Submissive Partner Realizes His Girlfriend Doesn’t Love Him, Just Wants A Servant

In some relationships, one person assumes a more dominant role, and both partners find fulfillment in their roles. But what happens when the lines between love and control start to blur?

This man is in a female-led relationship, where he has given himself over to his girlfriend’s needs, yet after a painful experience, he begins to wonder whether she truly cares about him as a person or just as a servant to her whims.

As he reflects on their dynamic, the contrast between what he thought was love and how he’s been treated raises critical questions about the future of their relationship. Can he accept the imbalance, or is it time to reevaluate what love really means for them?

After realizing his girlfriend only values him as a submissive partner, a man questions if their relationship is healthy and if it can work long-term

Submissive Partner Realizes His Girlfriend Doesn’t Love Him, Just Wants A Servant
not the actual photo

'I (31/m) am in a submissive relationship with my girlfriend (28/f) and I just realized she doesn't actually love me.'

My girlfriend (of 1 1/2 years) and I follow an "FLR" which means female led relationship. It's basically a lifestyle fetish thing.

Without being too specific I basically have dedicated my life to making her happy in a seemingly selfless way

(it's not really selfless I guess because I enjoy it myself, but that's all I get from it).

She controls all the finances, we only do stuff if she wants to do it, we never do what I want, s__ is only for her, I do all the...

The whole relationship is basically about double standards that benefit her and that don't benefit me, to put it simply.

But that's just how our relationship is. I've struggled with it at times but I enjoy it overall.

I have a sciatica issue with my back. It's normally not a big deal but over the weekend I seriously screwed it up.

It was totally agonizing and I had to go to the hospital. My girlfriend was completely unsupportive and didn't care about me at all.

She told me to power through the pain but I was like rolling around in pain almost. It was clearly impossible.

I called her by her first name by accident and she yelled at me for being disrespectful.

I had to drive myself to the hospital because she wouldn't let me use the phone. She was just completely annoyed about the whole thing.

I think she told me that she hopes I catch the virus but I wasn't sure. I was out of it as I was leaving the house.

They gave me some muscle relaxers in the hospital and I'm doing better now,

but I'm trying not to exert myself too much until the disk completely goes back into place.

Also, while she does sometimes treat me badly as part of the "role", she didn't seem to be doing that here.

I mean she knew it was serious, and I think she just revealed exactly how she felt.

I always thought that even though we had this relationship, that she did actually care about me.

But because of the way our relationship was, it didn't come out much. She loved me in her own way, I thought.

But these last days, I realized that she actually just views me as a literal servant.

She doesn't care about me as a person, only as submissive partner. Even calling it a partnership doesn't make sense.

Maybe this is the wrong place to post this but I wanted to get a vanilla perspective with people that have normal, healthy relationships.

Am I overthinking this? Do you think I might be able to make the relationship work long-term?

And if you have dabbled in d/s stuff I'd be curious to hear if any of you have had similar experiences. Thanks.

The OP is currently facing a painful realization about the true nature of his relationship. At first glance, it may appear to be a consensual female‑led lifestyle based on dominance and submission (D/s), but recent events, including his acute health crisis and lack of emotional support, have led him to question whether there is genuine care or love underpinning the dynamic.

To understand what is happening, it helps to look at both the psychology of D/s relationships and the fundamentals of healthy emotional reciprocity in partnerships.

First, dominance and submission (D/s) is a specific form of power exchange that exists within the broader category of BDSM (bondage/discipline, dominance/submission, sadism/masochism).

As defined in academic and community sources, D/s relationships involve one partner, the Dominant, exercising agreed‑upon control, and the other, the submissive, willingly ceding control within established limits.

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Crucially, healthy D/s dynamics depend on negotiated boundaries, consent, trust, mutual respect, and the ability for either partner to revoke consent at any time. Simply having a power differential is not inherently problematic, but without these elements, the relationship risks becoming unilateral control rather than consensual exchange.

The research context shows that D/s and related practices are not inherently pathological and can be part of healthy consensual relationships when both partners feel respected and heard.

In fact, some studies suggest that people involved in such dynamics report relational and sexual satisfaction when they choose these roles freely and with open communication.

