by Anonymous
There was a period in my life when dating stopped feeling emotional and started feeling strategic. I did not enter that season thinking, “I want to use people.” It was not that simple, and it definitely was not glamorous. I was overwhelmed, financially stretched, emotionally tired, and constantly anxious about how I was going to sustain myself while still trying to maintain the appearance that I was doing okay.
At first, it happened quietly. A dinner here. A conversation there. Someone offering help, and me accepting it because I genuinely needed relief. Then slowly, without realizing it, I started viewing attention differently. I became more open to entertaining people I knew I did not deeply connect with because there was comfort in knowing that at least for a moment, I would not have to carry everything alone.
What people rarely talk about is how survival can blur your emotional boundaries. When you are constantly worried about money, security starts to feel attractive in ways that have nothing to do with love. You stop asking yourself whether someone truly understands you, and you start focusing on whether being around them makes life easier. The conversations become less about connection and more about stability, access, and relief.
From the outside, it probably looked exciting. There were nice restaurants, thoughtful gifts, random transfers, and moments that could easily be mistaken for luxury. But internally, there was always a strange emotional distance that I could not ignore. I knew I was showing up physically while withholding parts of myself emotionally because I was trying to survive more than I was trying to build anything genuine.
The internet has a way of packaging these situations as empowerment without fully acknowledging the emotional cost attached to them. Everything becomes content. Women are encouraged to romanticize being financially supported without creating enough space to talk about what happens when support becomes transactional and your sense of self starts adjusting around what people can provide for you.
What affected me the most was not even the dating itself. It was realizing how quickly I had started disconnecting from my own honesty. I became skilled at performing versions of myself that felt appealing, agreeable, and emotionally convenient. I learned how to navigate conversations carefully, how to remain emotionally detached while still appearing warm, and how to avoid confronting the emptiness that sometimes followed those interactions.
There were moments I would return home feeling relieved financially but emotionally exhausted because deep down I knew I was craving something entirely different. I did not actually want luxury more than connection. I wanted stability without feeling like I had to negotiate my authenticity to receive it.
I also realized that constantly attaching financial relief to romance changes the way you experience care. It becomes harder to tell whether someone values you or simply enjoys access to your attention. You begin to question intentions constantly, and eventually even genuine kindness can start feeling conditional.
I understand why many women end up in these situations. Life is expensive. Pressure is relentless. Sometimes people make emotional compromises because they are trying to protect themselves from struggle, disappointment, or uncertainty. I do not believe that makes someone evil or shallow. I think it makes them human.
But I also think there is grief in constantly dividing yourself between survival and sincerity. There is grief in knowing that parts of you are present while other parts remain guarded because vulnerability feels too risky when your security is involved.
The hardest realization for me was understanding that I had started confusing emotional detachment with maturity. I told myself I was simply being realistic, strategic, and practical, but in truth, I had slowly stopped allowing myself to experience relationships honestly.
Maybe the real confession is not that I dated for money sometimes. Maybe the real confession is that I became so afraid of struggling alone that I convinced myself emotional disconnection was safer than authenticity.
And for a long time, I did not even realize how lonely that made me feel.





