I agree with that...I think things should be kept friendly and cordial but not overly familiar...when a lady starts calling the men who pay for her TEMPORARY company real life friends then boundaries can get blurred and someone on one side of the arrangement or the other is bound to get taken advantage of(sometimes the girl gets suckered into giving away time and sometimes the guy ends up spending an awful lot more money than he originally intended to help his "friend"). Things then tend to get messy, feelings get hurt and depending on the level of maturity of those involved serious drama can occur...professionals take care to avoid that kind of complication while giving as genuine an intimate encounter as can occur under whatever the circumstances are.
Originally Posted by Hannah Heresy
Excellent points Hannah. Many potential pitfalls.
I assume that a provider will approach our relationship in a similar way I do with my students, and the way it sounds like you do with your clients, friendly but not friends.
(I just realized that sentence can be interpreted way creepier than I intend it. Or perhaps way kinkier than I intended it.
)
I bonded with one provider when we discovered we were both fans of the same obscure author. Through discussing his books we learned we had similar backgrounds and attitudes. We had that click that happens when you meet a like-minded soul. We shared some information about our families and our lives. But we retained the boundary from overly detailed personal information. I became a regular client partly because she was a great provider and partly because the conversation was great. Eventually we scheduled some of our appointments near meal times so we could share a meal at the local diner then head back to her place. If she was short on any supplies or provisions, I would pick some up on the way over. I wore hats. There wasn't a good place to put my hat at her place. So I bought her a cool old hat rack I found at a garage sale so I'd have a place for my hat. I was happy to provide these minor, incidental expenses and at no time did she imply any financial obligations.
We had that level of maturity that you referred to. I would call us friends, but we were careful to maintain boundaries.
We kept the free time she chose to spend talking to me and the time I paid for her company from interfering with each other. We were not socially friends outside of our visits, we did not have expectations of the other. We enjoyed what the other could provide us, when they were available to provide it (not exclusively using the common us of the word "provide" here), and respected each other's role and position in the relationship. An uncommon situation, but possible with the right two people.