However, this does not guarantee emotional care outside of negotiated consensual roles, and it does not justify neglect or dismissiveness toward a partner’s actual emotional and physical needs.

In any intimate relationship, D/s or “vanilla”, researchers emphasize the importance of reciprocity and mutual support. Healthy relational bonds are described as “a two‑way street, where both partners give and receive support, care, and compromise.”

When one partner consistently receives support without feeling cared for in return, the relationship can become imbalanced and exhausting.

Moreover, emotional neglect, the ongoing failure to provide essential emotional support, attention, and validation, is widely recognized as damaging in romantic partnerships.

Psychological literature defines emotional neglect as a habitual lack of affectionate responsiveness, empathy, and emotional presence. In enduring relationships, emotional neglect can erode trust, intimacy, and the sense that one’s partner genuinely cares about them as a person.

That concept is especially relevant when one partner experiences a genuine need, such as illness, vulnerability, or distress, and the other responds with indifference rather than comfort or concern.

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Notably, emotional neglect is not just about what is said, but what is omitted: failing to provide comfort, empathy, or emotional engagement even when a partner is clearly suffering.

In the OP’s case, the disconnect between the submissive role he assumed and the lack of affection or care he received during his health crisis highlights a deeper imbalance.

A D/s relationship in which the Dominant partner does not also offer basic emotional support and compassion in non‑role contexts may not be emotionally healthy, regardless of consensual power structures.

Healthy relationships, whether BDSM‑oriented or not, require more than power imbalances and role play. They require mutual respect, trust, care, and responsiveness to each other’s emotional and physical needs. Without these foundational elements, consensual power exchange can risk becoming one‑sided control rather than a supportive partnership.

In summary, while a submissive/D/s lifestyle can be perfectly healthy when grounded in clear communication, consent, and mutual emotional care, what the OP is experiencing now looks more like an imbalance that lacks essential support.

Recognizing this distinction is the first step toward deciding whether the relationship can be renegotiated in a way that truly supports both partners, or whether it may ultimately be unsustainable because it fails to meet the basic human need for emotional connection and care.

Here’s what Redditors had to say:

These commenters emphasize that the situation is abusive, not a healthy BDSM dynamic

UncertainWeasel − Regardless of your type of relationship, your partner should always care and love you. This is the baseline.

It doesn't matter how you manifest or arrange it, if there is no love and caring, then it's abuse even in vanilla relationships.

You need to leave and find someone who cares for you.

bleepybleeperson − Let me preface this by saying I'm not vanilla. Your girlfriend's treatment of you is not OK.

For a relationship like yours, there has to be a lot of trust.

If you want her to be in control you need to be able to trust her, trust that she'll let you go to the hospital when you need to or...

Trust that the dynamic can be suspended in an emergency if that's what you want or need. For a dom / top to break that trust is unethical.

Get a new girlfriend. Edit: thank you all very much for the upvotes and awards!

It's also given me a reason to edit this post and add in the following general comment about kink and BDSM.

If any vanilla person who's curious about the BDSM world sees this post and this comment,

please know that while there are people like OP's girlfriend who don't practice kink ethically or safely,

generally the kink and BDSM communities are built on foundations of informed consent and mutual respect.

There are assholes, but most people are perfectly nice.

Being dominant doesn't mean you have to be disrespectful or harmful to your partner.

Being submissive doesn't mean you have to accept being treated like trash. Do check out r/BDSMAdvice for more.

This group expresses concern over the abusive nature of the relationship, emphasizing that the girlfriend’s behavior shows a lack of care, empathy, and respect

Absurd_Name-5231 − This may be controversial, but I think 24/7 d/s relationships are unhealthy, seriously unhealthy.

I say this as a fairly submissive person myself. But I'm satisfied with keeping it in the bedroom.

Sometimes we'll extend it into our daily life. But that's rare and even when we do that, we both know we're just playing.

I don't particularly enjoy being dominant but I do it for her at times.

It's just a fun thing that plays a small role in our otherwise completely respectful and loving relationship. That's the healthy way to do it.

If you're in a relationship with someone who treats you like s__t every day for a year, what do you expect?

