Love, as they sell it to us, is not love. It's a transaction dressed in silk. But real love? Real love is still an exchange — just not the kind they warn you about.
Not because you found someone perfect. But because you found someone who keeps trading with you — even on the days when you're both running on empty.
That's the exchange. And it's the only kind of love worth the risk. exchange love
People think exchange in love is cold. They think it's bargaining. But no — it's the most sacred barter system in the world. You give attention. They give presence. You give patience. They give honesty. You give a Saturday afternoon of silence, just sitting beside them while they grieve something they can't name. And they give you a Tuesday morning coffee, made exactly the way you forgot to ask for.
Where it breaks is when one person stops exchanging. When one keeps giving maps, and the other burns them for warmth. When one offers tenderness, and the other offers a receipt. Love, as they sell it to us, is not love
You see, to love someone is to hand them a map of your softest places. Your fears. Your midnight thoughts. The version of you that doesn't show up for interviews or first dates. And in return, they hand you their own trembling map. And then you both choose — every single day — not to weaponize what you've been shown.
So let them call love reckless. Let them call it blind. But know this: love without exchange is worship. And worship is lonely. Love with fair exchange is two flawed people saying, "I am bankrupt in so many ways. But here — take my last honest coin. And I'll take yours." Real love is still an exchange — just
And somehow, together, you become rich.
Not "I give you this, so you owe me that." Not tallying who cooked last or who cried more. Not keeping score like a bruised accountant at the end of a fight.
That is the exchange.