Wednesday, February 24, 2010

Conversations With Dead People.

This episode is difficult for me. It's difficult because I get WAY too emotionally involved in the lives and worlds of fictional people.
I cry a lot when I watch this.
I cry because of the whole Tara thing. Because Willow so sincerely believes that she's speaking to Tara, and then has her heart crushed all over again when she discovers it was all a ploy. Because if Tara really is watching over Willow in some form, which I believe she is, she's having to watch The First mock her and mock Willow and mock the relationship they had. And she can't do anything to stop it. Can't do anything to protect Willow.
I cry because Dawn DOESN'T really believe she's seeing her mom(in my interpretation, anyway). Somewhere deep down she knows this isn't right so it can't be real. But she needs so badly for it to be real, so she pretends that it is on a subconscious level. And it really is one of the most evil things of all time. Because she's being exploited into believing that the person who loves and wants to protect her most of all, doesn't. It's not fair to Dawn because she needs to know that Buffy will be there for her always. And it's not fair to Buffy because she already feels like she's treading on eggshells around Dawn, trying desperately to convince her that she truly does care about her. It gives me chills. It disturbs me.
But most of all I cry for Jonathan.
And this is the part most people probably wouldn't be able to understand. Why I care so much. But that kind of works, because the fact that no one cares about Jonathan as much as I do is kind of the point.
In high school, that was me. I sometimes fit into a very small, close-knit group of friends, but mostly I was the girl who was either thought of as strange and pathetic, or not thought of at all. By the reckoning of the greater population at my school, I was a repellent oddity or I was nothing. Even within my group of friends, I was kind of on the outer edges. I was shy, so I didn't have as much to contribute to the conversation. I had interests and hobbies the others couldn't relate to, so there was a measure of separation. Now, I'm not saying this just to whinge about how horrible my life in high school was. I'm saying it illustrate the parallels between Jonathan and me. The first time the connection hit me HARD was in Earshot, during the scene in which Buffy and Jonathan have their little heart-to-heart in the belltower. The things Buffy says are so true of me, too: I spent so much time worrying what people thought of me, and it didn't matter because they thought so much more of what people were thinking about them.
Anyway, so Jonathan graduates. He tries to make a name for himself. The "Superstar" spell turns out not to be the thing that'll get him that name, so he steps up to Warren's call. Very quickly, he realizes it's not right. But his life has to mean something, so instead of backing down he keeps going.
And somehow it all leads up to him reminiscing about high school moments before his death. Going back over every time the bad thing happened to him(which was often). Thinking of everyone who wronged him. Everyone who ignored him. And he comes to some sort of peace with it. Forgives them. Decides it won't matter in the long run what they thought of him or did to him, because he's got his whole life ahead of him.
Except for he doesn't.
^And THAT, ladies and gents, is why Jonathan's death is so damn painful for me. We went through a lot of the same stuff. But I have my whole long life to do other things. To make new friends, do better and more meaningful things, learn and grow and become a better and better version of me every day. At the end of my life, high school will be the tiniest of all tiny blips on the radar for me. I have that to look forward to. And that's exactly what Jonathan thought he had, and he did not. He never got to go on and fulfill any of that potential. So in the end, for him, high school kind of was the big picture. Those years of torment and neglect actually did make up a big, substantial chunk of his life. His life ended with him forgiving himself and everyone else for all of that horrible crap he went through, but he never got to experience any of the rewards that would inevitably have come out of that forgiveness.
And so I cry. A lot.
Andrew's part of it gets me, too, but I feel like going off on that tangent is a task for another day, another blog entry. Lots of confused, tangled up feelings there.

But uhmm so yeah... anyway... Jonathan. I loved him and I felt for him and I wish his death were not so widely overlooked. But I understand why it is, and that just strengthens the point.

2 comments:

  1. Aww, hugs for you. ♥ I can relate so terribly, especially to being on the fringe of even one's own group of friends -- for a couple of years in my mid-teens, I didn't even have any friends, except far-away internet people. (Thank God for internet people, though. I don't know what I would have done without them.) And for whatever reason, I've always been bizarrely easy to ignore or forget, not even maliciously, just... mind-slippingly. (...Damn you, evil fairy godmother?) And yeah -- the things Jonathan said right before he died really got to me, because even after all that, even after being alternately ignored and mocked and pushed around, he still cared about them, about people. Just... that kind of reaching-out, that kind of unconditional love kills me. Because that's the kind of person I want to be. Someone who can reach out in love.

    Also it makes me saaaad that you had a rubbish high school social experience! because on the internet you seem so confident and friendly and awesome and open and sunshine-bringing, and PEOPLE MISSED OUT. ^-^

    - Jo

    ReplyDelete
  2. I think it's fair to say that you're fast becoming one of my favorite people ever. Wow. >.<
    The fact that you can relate is such a comfort to me. The two people I've tried to explain the whole "yeah, I had friends, but there was like a disconnect?" thing too just kind of tilted their heads and furrowed their eyebrows and yeah. ._. So it's nice to have that concept met with understanding and empathy. And also, that you would take the time to read this all through and write such a touching and eloquent response means a lot.
    And I probably should have included in here that I wasn't COMPLETELY alone, of course: my older brother and I have nearly always been very close, and I had my Jaime, too. Even though we were like on opposite sides of the globe and had a 14-hour time difference to deal with at the time. The internet really is a life-saver to people who don't fit neatly into social norms. We find one another and we cope. =]
    Oh! I can't imagine anyone being able to forget you easily, though, I really can't! You're unique and clever and creative and striking(in both personality and looks). But the world is, realistically, a crazy place where people often wander around like zombies and totally overlook all of this amazing, intriguing stuff that's going on right under their noses.
    And uhmm... aughkjgshjkfgh. Someone who fully understands and appreciates the Emotional Potency of Jonathan's death! O Comrade! You are so spot-on; his pure love and forgiveness just create something so bitterly beautiful and heartbreaking.
    Uhmm so finally... heehee. You're such an incredible sweetie. <3 I kind of like to think of my Internet Persona as being somehow a truer version of myself than what I usually act like/come off as in real life, even if that's a bit backwards. But without being intimidated by scary social situations and the judgmental stares of people around me, I can express myself in ways I might otherwise be frightened to. I aspire to someday present myself in such an open way to the world at large and everyone in it. Little steps carry me closer every day. =]

    ReplyDelete