My boyfriend wanted me to babysit his 7-year-old daughter for the weekend, but I made it clear I wasn’t doing it for free anymore. When he dropped her off, I demanded that he pay me first. Later that night, his daughter came up to me and said,“Daddy told me you don’t love me unless he gives you money.”I froze. My heart dropped into my stomach. I didn’t know how to respond to a little girl who was blinking up at me, confused and hurt. I tried to explain gently that it wasn’t about love, that adults sometimes argue about responsibilities and fairness—but I could see the seed of doubt already planted in her mind.
The rest of the evening, she stayed unusually quiet, watching me like she wasn’t sure who I really was. Every time I tried to engage her in games, coloring, or even bedtime stories, she hesitated. It was as if she was testing whether my kindness was “real” or “paid for.”When I texted my boyfriend about what she’d said, he brushed it off: “She’ll forget by morning. Stop overthinking.” But I couldn’t stop thinking about it.Because in that one sentence, I realized the real problem wasn’t babysitting fees—it was trust. Trust between me and her. Trust between me and him. And if we couldn’t get that right, no amount of money would fix it.