worth.
I thought Id misheard.
What do you mean?
She looked at me calmly, as if reciting a line from a script.
Straight up, Mick. Ive already lived with men like you.
The phrase men like you felt like a label slapped on a whole class of menbroken, cheap, inconvenient.
I tried to stay composed. Im proposing a normal, adult relationship.
She smirked. No, youre proposing a very convenient life for yourself.
Now the gears started grinding in my head. I wasnt asking her to bankroll me, buy me a car or foot my mortgage. I was offering a straightforward, adult arrangement. Yet Ethel seemed to read it very differently.
You want to live in my flat, rent out yours, and live off that money, while the household duties automatically become yours, she said.
I answered, halfjoking, Well, youre a woman. Thats natural.
She stared at me as if I were a talking cockroach.
Whats natural? she asked. Well a woman is the keeper of the hearth, she added, chuckling in a way that felt more icy than amused. So Im supposed to cook, wash, tidy, make it cosy, and you just exist?
I was getting annoyed at the distortion. Why just exist? Im contributing too.
Where?
Utilities, groceries
She cut in, Whose flat are we talking about? Yours. And whose household chores?
I started to raise my voice a little: Youre blowing this out of proportion. A womanthekeeperofthehearth!
She delivered the final blow.
You should be the provider, Michael. But alas, youre a halfpayer. Men like you cant stay together, let alone reproduce.
I froze. What does that even mean?
She took a sip of wine and finished, They cant be allowed to multiply.
My cheeks flushed a deep crimson. Im a fiftyfouryearold man, not a petri dish.
There I was, in a strangers flat, listening to a woman approaching fifty discuss why I shouldnt multiply because Id rather not fully support her.
Do you need a sponsor then? I asked.
She shrugged. No. I need a man.
And I am?
Youre a bloke who wants a cosy spot without the hassle.
That hit harder than any insult because I genuinely believed I was offering a fair modelno tilt, no onesided load, just a balanced partnership.
The longer she spoke, the more the certainty in her tone grew, as if shed already lived through this scenario a hundred times and knew exactly how it would end. She warned, First itll be fiftyfifty, then youll end up eating more, the utilities will rise, Ill end up buying the little bits, cooking, cleaning, while you, at best, fetch a supermarket bag once a month and call yourself a hero.
It infuriated me.
You dont even know me properly, I shot back.
She replied coolly, I know this type of man very well.
Type of man, she repeated, as if I were a checklist of symptoms.
I tried to explain that I simply didnt want to be dragged back into the oldfashioned script where the man supplies everything and the woman creates the atmosphere. Id lived that life; Id had enough.
But the more I talked, the clearer it became that any respect I might have earned was evaporating. The worst part wasnt the rejectionit was the lack of any genuine respect. In the past, women at least pretended to value a mans honesty. Now, if you dont want to shoulder the entire load, youre instantly catalogued as a freeloader, a halfpayer.
The irony is that Ethel earns almost as much as I do. She has a solid career, an adult son, her own flat, and lives comfortably on her own. Yet the expectation remains that the man must still be the provider. Equality, it seems, lasts right up until the moment money actually has to change hands.
I left her flat that night angry as a hornet, didnt bother saying a proper goodbye, just grabbed my coat and walked out. The phrase they cant be allowed to multiply kept looping in my head all the way home, as if I were some sort of genetic waste.
Later, lying awake, I wondered whether it was the fiftyfifty that had set her off, or the fact that Id already handed out the traditional roles: she as the domestic, me as the help.
Women these days seem to be looking for sponsors, but after fifty, most people are pretty good at doing the maths on whos getting what. The most irritating part of the whole saga is that she never tried to keep me, never called, never texted, never explained herselfjust handed me a diagnosis and moved on with her life.
And I still sometimes think: is it really impossible now to propose a mature, adult relationship without being instantly labelled a cheaptaker?
—
**Psychologists take:** This tale spotlights the clash of two relationship models. Michael sees his fiftyfifty split as honest and rational, having grown weary of the perpetual provider role. Yet he still clings to the old assumption that household chores and emotional labour should fall to the woman. Ethel instantly perceives this mismatch: financial equality is fine, but not when domestic duties stay onesided. Her halfpayer label masks a fear of ending up in a partnership where she does more than her fair share. Michaels anger stems from feeling his masculine role and life experience are being dismissed. The core conflict is not the money split itself, but the unequal distribution of everyday responsibilities.
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