Welcome to Tough Love. Every other week, we鈥檙e answering your questions about dating, breakups, and everything in between. Our advice giver is Blair Braverman, dogsled racer and author of . Have a question of your own? Write to us at toughlove@outsidemag.com.
My partner has run a mountain half marathon for a couple of years. Last year, after about a month of dating (things went fast), he asked me to go with him. The trip was about ten days鈥攊ncluding the car ride to/from the race and camping for several days to train at elevation so he can acclimate.聽
I went. For some reason, I thought he would pay, or had already paid for, the basic parts of the trip: rooms for the nights we would be on the road, a camping site, and associated costs like a trolley that would take him up and down the mountain before the race for acclimating at the top. He hadn鈥檛. So I went and paid for my share, which would be fine; I always do on dates. But I felt that basically I was there to pay for half of his trip. Also, our relationship was young. It didn鈥檛 feel like a trip for a committed couple鈥攋ust me tagging along while he did his thing. That would also be fine. I like to spend a lot of time on my own. But I am a freelance editor, so I don鈥檛 have the means to do it in such an expensive way.聽
We are now living together. This year, he is going to run the whole marathon up and down the mountain. I would like to support him, and I am a little worried about him since it is his first time doing so. But it would be very difficult financially. Money is very tight鈥攎ore than other years. I barely have enough money for my basic expenses this year. An over-$800 vacation is not easy for me.聽
This is getting long. But I have so many questions:
- Is it fair for him to ask me to pay for everything for this kind of trip?
- Would it be fair for me to accept his offer to pay for some parts of the trip, like the flight (maybe using frequent flier miles)聽or the trolley rides (they鈥檙e expensive!)?
- How can I support him but not put myself in a bad financial situation?
- If I don鈥檛 go, what is the best thing I can do to support him and not create tension/disappointment in our relationship?
Money isn鈥檛 fair.聽It鈥檚 time to spend less energy worrying about what鈥檚 fair, and more time coming up with a solution that feels good for both of you.
It seems like you take pride in always paying your share. And that鈥檚 great! But paying for your half of dates, especially early dates, is different from paying for half of everything in a relationship. When you鈥檙e first dating someone, splitting costs is a way to express values, determine boundaries, and signal the kind of relationship you鈥檙e looking for. But now that you and your boyfriend are living together, you鈥檙e moving toward a shared household economy. Some of that economy is financial, regardless of how you choose to combine or separate expenses. But much of the economy consists of labor, both physical and emotional: the things you do to keep your home and relationship running smoothly. Maybe you grow a garden, and you both enjoy having fresh vegetables and flowers. Maybe he struggles with depression, and you鈥檙e always there to remind him, with love and patience, that he鈥檚 not going to feel like this forever. Maybe he draws a bath for you after a long day, and throws out the gross stuff from the back of the refrigerator. All of these things are part of your shared currency.
You鈥檙e a team, and right now he has more money than you do. But there鈥檚 a good chance, if you鈥檙e together long-term, that there will be times when you鈥檙e the one who鈥檚 able to do more, whether it鈥檚 because of money or time or health. That鈥檚 part of the beauty of family: you can absorb each other鈥檚 needs.
The big question is, do you want to go on this trip, or would you rather find a way to support your guy from a distance? If you don鈥檛 want to go鈥攊f the stress outweighs the excitement鈥攖hen consider this column permission for you to stay home (given, of course, that you鈥檙e honest with him about the reasons you鈥檙e staying). You can hide notes in your boyfriend鈥檚 luggage and send him texts to say you鈥檙e thinking of him and have his favorite snacks waiting when he gets home. Money stress can be hell on a relationship, and by making responsible decisions for yourself, you鈥檙e also protecting him.
If you want to be there in person, then it is absolutely reasonable for your boyfriend to cover some of your costs, provided that he鈥檚 able and happy to do so. He鈥檚 going anyway, and his trip will be more fun with company; plus, it鈥檚 a chance for him to celebrate a major accomplishment with his partner by his side. You should sit down together, look at the funds you both have available, and calculate a budget for the trip. If it鈥檚 too expensive, you can work together to come up with cheaper options: you could split a hotel room with another racer, or stay at a campground. You could skip the trolley in the days before the race so you can catch up on freelance work at a coffee shop.聽
It might be daunting to have this kind of conversation with someone else, but as a general rule, the scarier an honest conversation seems, the more vital it is, and the more rewarding it can be in the end. Consider this an important step in your relationship. You鈥檙e learning how to support him鈥攁nd he鈥檚 learning how to support you, too.聽