case: (Default)
Case ([personal profile] case) wrote in [community profile] fandomsecrets2012-06-10 03:09 pm

[ SECRET POST #1986 ]


⌈ Secret Post #1986 ⌋

Warning: Some secrets are NOT worksafe and may contain SPOILERS.

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Notes:

Secrets Left to Post: 05 pages, 119 secrets from Secret Submission Post #284.
Secrets Not Posted: [ 0 - broken links ], [ 0 - not!secrets ], [ 0- not!fandom ], [ 0 - too big ], [ 0 - repeat ], [ 1 - take it to comments ], [ 1 2 - going to have to be a little more subtle than this ].
Current Secret Submissions Post: here.
Suggestions, comments, and concerns should go here.

(Anonymous) 2012-06-11 03:09 pm (UTC)(link)
No, I get what you're trying to say here, and why you would object to my use of the word "flaw." For me, at least, a flaw is potentially a "negative" aspect of a character, but that doesn't make them inherently good or bad. It's just, well, an aspect of their character. It helps to give them depth and it frequently helps to give them motivation.

Saying that characters have flaws doesn't say that they are inherently bad, just like saying a character doesn't have flaws wouldn't mean they are inherently good (in fact, it would probably mean they are inherently boring).

The thing that I most like about Loki is that he's just this giant bucket of flaws. That's why I love the character. I love it that a big part of his character is that he refuses to grow as a character, that he rejects what everyone else tries to get him to see and instead goes off an does his own thing. He's obviously very, very flawed...but so are Thor and Odin as well, at the beginning. The difference is that Loki doesn't want to see that he's flawed, and that's IMO what also makes him so tragic.

As for the "valid feelings" thing, I...have mixed feelings on that. I don't think that just because a person has feelings that means they're valid. Thor might feel threatened and might feel an urge to prove himself...which leads to a lot of terrible shit happening. His feelings were clearly not valid or based on anything but his own motivation, and that's where the problems of the movie stem from. A lot of the movie is based around having to accept objective truths, even if they don't fit in with what you want to believe.

I see a lot of that with Loki as well. He has a lot of feelings, but they're not based on any real external stimuli, just what he wants to think. And no, I don't think Loki ever wanted to be an outcast and a villain but (and this is pure speculation on my part), I think that he created an image of himself that was based on being what Thor wasn't. I think he also internalized this idea that he was everything Thor wasn't, which led to him feeling that he was the unliked second-son (he sees Thor get recognition, but any time he gets recognition he doesn't pay attention to it). And when that became his sense of self, he became very adept at twisting everything to further this world-view. It's pretty obvious during the frost giant confrontation, where every time Odin tries to explain himself Loki just twists everything Odin says to be something horrible.

As for Loki's suicide, I personally think that it was a conscious choice. I know that things are different in real people, but Loki isn't a real person. I don't think his mental process was "I want to kill myself now," I think it was more based around "Dammit, I was wrong the whole time, and if I go back then I'll have to face my father's disappointment." I think that he saw himself as being stuck between a rock and a hard place, and him choosing the abyss over being with his family was his ultimate rejection of acknowledging any kind of character growth. Basically, I don't think he wanted to die, but I think he wanted to realize that he was wrong about pretty much everything even less. Like I said, we're talking about a fictional character here, where we can actually objectively (as an audience) see his motivations and what goes into making this decision. I wish I didn't have to make this disclaimer, but obviously none of this stuff would apply if Loki were a real person.

Anyways, that's pretty much all I have to say about the suicide stuff, because that's my thoughts on it with regards to Loki.
cashay: (Default)

[personal profile] cashay 2012-06-11 03:27 pm (UTC)(link)
The way you explain flaw I agree. I seem to have a wrong "feeling" for the word.

(Frustrating second language is frustrating xD) Let me try again because I think I'm not getting across my point =/ If you feel something you feel it. Just because you know it's wrong (like projecting your anger at yourself onto another person) doesn't mean you will stop having those feelings. Taking a look at your own motivations and why you feel that way might help but it doesn't always does.

Your emotions in themselves aren't wrong or right, what you do with them is what can be wrong or right. I think a big part of growing up is learning that just because you feel a certain way about something (angry at your teacher for giving you a bad mark, angry at the world for giving you a bad day) doesn't make it legit to act on those feelings.

As you pointed out this is a big problem for Loki all throughout the movies is that he doesn't grow up and makes the distinction between what he feels and what's actually true.

Your theory actually sounds pretty plausible.

On the suicide: Since I really can't remember much of the movie I think I should just take myself back and not form any theories, I can barely remember most of the plot points.

Again, I'm sorry I let my emotions get the better of me. I never meant to personally attack you and if I did I'm very sorry about it.

(Anonymous) 2012-06-11 04:26 pm (UTC)(link)
I don't blame you for having the wrong feeling with the word "flawed," because it does have kind of a negative connotation to it (nobody's ever like, "I'm so flawed! Wheeee!"). It's really more like a personality or emotional complication than it is "something that is objectively bad," particularly when you're discussing the craft of writing (where flawed characters are usually the best characters because they have the most potential for growth, generally have a lot of motivation, and are usually more interesting than characters that aren't flawed.)

And I understand where you're coming from now regarding feelings. Personally, I don't think that Loki was ~wrong~ to feel like he's unwanted and whatever (it was factually incorrect but emotions are rarely logical anyways), but I do think that his stubborn refusal to see that, no Odin really does love him and probably killing all the frost giants wouldn't be a way to win his affection anyways is a problem. So it's sort of like, "Yeah, you can feel however you feel...but when your emotions start resulting in you genociding a whole race you might want to take a step back and re-evaluate."

And it's okay if you got emotional about the topic. With this kind of heavy stuff it can be pretty difficult to not get emotional. And I didn't feel like you were personally attacking me so it's all good. :D

(Anonymous) 2012-06-11 10:39 pm (UTC)(link)
Sometimes your emotions are wrong. Or at least the source of them is completely wrong.

I suffer from depression. When I'm low I start to get twisty thoughts. Emotionally, I start jumping to conclusions without any evidence whatsoever that make me feel like shit. I feel like my friends don't actually like me, or that my family doesn't really love me, or that I'm the worst person in the world, even though I logically know that none of these things are true and that when my brain is behaving correctly again I won't feel those things at all!

Those negative thoughts and feelings are wrong. I should not be having them. They're very real, but also very wrong, and if my brain was healthy I would not be having them, or at least not to the inescapable extent that I do sometimes.
thehandler: (Default)

[personal profile] thehandler 2012-06-11 11:57 pm (UTC)(link)
But just knowing that your feelings have no grounds or are "made up" by your mind doesn't make them go away. You're feeling what you're feeling, what you do with it is a whole different point.

Knowing feelings are irrational doesn't make them go away. They're still there, you're feeling them and they have to be take seriously.

I'm not sure if I'm bringing my point across. It's basically: feelings are there, for whatever reason, and rational thinking won't make them go away. Feelings are real no matter how rational they are.

(I still feel like I'm failing to bring across my point =/ If I do indeed i'm gonna try again in the morning^^")
cashay: (Default)

[personal profile] cashay 2012-06-11 11:58 pm (UTC)(link)
Damn it, was logged in with my RP account =/