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Chapter 13 - WHEN ATTENTION FELT LIKE SHAME

> I had crushes, of course.

Just like other girls.

Small, silly daydreams that meant nothing to anyone but me.

I'd see a boy smile a certain way,

lend a pen, pass a note, walk past —

and my stomach would flutter like I'd just made a secret.

Not that I told anyone.

Because even then, I already felt like love wasn't something made for my kind.

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Who would want a girl like me?

Short.

Thighs too close.

Stomach not flat.

Skin too black for the compliments that were always reserved for the lighter ones.

I was never the "fine one."

Never the one boys pointed at when they whispered.

Never the one girls envied for getting attention.

Just me.

An alien.

Unchoosable.

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> But God, or fate, or something darker… had other plans.

Because while I looked at my crushes like innocent fireflies in the dark —

grown men began to look at me like prey.

And these weren't random men on the street.

They were teachers.

Just like in primary, it started subtly.

A look.

A pause.

A too-long comment on something that had nothing to do with school.

I thought I was imagining it.

Thought maybe they were disgusted by me — like I was some kind of mistake they couldn't quite ignore.

But their actions said something else.

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> Excuses to call me.

Favors no one else got.

Time spent alone — for no reason at all.

Some were my teachers.

Others weren't.

Even the headteacher at one point gave me that look —

the one that makes your skin crawl while your face pretends to smile.

And still I couldn't understand why me?

I was only in Senior Two.

And girls like Faith, Eva, and others — they were beautiful.

Light-skinned.

Shapely.

Confident.

I didn't compare.

I wasn't trying to.

But they chose me to notice.

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At first I thought it meant I was special.

Then I realized it only meant I was vulnerable.

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> When you're a girl like me, attention never feels like a compliment.

It feels like a trap.

A curse.

A slow erosion of your safety.

I started to hide my body in oversized clothes.

To avoid eye contact.

To pretend I didn't understand the compliments disguised as jokes.

To kill any part of me that ever wanted to be noticed.

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And slowly, I stopped crushing on boys.

Not because I didn't want love —

but because love no longer felt like something I could want safely.

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