“I learned the truth At seventeen That love was meant for beauty queens And high school girls with clear skin.”
I learned the truth At twenty-one, I was sad, recently single, Sitting in a black truck Dark as the night Turning our bodies Into silhouettes, When he took my hand firmly in his And moved it down his body Onto his ******* And I told myself This is what I wanted.
I learned the truth at seventeen That men want to touch you, And they don’t always care Whether or not you want them to. I learned it when my high school sweetheart Pressed himself into my *******, When he pushed his hand Into my ******* and touched me, And I recoiled.
I learned the truth at thirteen When my mother left my father, And he didn’t want me. We had a relationship of convenience, He was only my father When I was easily accessible And easy to deal with.
I learned the truth At nineteen, When my high school sweetheart Forced his **** into me The last time I ever saw him. I learned that men don’t always Care about no, And safewords don’t keep you safe.
I learned the truth At twenty-one That men want someone Thirty years younger than them, And that the attention I got felt good After years of not feeling good enough.
I learned the truth Mere weeks before I was twenty That I wanted a man to touch me again, And I wanted to feel safe. I lost my virginity With a man carved out of sunshine, And I watched his light die Almost two years later.
I learned the truth at twenty-one, That I will never trust anyone, That love was meant for nice girls, With pastel sweaters And clear skin, With nice two parent homes, And high school sports trophies. I learned that I am the only one, Who will ever take care of Me.