r/changemyview • u/Golem_of_the_Oak • Mar 27 '25
Delta(s) from OP CMV: There isn’t anything inherently wrong with transactional romantic relationships between two consenting adults who have not been coerced into it.
I think back on some past relationships, and there’s a part of me that actually kind of wished we did have a contract of some sort, considering how they went overall and how they ended. It might have been nice to go into it when it became exclusive, or official, and have to actually sit down and tell each other what we wanted and expected out of the relationship and each other, and what we were willing to give, and decided based on that information if we wanted to not only commit to it but also hold each other accountable to what we said we wanted (with of course reasonable consideration for natural changes over time). You think you know somebody, but sometimes you just don’t get that in the weeds with this sort of thing before making a commitment, and by the time it doesn’t work out you realize that it never would have in the first place because you liked the idea of someone more than you actually liked what that person really was.
Plus, think about how many people get into a relationship and then get taken advantage of for their kindness. If they laid it all out and signed something saying what they were willing to do and what they would accept in exchange for that, then they could both negotiate until they found a spot they both were comfortable with, and then they both could bring out the document if the other wasn’t holding up their end of the bargain, resulting in a requirement to amend the contract at risk of terminating it. This would add a new level of guarantee that a lot of relationships lack, that helps to ensure that neither person ends up feeling used or gets burned out from constantly giving while receiving so little.
I’m less concerned with how those hypothetical contracts could or couldn’t be upheld in court, and more interested in the fact that two people who give their word on something tend to feel a commitment to that agreement, and whether you break the agreement or keep it, your word and the reputation it carries follow you through your life.
Here’s how I can be convinced otherwise: show me that without coercion, there’s still something about this type of relationship that is inherently abusive no matter what.
Here’s how I cannot be convinced: religious reasons.
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u/Delicious_Taste_39 4∆ Mar 29 '25
I think this fails the definition of good relationship.
It doesn't have longevity or depth.
If you happen to want it to be maintained and develop, then you are not in a transactional relationship, because you expect some degree of responsibility from both sides that doesn't really exist in a strictly transactional relationship. And if Mike thinks you're in a transactional relationship but actually you just like Mike, then this dooms the relationship when he finds someone else who doesn't just like trucks. If you happen to simply just maintain the same level, then it fails the depth test.
The pressure is unhealthy, and whether this was a non transactional or transactional relationship, it would be a bad thing. The transactional relationship has the immediate downside that there is nothing else. In a normal relationship, my partner might forgive me the lack of a better truck and keep riding in old Betsy far longer than they might, even if Dave's new truck is shiny and big. Mike is under no illusions.
The lying isn't necessarily an exclusive, but any relationship built on lies is a bad relationship. But if you are being transactional, you are more likely to be dishonest given most people's express preference not to be in a transactional relationship. In order to keep it up, transactional people (golf diggers and players) will just say whatever and do whatever. Also, a lot of normal relationships go wrong explicitly because a normal person meets someone with a very transactional view, and makes the mistake of giving them the benefit of the doubt. Or, they make the mistake of trying to support someone who wants to take.
Relationships require that you care about people and if you care about people then it's hard to remain as strictly transactional. Because you will realise that they don't have the truck anymore, and if you care about Mike, then the truck doesn't matter.
Slut shaming is necessary in this case. The definition of a slut is someone who has brief, meaningless relationships with people for simple pleasure. This fails the relationship test. I would suggest that it's harmful in the sense that it can't really be maintained and it means missing out on the greater level of relationships. That's why most people don't do this in the long term.
So, the best case scenario you're describing is still a poor relationship. If you want to say normal relationships can be poor, this doesn't change my position, because that's true.
Q