The Modern Love Roundtable

Who Really Benefits From Situationships?

Erica Bell Season 1 Episode 4

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0:00 | 13:50

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Situationships are everywhere—but let’s be honest, they’re not as mutual as people pretend.

In this episode of The Modern Love Roundtable, the hosts break down who really benefits when there’s no label, no commitment, and no accountability. Are men getting access without responsibility—or are women choosing to stay in situations that don’t meet their needs?

From mixed signals to emotional attachment, the conversation gets real about power, control, and why the person who cares less often has the upper hand.

If you’ve ever stayed in something undefined hoping it would turn into more, this episode will challenge you to ask yourself one question: are you being chosen—or are you just available?

If this conversation gave you clarity, make sure you’re subscribed to Decode Him: The Roundtable so you never miss a breakdown.

Because here, we don’t guess—we decode.

Follow Erica Bell and Heart Sync Media Group for more real conversations on dating, relationships, and emotional clarity.

And if you’re tired of overthinking, mixed signals, and trying to figure it out on your own…

Tap into the Love Decoded AI and get real-time insight into what his behavior actually means.

Because at the end of the day…

Clarity is peace.
 And confusion is never accidental.

Until next time—protect your energy, trust what you see… and don’t ignore what you feel.

SPEAKER_04

Welcome to Modern Love Roundtable. Love, sex, real talk. Where nothing is sugar coated. And the truth always comes out. This is the space where real conversations happen about dating, relationships, intimacy, and everything in between. So if you ever felt confused, question someone's intentions, feel like something wasn't adding up, you're in the right place. Cause here we don't guess. We break down behavior, patterns, what it actually means, real perspectives, real reactions, and real truth. So sit back, listen in. Let's talk about it.

SPEAKER_05

Late night, low, light, something on your mind. You've been holding back the questions you've been scared to find. Been reading all the signs, but you don't trust yourself. Put your feelings on the shelf. Let me help. This is real talk, no filter, no change. We say the things that nobody else can't say. Love is complicated, but the truth is pain. Welcome to the table, let's play. You deserve someone who shows up when it's hard. Not just when the vibes are right and everything is soft. We break it down, no judgment in the space. Real love, real pain, real grace. This is real talk, no filter, no shame. We say the things that nobody else can't say. Love is complicated, but the truth is pain. Welcome to the table, let's play. So sit back.

SPEAKER_04

Listen, man. And let's talk about it.

SPEAKER_03

Let's stop pretending situationships are mutual. Most of the time, one person is benefiting and the other person is sitting there calling anxiety a connection. So today we're not doing soft answers. Who benefits more? Men or women? You have to pick one. No, it depends because no, it doesn't. That just means you don't want to say it clearly. Jack, start.

SPEAKER_00

Men. I don't even think that's hard. If a relationship stays undefined, usually the guy's getting companionship, sex, attention, access, all the good parts. Without having to actually stand up and say, you're my person. That setup favors men way more often than not.

SPEAKER_03

Thank you. Clean answer. Jalen.

SPEAKER_01

Men benefit more. And I say that as a man, if there's no clarity but there's continued access, somebody is enjoying the comfort of closeness without carrying the responsibility that should come with it.

SPEAKER_02

Exactly. Say laugh. Men benefit more. Not because women never get anything out of it, but because many women enter, hoping it will become something deeper. So even if she's receiving time or affection, she's often paying for it emotionally.

SPEAKER_03

Right. And that's the part people skip. They act like because both people are physically there, it's equal. No. Presence is not the same as investment. So let me push it harder. Are women getting played or are they ignoring the signs? Jack.

SPEAKER_00

Both, but if you're making me choose, ignoring the signs. And I know that sounds rough. Some men absolutely keep things vague on purpose. But a lot of times the signs are there real early. He won't define it. He avoids future talk. He gives boyfriend energy on Friday and stranger energy by Monday. That's not hidden.

SPEAKER_03

Jalen.

SPEAKER_01

I'd say many women are hearing what they want to hear. Not all, but many. If a man says I'm not ready, and his actions keep reinforcing distance, then the issue is no longer confusion. It becomes hope-fighting reality.

SPEAKER_02

And hope can be very loud, sometimes louder than discernment. You can feel the misalignment, but if you want the outcome badly enough, you start translating his inconsistency into possibility. And that's where women start abandoning what they know. Wait a minute, because that's the part.

SPEAKER_03

Women love saying he's giving mixed signals. Sometimes, yes, but sometimes he is very clear and you just don't like the answer. I'm not looking for anything serious. I'm just going with the flow. Baby, that is not a riddle. That is a warning label.

SPEAKER_00

Yeah, and guys know that vague language buys time. Let's be honest about that too. It gives him room to enjoy the arrangement while keeping plausible deniability. Later he can say, well, we never defined anything.

SPEAKER_03

Exactly. Undefined doesn't mean unclear. It means unspoken on purpose. So I'm gonna say the uncomfortable part out loud. If you stay in something casual while secretly wanting commitment, you are not in a mutual situation. You are in a silent negotiation that only one person knows they already won. Now let's apply pressure. Jack, Jalen, I want yes or no first. Have men kept women around knowing they were not serious?

SPEAKER_01

Yes. Yes.

SPEAKER_03

There we go. No TED talk needed. So when men say, I'm not ready, is that honesty? Or is it a softer way to dodge responsibility?

