I’ve been with my girlfriend for 4 years. Throughout our relationship, I covered about 99% of all expenses—dinners, vacations, bills, small day-to-day purchases. It never really bothered me; I wanted to take care of her.
The other day, she craved bubble tea. It was a simple $10 drink, but that day I had forgotten my wallet, and my phone was dead. I asked her if she could pay for it. She hesitated, sighed, and reluctantly pulled out her card.
At the time, I brushed it off. But the next morning, something strange happened. She looked at me and said:
“Hey, can you send me back that $10 from yesterday?”
I froze.
Four years together. Thousands of dollars I had spent without a second thought. And she was asking me to pay her back—for one bubble tea.
It wasn’t about the money. It was about what it meant. About the imbalance, the lack of generosity, and the fact that after everything I’d done, she couldn’t even let a $10 moment slide.
That’s when I realized: relationships aren’t measured in who pays for what, but in willingness. In reciprocity. In showing that you’re a team, not two people keeping score.
And in that moment, it became clear that maybe we weren’t really on the same team after all.