He itemized my body like a business expense.
The “Date Night Invoice” should’ve been a joke—but it wasn’t.
Every line was a price on my time, my touch, my existence.
I thought I was overreacting. Then other women whispered, “Me too.”
This isn’t just about one man. It’s about the quiet, creeping eco
I didn’t pay his invoice; I paid attention. That spreadsheet stripped the romance from our evening and exposed something colder: a belief that affection is an investment that must yield returns. Once I saw it, I couldn’t unsee it—in his texts, in past relationships, in stories my friends told with a nervous laugh that sounded too much like recognition.
Chris’s counter-invoice landed like a flare in the dark, illuminating how many of us have silently absorbed the cost of making men feel adored, accommodated, unchallenged. It turned private discomfort into shared vocabulary, and shared vocabulary into a boundary. I owe Eric nothing, but I owe myself this promise: I will never again negotiate my worth against someone else’s sense of entitlement. Let them keep their ledgers. I’m done auditioning for a spot in anyone’s accounts receivable.