He didn’t say it to be clever. He said it like a man who had already paid the price. One sentence about women, money, and feelings carried a warning most people only understand too late. It wasn’t about hating love. It was about surviving it.
When you give too much, too fast, you shift the power. Hearts get careless. Expectations multiply. Money complicates affection. Feelings become leverage. What you thought was connection can quietly turn into control.
And by the time you notice, you’ve already given them the two things that hurt most to lose: your savings and your so… Continues…
He was speaking to the part of you that wants to be fully seen and still secretly fears being taken for granted.
Boundaries are not walls; they are doors with locks, opened slowly over time. When you reveal your deepest emotions or your full financial reality to someone who hasn’t earned that level of trust, you invite them into a room they may not know how to respect.
Real intimacy isn’t built on instant transparency; it’s built on tested consistency. You watch how someone handles disappointment, conflict,
and limitation before you hand them the most fragile parts of you.
Love doesn’t require self-exposure on demand. It asks for mutual responsibility: for your heart, your future, and the shared space in between.
His warning was never “Don’t feel” or “Don’t give.” It was simpler, and harder: don’t offer what is sacred to someone who hasn’t yet shown they can keep it safe.