The words we choose have a funny way of affecting our lives. "Would you mind being quiet?" will evoke a separate response to telling someone to shut the fuck up, even though the sentiment is more or less the same. Likewise, adoration is infinitely different than love, which is distinct from lust and infatuation, though some dictionaries may disagree.
This is where my problem started, with connotation and denotation. A simple change of words, and things might have gone differently. What I wanted to say was, "I love you, Josh. Make love to me." But, as you can imagine, that isn't what I'd said at all. I was young, and there simply isn't any reason to dwell on it. It won't change anything, anyhow, because I didn't tell him to make love to me.
With two simple words, I'd managed to fulfill my every wish and terminate the sheer notion of the thing in one contradicting instant. Two goddamned words: "Fuck me. . ."
Somewhere in the tangle of sweaty bodies and sloppy kisses, our clothes had wound up strewn across the room, and now he loomed over me, his hard cock placed precariously at my entrance, silently asking permission. He'd hesitated, his hands tangled roughly in my hair, his breath coming out in anxious pants. And that's when I said it. "Fuck me."