My boyfriend asked if I could babysit his seven-year-old daughter for the weekend.
It wasn’t the first time. When we first started dating, I happily helped. Movie nights, park trips, homework battles—I genuinely liked her. But somewhere along the way, it stopped feeling like a favor and started feeling like an expectation.
So this time, I said it clearly: “I’m not doing it for free anymore.”
He looked surprised. “She likes being here.”
“I like having her here,” I replied. “But this is childcare. It’s time, energy, groceries, activities. I need you to respect that.”
When he dropped her off that Friday, I held out my hand. “Payment first.”
He sighed, but he transferred the money.
The weekend went smoothly. We baked cookies. Built a blanket fort. She insisted on painting my nails bright purple and told me very seriously that glitter improves everything.
Later that night, after we’d read two chapters of her favorite book, she padded back into the living room where I was folding laundry.
“Can I ask you something?” she said softly.
“Of course.”
She climbed onto the couch beside me, tucking her legs underneath her.
“Did Daddy pay you?”
The question caught me off guard. “Yes,” I answered gently.
She nodded slowly. “Good.”
“Why’s that?”
She picked at the edge of the blanket. “Because Mommy says people shouldn’t do hard work for free. And taking care of me is hard work sometimes.” She smiled shyly. “I know I talk a lot.”
I laughed. “You do.”
She grew serious again. “I don’t want you to get tired of me.”
My heart squeezed.
“I’m not charging because of you,” I said. “I just want your dad to understand that helping takes effort. And when people respect your time, it means they respect you.”
She thought about that. “So if he pays you, it means he respects you?”
“Yes.”
She nodded decisively. “Okay. I’ll remind him next time.”
I didn’t expect what happened Sunday night.
When my boyfriend came to pick her up, she stood in front of him with her backpack on.
“Did you say thank you?” she asked.
He blinked. “For what?”
“For paying her,” she said firmly. “Because that means you respect her.”
Silence hung in the doorway.
He looked at me, something shifting in his expression.
“Thank you,” he said quietly. “For this weekend. And for being honest with me.”
After they left, my phone buzzed.
You were right, he texted. I was taking it for granted. That won’t happen again.
I smiled.
Sometimes setting boundaries doesn’t push people away.
Sometimes it teaches them—and the little ones watching—how love and respect are supposed to work.