SPEAKER_00

Usually both. It can be honest in the sense that he's not ready to commit to her. But it's also a dodge when he keeps showing up like a half-boyfriend. If you're not ready, fine. Then stop collecting relationship benefits. That part.

SPEAKER_03

Not ready or not ready for her.

SPEAKER_00

A lot of the time, not ready for her. I mean, if the woman he truly wanted walked in tomorrow, plenty of these guys would get real clear, real fast.

SPEAKER_01

And that's where accountability matters. A man may be honest with his words, but dishonest with his continued behavior. If I tell you I'm not ready, but I keep leaning on you emotionally, sleeping with you, calling you late at night, acting possessive when you pull away, then I'm feeding your attachment while pretending I gave a disclaimer.

SPEAKER_02

Yes. Because a disclaimer does not erase impact. Some people tell the truth just enough to protect themselves, not enough to free the other person. And that's where discernment matters. You have to ask, what is his behavior training me to accept? Come on.

SPEAKER_03

Because women hear I'm not ready and turn it into maybe later if I love him hard enough. No, that's not what was said. So let me ask the hard question. Why stay after hearing you are not being chosen?

SPEAKER_02

Sometimes it's chemistry, sometimes loneliness, sometimes the fear that if you let go, you're losing your chance. And sometimes, honestly, it's the wound underneath saying, if I can get this unavailable person to choose me, then maybe I'm finally enough.

SPEAKER_03

Oh, and that's why this is deeper than dating advice. Jack?

SPEAKER_00

I think some women stay because the man is giving just enough. Not enough to build a future, but enough to interrupt their exit. A text every morning, a good weekend, a jealous comment when she starts pulling back. That little bit keeps hope alive.

SPEAKER_01

But at some point we still have to say it plainly. If someone tells you they cannot offer what you want and you remain, that is now a choice. Painful choice, maybe, fear-based choice, maybe, but still a choice.

SPEAKER_03

Exactly. And I'm not rescuing anybody from that. If he says, let's go with the flow, that usually means he does not want responsibility. Translation: he likes access more than he likes you. That sounds harsh, but that's what actually happens. Not the pretty version people post online. Let's talk power. Who controls a situation ship? The person who cares less, yes or no?

SPEAKER_00

Yes. Usually yes.

SPEAKER_02

In practice, yes.

SPEAKER_03

Right, because the less attached person has less to lose. And that means they set the emotional temperature. They decide when to text, when to disappear, when to come back. And the more attached person starts adapting. That's where people lose themselves. Sayla, does emotional attachment cost people leverage?

SPEAKER_02

It can, especially if attachment is stronger than self-respect. Caring is not the problem. But when your desire to keep them outweighs your willingness to honor what you need, you start negotiating against yourself. You become easy to delay because you have shown you will stay in longing.

SPEAKER_03

Negotiating against yourself is exactly what that is. Jalen?

SPEAKER_01

I'd add this attachment is natural, but ungoverned attachment will make people accept treatment they would never advise their friend to accept. That's why clarity matters. You cannot build self-respect on top of a dynamic that requires you to keep shrinking your standards.

SPEAKER_00

And you can feel it happening too. That's the wild part. You start off saying, I'm not doing anything casual. And six months later you're explaining to yourself why exclusivity doesn't need a label. That's not growth. That's drift.

SPEAKER_03

Wait, because that's good. That's not growth. That's drift. And honestly, if you're in a year-long situationship, we need to stop talking like time itself is proof of depth. Sometimes time just proves your tolerance. That's it.

SPEAKER_02

Yes. Duration can make people feel like they have something meaningful when really they have something prolonged. And prolonged confusion is still confusion.

SPEAKER_03

So let me land this. Are you a victim or are you choosing the situation once the pattern is clear? I'm not talking about manipulation in extreme cases. I'm talking about everyday dating where the signs are blinking red. Jack?

SPEAKER_00

Once the pattern is clear, you're choosing it. Maybe not happily, maybe not confidently, but you are choosing it.

SPEAKER_01

Agree, responsibility returns the moment truth is visible.

SPEAKER_02

And that truth is not there to shame you. It's there to free you.

SPEAKER_03

There it is. One sentence each. Why do situationships really exist? Jack.

SPEAKER_00

Because one person gets the benefits of closeness without paying the cost of commitment.

SPEAKER_01

Because comfort is easier than courage, and ambiguity lets people avoid accountability.

SPEAKER_02

Because people keep holding on to potential after peace has already left the room.

SPEAKER_03

In my sentence, situationships don't continue because people are confused. They continue because someone is accepting less than what they actually want. Period. That's the episode. Jalen, always solid.

SPEAKER_01

Always good to be here.

SPEAKER_02

Thank you, friends. Take care of yourselves.

SPEAKER_00

Good one. See y'all next time.

SPEAKER_03

See y'all next round table.

SPEAKER_06

We said, we said, let's be real tonight. If it's confusing, it ain't right. Stop reading words, watch what he do. If it don't match up, that's your truth. No more waiting, no more guessing. Half love ain't a blessing. If you wanna do you know, but now don't know what you're standing, just a phone. Let's be real tonight. If it's confusing it and right reading the words, what it's what it does. If we don't mess up, that's your truth. No more way to no more gets a half in the blessing.

SPEAKER_07

If we wanna do you know, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no. It's the time.

SPEAKER_06

Real tall, real tomato. We're cleverly cleverly. You already have your hands, I hate three three, three, three, three, four, four, four, four, four, four, four.