I don’t want a man.
Not because I can’t love —
but because I know exactly what I’ve done with that power.
I’ve played with hearts just to see what sound they made
when tapped in the right place.
I’ve tested limits out of boredom,
pushed buttons because I wanted to see what lit up.
Not cruel — just curious.
Not evil — just aware of the leverage softness gives you.
I’ve watched a man unravel
under a look I didn’t mean,
a compliment I tossed aside,
a silence I held too long.
And part of me catalogued it —
This text was taken from Royal Road. Help the author by reading the original version there.
how influence works,
how desire bends,
how easy it is to get inside someone’s head
when they want you more than you want them.
I don’t want a man
because I don’t want to be measured
by the wreckage of the versions of me
that were experimenting, surviving, learning.
Because if I can twist someone without trying,
what happens when I’m actually tired, hurt, or unguarded?
I stay alone
not out of fear of love,
but fear of the way I’ve learned to navigate it.
I know the shadows I cast.
I know the tricks I never meant to master.
I don’t want a man
until I learn how to hold power
without playing with it.
Until I can trust myself
as much as someone else would trust me.
Because the truth is —
I could love someone deeply.
I just don’t want to break someone
accidentally.

