Brother doesn’t deserve to die, but it is interesting how often even real men are often naive fools who think they understand the art of emotion and subtlety and believe women to be one way (aka sweet, innocent, pure on projected ideals and fantasy of what a woman should be) and then easily get used by women who have become far more smart and intelligent than the men have ever even thought possible in a world that is cut – throat and doesn’t love them.
I know Jaina is the ‘villain’ in this story, but realistically, she’s ALSO a victim – she became an abuser because hurt people hurt people – her living situation is no different than the villainess stories where their behavior becomes explained once you realize the torture they’ve been through.
You can be mad at the brother for being a naive fool, and I agree, but I don’t think he deserves death. I think he deserves to live with his weakness and learn to turn it into experience and become an adult.
As Cassia said, this world is not kind to the naive. And women often have to learn that the hard way. I genuinely don’t blame Jaina for becoming so cutthroat and ambitious – but I don’t excuse it, either. She’s gone beyond just trying to better her own situation and get back at he family; she’s hurting innocent people who genuinely loved and cared for her in the process, all in a vapid and pointless struggle to be greedy, rather than just improve her own life.
Why did you come clean to your brother
You shouldn’t say anything
I’m worried that she is using your brother again
.
As we can see for a man he’s so weak
Kyosumari
TLDR: It’s not enough for her to succeed, others have to fail. And that’s where Jaina stops being empathetic, and becomes a villain.
Kyosumari
Brother doesn’t deserve to die, but it is interesting how often even real men are often naive fools who think they understand the art of emotion and subtlety and believe women to be one way (aka sweet, innocent, pure on projected ideals and fantasy of what a woman should be) and then easily get used by women who have become far more smart and intelligent than the men have ever even thought possible in a world that is cut – throat and doesn’t love them.
I know Jaina is the ‘villain’ in this story, but realistically, she’s ALSO a victim – she became an abuser because hurt people hurt people – her living situation is no different than the villainess stories where their behavior becomes explained once you realize the torture they’ve been through.
You can be mad at the brother for being a naive fool, and I agree, but I don’t think he deserves death. I think he deserves to live with his weakness and learn to turn it into experience and become an adult.
As Cassia said, this world is not kind to the naive. And women often have to learn that the hard way. I genuinely don’t blame Jaina for becoming so cutthroat and ambitious – but I don’t excuse it, either. She’s gone beyond just trying to better her own situation and get back at he family; she’s hurting innocent people who genuinely loved and cared for her in the process, all in a vapid and pointless struggle to be greedy, rather than just improve her own life.
RavenSchofield
Why did you come clean to your brother
You shouldn’t say anything
I’m worried that she is using your brother again
.
As we can see for a man he’s so weak
Ishtar
I wanna kill the brother tch