Practice using Ugolino and his son's by Jean-Baptiste Carpeaux as reference
My entry for the @toa-minibang with @asunnydreamer
what is your most controversial video game hot take? š®š®š®
Nicoās personality in tsats feels most reminiscent of what he was like in The Titans Curse which (imo) is a sign that he is slowly healing and living with his trauma.
The Sun and the Star emphasizes that trauma and PTSD can make it feel like oneās past life events happened to a completely different person, and it mentions that Nico relates to this feeling. This distancing of oneself from past memories, experiences, and personality can result in feeling disconnected for a while, taking on new personality traits, feeling like a chameleon mimicking others, or just feeling empty.
For some people (maybe, depending on when trauma occurs), healing can be about reconnecting with our childhood selves. Depending on what someone was like before trauma, like maybe Nico for example, that can mean becoming more emotional, being more playful, indulging in your childhood interests (eg. mythomagic cards). And Nicoās progression practically mirrored mine exactly through the years, and the ways I changed in ED treatment.
Itās hard to let go of a disorder when in some cases it feels like the only thing thatās stayed stable in our lives. Suffering is touted as the pinnacle of artā we see its romanticization everywhere. It sounds weird to say that I miss being sick, or I miss my suffering, when Iām actively trying to make my life better, but those thoughts do come up. And when it comes to characters I project that misery on to? Well, if Iām suffering, then they have to suffer with me! (After all, theyāre just characters, itās not that deep, right?) Except I found that the more I made my characters suffer, and focused on the ābeautyā of suffering, the harder it was for me to heal from my own. Whenever my health was in decline, I characterized my favorite characters the same way. It was just as hard to allow those characters to heal as it was to allow myself to heal. (Other people might not feel the same, though.)
I think Nico choosing to accept the physical manifestations of his demons (while also setting them free, and allowing them to exist as they please) mirrors the suggestion I was given in treatment when I struggled with the idea of āgiving upā my eating disorderā because to me, it was always either defeat the disorder or be consumed by it, and defeating it sounded like killing a part of me or erasing a part of my past or my home. Approaching treatment from the standpoint of killing my eating disorder scared me too much. I knew my disorder had caused problems for me, but many of the habits and behaviors Iād developed had served as my coping mechanism and they helped me survive.Ā
So, my therapist told me: āYou donāt have to shun your disorder, kill it, or say goodbye. Instead, you can acknowledge that it served a purpose during a point in your life in which you used it to survive, but you no longer need to hold on to it and thatās okay ā youāre setting it free. Maybe even instead of saying goodbye, you can say āthank you, Iām alright now.āā
And thatās pretty much⦠exactly what Nico did with the demons. Bob, too, acknowledged that he was a titan, and that was part of his past, and thatās okay ā but heās allowed to change. And Nico is too.
I just found that really really wonderful because I related to it so heavily. He didnāt want to conquer his trauma in battle. He wanted it to just⦠be acknowledged, and set free. And it followed him, but he can have a better relationship with his past now. Heās not consumed by it. Itās just there, itās a part of him, and he can continue to live his life. And I think reading this book (while trying to maintain and navigate post-treatment life) was exactly what I needed to remind myself why Iām doing this.
:D
ive seen people say that will was insensitive and too demanding when it came to nico not sharing enough with him, which strikes me as an odd complaint, because he had multiple moments throughout the book of reassuring nico that he doesnāt have to talk about painful topics, and nico appreciating that but insisting heās ready to share:
There was the one moment where will snapped at nico by saying ā(i donāt know what youāve been through) because you wonāt tell me!ā but this came up because nico was expecting will to be sensitive about things he didnāt know of, which is a point of growth for nico in the book.
will never pressures or guilts nico into sharing more than he wants to! but at the same time, he can only be sensitive and responsive to nicoās trauma if nico talks to him about it. nico learns to adjust his expectations of will AND he gets to a point of being more confident and comfortable opening up to him. itās a nice arc for their relationship development thatās worth appreciating
Hamster Zaizai watercolor book
Hope you like itā¤ļø