Instead of berating Leah for what she expects a man to bring to bring to the table why aren't people (that disagree so profusely with what she says) asking what she will bring to table that she sees of equal value? I think that's reasonable. Of course, you may disagree in what Leah perceives as value but aren't you even curious to see if it would affect your opinion?It's not so much what she offers as her apparent lack of respect for what he offers other than the financial. I take for granted that she brings significant value to the relationshp, in the eyes of her lover. I also assume that she feels he should respect her for those non-financial contributions. Is her lover also making non-financial contributions to the relationship? Although those other factors may be a prerequisite to a relationship, they apparently do not suffice for her respect of him.
C Originally Posted by Camille
To put it another way, it suggests either that: (a) the gentleman must always bring more to the relationship than the lady; or (b) the lady's non-financial contributions always should be more valued by him than the gentleman's non-financial contributions are valued by her. Both seem (to me) rooted very heavily in antiquated gender stereotypes, where the man always had the wealth and power and almost inevitably dated or courted below his socio-economic class. I enjoyed Pride and Prejudice, but it doesn't portray my life. I almost always dated social and financial equals, or even (slight?) superiors.
I don't criticize that perspective per se. It may accurately reflect relative value for the relationships she's been in. Same for Naomi and Lina. And I am not arguing an individual case, that my non-financial contributions are the equal of theirs. I have no idea, but assume they're not for the sake of argument. I just wouldn't want to be in a relationship with someone who valued what I contributed (other than financially) to be less than her value contributed, and insufficient for her respect, as an absolute rule. But she and I are not going to have a relationship anyway, so no harm, no foul.
If it's expressed on a case-by-case basis, or predicated on a significant imbalance in resources -- not as big of a deal. Then it's more about ability to pay than respect. The same, perhaps, if it's expressed as a social convention that a lady enjoys rather than a requirement, or something without which she cannot respect him.
Again, I have generally followed social conventions in this matter. But something that sounds like an absolute right or entitlement bothers me. It's a lady's attitude toward me that matters most, not the money. It seems degrading, perhaps a minor version of what women feel when they talk about treated as a sex object. An absolutist attitude seems to be treating men as money objects.