Picture
yourself in your kindergarten classroom, sitting-cross legged upon the circular,
crimson rug, painted with alphabet letters. From across the room, your eyes
twinkle as your crush grabs a crayon from the box. He picks up another, debating
which shade of blue to color the sky with. You smile, you don’t know why. You
don’t like him—you like, like him. An
important distinction at five-years-old.
As our minds grow and expand, so do
our hearts. A shift occurs as we begin to move past the scribbled names in our
diaries, and plucked dandelions on the playground. The way he accidentally
brushes against your skirt and tugs at your pony tail in elementary school
begins to ignite more carnal cravings. You no longer yearn for a peck on the
cheek, or a hand to hold during recess, you want more. You want his touch to
linger across your frame—to pieces that still have not quite made you
full-bodied. You never act on these desires, but you begin to fantasize.
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High school rolls around, and there’s
a new boy on your mind, a new fantasy to pursue. A boy in your math class, he’s
intelligent, and picks up his number two pencil the same way your kindergarten
crush held his blue crayons. But this
boy is more decisive, more complex. He does not simply color the sky as it is,
he sketches your mind. He does not need to choose between colors in order to
paint you into his world, you become his black-and-white fantasy. You imagine
him tracing numbers down your spine, feeling the way his pencil smooths over
each crevice between your vertebra. You envision him drawing emotional
equations across your chest and asking you to countdown from ten as he inches
ever-closer to your toes. You begin to learn this person’s body better than you
know your own. You begin to bleed the led from his pencil as you share your
first “I love you,” but it’s not returned. Blood turns to tears, and you find
yourself wrapped in your father’s arms. He holds you close, and assures you
that one day, your pain will make sense. Probably not today, or tomorrow, or
even this year, but one day. Your teenage angst begs to differ. This is your
first heartbreak. You walk into math class with your eyes lined in black and
your body snuggled deep within his hoodie that you can’t seem to return. The
world seems to stare at you as you take your seat, a new seat that isn’t behind
his. The equations screeched by chalk into the blackboard are enough to evoke a
single tear down your cheek. Day one of survival.
Years pass you by, and with each
new man you date, you reflect back to the lovers of your life—the ones you
loved, and the ones you thought you loved, and the ones you were actually
in-love with. You think back to the boy with crayons, and your sweetheart with
the pencil who you wanted to break in two (like he did your heart) ,and you think of
your dad. You think of what he told you, and you begin to make sense of it,
nearly ten years later. You loved him,
but you were never in love. You do
not have to be in love with someone to love them. Every person you hold any amount
of love for deserves to know your affection and admiration that you hold for
him or her. In the end, it’s that difference between like, and like-like that
we all want to hear.
*A heterosexual, cisgender woman's perspective
*A heterosexual, cisgender woman's perspective
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