There’s a question a lot of people love to dance around like it’s wearing church shoes on a wet floor: who is supposed to set order in a home?
Traditionally, many people would say the man.
Now before the allergic-to-accountability crowd starts twitching, let’s slow down. Setting order does not mean barking commands like a discount drill sergeant. It does not mean turning your relationship into a hostage situation with matching towels. It means leadership, structure, responsibility, and guidance. Real control, in the right hands, is not oppression. It’s responsibility with a backbone.
But we live in a time where too many people treat their feelings like an unlimited American Express card. Swipe here. Decline reality there. Overdraft on logic. Then blame everybody else when the bill comes.
Some folks hear the word “control” and instantly act like you’re trying to turn them into a robot. Calm down, Optimus. Nobody said love means becoming a household appliance. What it does mean is understanding that every successful relationship requires order, and order requires somebody mature enough to help maintain it.
Now let’s flip the scenario and expose the circus.
A lot of modern people–yes, women included, since that’s often where this conversation lands, will loudly declare, “I don’t want a man controlling me.”
Cool. Strong statement. Very dramatic. Great for social media captions.
But then that same person will wake up, get dressed, and go clock in for a job that tells them:
- what time to show up
- when to take lunch
- when they can go on vacation
- how long their break is
- when to get off the phone
- what they can wear
- how professional their hair, nails, and attitude better look
And if they don’t like it? There’s the door. Somebody else will gladly take that spot, probably for less money and half the complaining.
Funny how “nobody can tell me what to do” suddenly becomes “yes ma’am” and “absolutely, team player” when direct deposit hits on Friday.
Nobody walks into work saying, “Your accountability is triggering me.” Nobody tells HR, “I need you to validate my imagination.” Nobody tells the boss, “I feel like policies are toxic to my spirt.”
Why? Because jobs are not dating you. Jobs are renting your time.
That’s the part that should make people pause.
Some people will submit to a corporation faster than they’ll submit to real love. They will tolerate disrespect for a paycheck, swallow their pride for promotions, bite their tongue when the boss is out of pocket, and keep showing up with a smile that looks like it’s fighting for its life.
But when it comes to the person who actually loves them? The one investing in their present and future? The one willing to sacrifice, protect, provide, support, and stand in harm’s way if needed? Suddenly now it’s, “I just don’t want to lose myself.”
Lose yourself?
Ma’am, sir, beloved citizen–you already gave away your peace for a job that would replace you by Tuesday.
That’s what makes this whole thing so strange. People will surrender their comfort, their time, their bodies, their schedule, and their mental health for money. But ask them for cooperation, respect, and structure in love, and suddenly they become freedom fighters with Wi-Fi.
Let’s be honest: that’s not always about independence. A lot of the time, that’s about priorities.
Because submission is clearly not out of your element. You do it every week for money. You do it for managers. You do it for companies that barely remember your birthday and would send flowers to your funeral with a coupon attached.
So the real question becomes this:
Why is it easier to submit to profit than to love?
Why is the temporary check more trustworthy than the person trying to build with you? Why does the person using your labor get more cooperation than the person offering loyalty? Why do you know how to hold your tongue at work, but at home every conversation becomes a hostage negotiation with background music?
That’s not strength. That’s confused loyalty.
Now let’s be clear. Love should never be used as a disguise for abuse, domination, or insecurity wearing grown-up clothes. A real leader is not a tyrant. A real man does not lead through fear, manipulation, or ego. He leads through consistency, example, sacrifice, protection, wisdom, and accountability. The same way a real woman brings peace, discernment, support, and strength to the structure–not chaos with acrylics and attitude.
A healthy household is not built on who can yell the loudest or post the pettiest quote online. It’s built on mutual respect, clearly understood roles, and the maturity to recognize that structure is not slavery.
And maybe that’s the uncomfortable truth hiding in plain sight:
A lot of people do not hate submission. They hate not being in control when love requires them to become better.
Money doesn’t ask you to heal.
Money doesn’t require emotional maturity.
Money doesn’t care if you’re selfish, wounded, childish, or addicted to dysfunction.
Money just says, “Be useful.”
Love, however, demands more.
Love exposes selfishness.
Love requires growth.
Love challenges pride.
Love makes you accountable in ways money never will.
So yes, a self-respecting person should absolutely question that decision.
Because if you’ll bow for a paycheck but refuse to bend for partnership, then maybe the issue was never control. Maybe the issue is that you love money more than you love being loved.
And that’s a dangerous trade.
Because there will always be more employees.
But real love?
Real love is a lot harder to replace than a résumé.

There’s no shortage of people willing to help keep you exactly where you’ve always been.
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