People say Pisces women are all intuition and compassion, floating through life like water.
They forget that water can drown you, too. I know this better than anyone. My name is 楼晴,
and this is about the parts of me that sink instead of swim.
1. The Porous Boundary
It started in the astronomy lab. He was explaining the refraction of starlight, and I was lost in the metaphor. After class, he asked if I understood the homework. I didn’t. “Let me show you,” he said, and his hand brushed my shoulder as he reached for my notebook.
That’s the first weakness: boundaries that dissolve like sugar in water. I absorb moods, emotions, expectations. When his fingers lingered on the page, I felt his curiosity seep into my skin. I should have moved my chair away. I didn’t.
A week later, he found me in the library. “You look overwhelmed,” he said, and it was true — I was drowning in a friend’s breakup and my own overdue papers. He bought me tea. Listened. His attention felt like a life raft. I clung to it.
2. The Escape Hatch
Reality became too sharp-edged. My parents’ expectations, deadlines, the constant noise of dorm life. He offered silence. “I have a study space,” he said. “Quiet. No one bothers you there.”
The room was small, lined with books, a single armchair by the window. He locked the door behind us. “So we won’t be disturbed,” he explained. My heart beat faster, but I told myself it was anxiety about my midterm. Another escape.
He began setting rules. “Leave your phone in your bag. Focus only on the work.” His voice was calm, a steady current. I obeyed because structure felt like salvation from my own chaotic mind. When he took my finished essay and praised it, the warmth in my chest was worth the strange tightness in the room.
3. The Shape of Submission
It wasn’t sudden. It was a slow shift, like tide covering sand. One afternoon, he said, “Stand up.” I did. He walked around me, thoughtful. “You hold your books like a shield,” he observed. “Put them down.”
I placed them on the desk. My hands felt empty, vulnerable.
“Close your eyes.”
Darkness. The rustle of his clothes as he moved. A finger under my chin, tilting my face up. “Breathe,” he instructed. I did. His thumb traced my jawline. “You’re always braced for impact,” he murmured. “Learn to receive instead.”
When he kissed me, it felt less like an invasion and more like a completion — my emptiness meeting his intention. I didn’t pull away. Pisces women are said to crave union, to dissolve into the other. We forget that dissolution is a kind of vanishing.
4. The Anchor of Pain
The first time he used the silk scarf, he framed it as a lesson. “You’re too in your head,” he said, tying my wrists loosely to the arms of the chair. “This will help you feel.”
I expected panic. Instead, a strange calm descended. The pressure was a tether, holding me to the present moment. When he touched me, every sensation was magnified — the cool air on my exposed skin, the texture of his shirt under my cheek, the precise pressure of his fingers on my thigh.
“See?” he said, his mouth near my ear. “No space for anxiety now. Only this.”
He was right. The usual whirlpool of my thoughts stilled into a single point of awareness. Pleasure became a sharp, clean line. Pain — the bite of his teeth on my shoulder, the sting of a careful slap — was just another color in the spectrum. It all felt more real than the hazy world outside that door.
Afterward, untying me, he kissed the faint marks on my wrists. “My sensitive fish,” he called me, and I curled into the nickname like a safe harbor.
I know what you’re thinking. You see the locked door, the silk bonds, the power imbalance — a clear story of predation.
But you don’t understand the Piscean hunger. The terrifying fluidity of our selves. In a world that demands solid shapes, sometimes we welcome the container, however rigid. His dominance gave form to my formlessness. His rules were shores to my endless ocean.
The greatest weakness isn’t the submission. It’s the relief it brings. The terrifying, blissful relief of not having to be the one who decides, who navigates, who holds oneself together. To simply be held. To be told.
He texts me. The room. 4pm. I look at my reflection — the girl with the library books and anxious eyes. I think of the chair, the silence, the sharp clarity of sensation. The way I become real under his hands.
I type back: Okay.
And I go. Not because I can’t say no.
But because, in all the confusing vastness of being me, it’s the one place where I feel exactly, perfectly empty.
Epilogue: Water Remembers
They say water has memory. It carries the taste of mountain rock, the whisper of rain, the salt of deep ocean trenches.
My skin remembers the texture of silk. My pulse remembers the timing of his commands. My body, so eager to adapt, has shaped itself around the absence of choice.
This is the final, most insidious weakness: we Pisces don’t just escape into fantasy. We allow fantasy to etch itself into our bones, until the dream and the damage are indistinguishable. We become living archives of every current that ever carried us away.
And somewhere, deep down, we’re afraid that if those currents stilled — if we ever truly stood on solid ground — we might not recognize ourselves at all.