Taxed on Affection

Experience disgust so intense that you are deprived and thirsty yet feel undeserving for affection or for love or anything. Experience anger so emotional that there are no lyrics to relate; there is no one to pick you up; there’s no time that could mitigate it. Experience resentment so full you declare it wasn’t love at all because a lover wouldn’t deny you and provoke you to deny him back, reasoning that it was probably meant to be; that it was probably just lust. The silly things are vivid in hindsight. Regretful begrudging is valid. Dilute it and reduce it so you don’t feel so inane.
Experience the fear that David J. Rosen wrote about on pages five and six. Experience the guilt of making love under the crucifix. Experience the thrill. Experience the bliss blocked off. Experience never getting a chance to be fully exposed, agreeing that you revealed yourself enough. No. That was mere juvenility. And there was always a peremptory hand craning and guiding and controlling, and you were stupid for believing you would prove your womanhood.
You belong back at home, sheltered beneath the authoritarian shaking heads of mom and dad. You belong back home where you thought it wasn’t home at all because the ground was made of ice and the ceiling dripped of resentment. You were born into tension and will probably die that way, too.

About Sarah Estime

Sarah Jean Estime is an aircraft mechanic in the United States Air Force. When she in not working on the day job, she writes stories related to young adult, humour, and drama. Sarah has been published by the "African American Review," Canadian literary magazine "What If?" and photography litmag "BurnerMag."

Sarah Jean Estime is an aircraft mechanic in the United States Air Force. When she in not working on the day job, she writes stories related to young adult, humour, and drama. Sarah has been published by the "African American Review," Canadian literary magazine "What If?" and photography litmag "BurnerMag."

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