White Knuckles

My first crush,
the one with butterflies
and innocent fantasies,
was for my science and math teacher.

His kindness and patience with me
made me feel so loved
that I couldn’t help but dream
of it being only he and I—
safe and warm.

Back then,
my fantasies were sweet
and gentle
and harmless.

I can’t say
I am as softly impacted now.

A male teacher later
crossed lines
and wiped the innocence
of crushing on older men
from me.

I felt the danger
in his long looks,
in the questions he asked
about my boyfriends
and how far we had gone.

There was a small thrill
in being noticed,
but now I know
he understood
that was my weakness.

Quiet girls
who keep to themselves
and write poetry
in the background
rarely get attention
until someone wants something.

Another teacher
I respected deeply,
though I never had feelings for him,
taught me something different.

One day
on the bus between high schools,
it was just he and I
in the parking lot.

He called the office
and asked for a student
to come with us.

I asked him why.
His arms locked,
his fingers went white
on the steering wheel,
and he stared straight ahead.

“My wife told me,” he said,
“never to be alone
with a female student.”

I felt his shame
and my own,
and for a moment
I felt powerful.

“Smart woman,” I said.
He relaxed,
and so did I.
“Yes,” he said,
“she is the smartest woman
I know.”

That was when I learned
it is not a game.
Attraction
versus action
can wound.

My innocent crush
had grown into a young woman
who knew pain
before she understood consequence.

Had he not responded
as he did,
I still wonder
if I would have read things
the way I did
and known how to diffuse it.

I have always had angels
watching over me,
even when I haven’t.

© 2025 Raven | Jasmine on the Grave. All rights reserved.

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