Tell me you’re okay. Tell me you’re not in any pain. Tell me you don’t have flashbacks of his penis in your mouth. Tell me, tell me you’re okay. I worry about you. I worry about what you might do if you don’t get help. I worry—
Oh, god. I remember him so well. I don’t want you to have to feel this pain. It’s the superwoman complex all over again. I’ll suffer anything to keep someone from hurting like I do.
That’s not healthy, and so I try to control it, but I can’t help it. If it’s a problem, it’s not one that concerns me much. I really like knowing I was there for someone when they were lying in their own hell. Do I often get burned for my efforts? Yes. Too often. But is it arrogance when it helps someone? Is it a vice?
I know I’m rationalizing this. I know I can’t save everyone, because it’s not physically or emotionally healthy to try. But can’t I just be pickier about who I give my help to? Can’t I just limit it to Sam, Sang, Charles, Nyte, Clara, and Butterfly? Six people. It’s not a lot. I’m incredibly organized, and I know when to say “no.”
I can almost hear Sam chuckling at that: I know when to say “no.” He doesn’t think I do. I wish he would just understand that I can just handle more than others, that I take a lot of pride from seeing someone I helped succeed.
Shit. This is why I always become Mama Lucy to my friends. This line of thought objectifies me. I sound like a beast of burden! When am I going to learn?! People need to save themselves.
In the meantime, that also means, no one is going to save me. So, here I am, exhausted from all my perceived screw-ups and all my perceived successes, and I just realized, I’m helping everyone else. Who is there to help me?
“Me,” Clara says. I’m trusting her and fighting for her, hoping desperately it isn’t a ruse.
“Me,” says Sarah. I believe her, but it’s still early. I don’t want to trust too quickly.
“Me,” says Sang, and I love him for his loyalty.
“Me,” says Sam. I hesitate. It’s instinct. Once I’ve fucked you, I can’t trust you.
So when he says I only ever write mean things about him on this site, I fear he’s right. I’ve often talked on this site of how I vilify him. So, I’m sorry. I’ve slept with men who cared more for their dogs than they did me. I’ve been objectified for so long, I don’t even need anyone to do it to me anymore. Any new wound I suffer is self-inflicted in the absence of a master. No wonder control games during sex turn me on. I get to take a break and let someone else do it to me, just like old times.
I feel that must be a sickness. How can my determination to endure some kind of physical or mental anguish during sex be healthy? During those moments of overwhelming pain, the familiarity of my childhood sparks inside my head. When my father struck me so hard I saw lights; when my mother slapped me hard across the face; when I might as well have been in handcuffs—a little girl beneath the hand of a giant: that’s what I think about as he rides me or I, him. That’s what I think about as I keep the minutes at a meeting. There is no pleasure, for me, without pain. So forgive me, darling, if I falter as we near each other. I know I’m not healthy, but I’m trying.
So, tell me—tell me you’re okay. Tell me you’re happy. Tell me I love you, and you love me, and everything will be beautiful one day. Tell me I don’t remember his penis, and neither do you. Tell me he was never inside me, nor was he ever in you. Tell me we’re on the beach somewhere, it’s nighttime, and we’re alone, watching the waves roll. I like the smell of the sand and the sea. I want to carry it home with me.
I’m all over the place. Just tell me the truth.

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