Don't get me wrong, her behavior is awful, but isn't it just a natural manifestation of what you're already doing?

I wouldn't enjoy my girlfriend's entire life being dedicated to me, even if she said she wanted it. I care for her too much.

I want her to enjoy her life, and if she did seriously want to completely submit to me, I would rather she get professional help with that,

instead of exploiting it for my own gain. If your girlfriend love you, she'd feel the same way about you.

I know, people will yell at me for this, but I honestly feel like this sort of outcome is natural and should be common sense.

I recommend getting into a better relationship with a person who cares about you. Maybe that person can still fulfill your fantasy without abusing you.

Nox369 − Sooo I'm not a "vanilla" person and definitely the submissive one in my relationship but what you described is not normal or healthy.

Everything in your first paragraph sounds like literal abuse, not just submission. Then everything else you wrote after that solidifies the abuse.

My husband is definitely more dominant in our relationship but he still helps with the chores, kids and takes care of me.

I still have a say in our finances and money management.

He wouldn't ever n__lect me if I'm in pain, in fact he would do whatever he could to make me feel comfortable.

If I'm ever not happy I can tell him and we'll figure out how to fix that together. He always makes sure I know I'm love and appreciated.

He definitely in charge, but he's not walking all over me.

Craven_C_Raven − Jesus christ wake the f__k up. She doesn't love you. You are a helpful i__ot to her. Read what you wrote.

You want to spend the rest of your life with this person? How low is your self-esteem.

Yeah, call me a kink shamer, I don't care. What about ANY of this sounds healthy?

How would you act if you had a daughter and she was with a guy who was EXPLICITLY using her, and who didn't give a f__k about her?

These commenters clarify that even in BDSM relationships, boundaries, trust, and care are paramount

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helenp353 − A good Dominant cares for their sub. She shouldn't be in that kind of relationship if she can't uphold her end.

Libellchen1994 − Well, I am a switch. And while 24/7 is not my thing, I think I can have an opinion. A good Dom knows the hard limits.

And even if it wasn't a agreed on safeword, calling her by her first name (I think instead of mistress/goddess/. ..?)

She should have noticed that you really need help. A good Dom loves their sub. And protects them.

If only to protect their "belongings". That way she could have supported you without letting go of your dynamic too much.

While you said you agreed to abuse: no. Bdsm is never about abuse. Nothing about Abuse is safe, sane or consensual.

And because of this, your situation was abuse. It was neither safe (both of you didn't know what was wrong with your back.

Not letting you call for help and forcing you to endanger your live further with driving yourself) nor consensual

(you withdraw the consent for the moment). So you didn't agree to abuse, but she abused you.

These commenters agree that the relationship is unhealthy, noting the red flags of manipulation and lack of empathy

SunburntWombat − I really don’t think your relationship can work long-term.

Consensual BDSM in the bedroom is all fine and good, but bringing it to every life, to finances and domestic labour and to love is too much imo.

The transfer of power is so total it makes abuses more likely, and that seems exactly like what’s happening here.

From what you’ve written it sounds like you want a partner who values, respects and cares for you. Your current girlfriend is none of those things.

She’d rather that you drive yourself to the hospital while in terrible pain than break your s__ual dynamics.

That’s not just a hallmark of an abusive partner, but also a s__tty person in general.

I’ve done much more when a casual friend got sick. I don’t think any benefit you get from this relationship can outweigh tying yourself to this horrible human.

Btw, almost every abused person says “my partner is great except for this one or two things”.

It’s easy to focus on the good things, but they can’t cover for the serious defects in a relationship.

-Azrael-Blick- − It’s sounds like you’ve been manipulated and abused.

Most_Goat − I've struggled with it at times Red flag one of this post.

My girlfriend was completely unsupportive and didn't care about me at all.

Red flag two. I had to drive myself to the hospital because she wouldn't let me use the phone.

Red flag three. And these are just the ones that scream "oh f__k no" to me.

This is not a healthy relationship by any standard, vanilla or bdsm.

What do you think? Should the man leave this relationship and find someone who truly cares for him, or is he overreacting to the situation? Share your thoughts below!

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