Giles: I'm sure we're all perfectly safe. Dawn: We're safe. Right. And Spike built a robot Buffy to play checkers with. Tara: It sounded convincing when I thought it.

'Dirty Girls'


Buffy 4: Grr. Arrgh.  

This is where we talk about Buffy the Vampire Slayer! No spoilers though?if you post one by accident, an admin will delete it. This thread is NO LONGER NAFDA. Please don't discuss current Angel events here.


brenda m - Sep 10, 2003 8:33:43 am PDT #5473 of 10001
If you're going through hell/keep on going/don't slow down/keep your fear from showing/you might be gone/'fore the devil even knows you're there

I think that type of threat is commonplace in familial arguments.

It's very easy to say in the heat of the moment, and it makes it clear that the speaker feels very strongly about the matter. The trouble is, there are consequences (as Joyce learned) if the recipient feels equally strongly.

Certainly I had similar-sounding arguments with my mother at that age, and statements like Joyce's made it almost irresistable to actually take her up on them, in an "I'll show her" kind of way.

Thank god I'm not sixteen any longer.

For me, Xander is the biggest 'whap him over the head' candidate. Every time, I hear that 'So your honey was a demon. Most girls don't jump on a greyhound bus out of boy troubles,' I'm just *grrrrrrr, snarl, grrr*. I have this entire rant I shout at Xander(every time I see the episode), but you can probably live without it, it's not very coherant.

I get angry with Xander but...we don't really see much of what happens over the summer. We see them at the end of it, when they've pretty much coped. We don't see the first days, week, month when Buffy's disappeared and they have no idea what's happened to her. When they know Angelus didn't destroy the world, but they don't really know if he's still out there. And when they're left in this still new, scary world, without the one with the powers, the one they depended on. As understandable as it was, especially to us with the full knowledge of what happened, she still ran off without a word. She abandoned them. So yeah, there's going to be some residual anger there. It's not necessarily fair of them to take it out on her the way they do, but I get the impulse.


JenP - Sep 10, 2003 10:22:33 am PDT #5474 of 10001

We see them at the end of it, when they've pretty much coped. We don't see the first days, week, month when Buffy's disappeared and they have no idea what's happened to her.

Heh, heh, heh. So, basically, I'm mad at them for doing to Buffy what I do to them when I watch the ep, which is get mad first, ask questions later. Lordy, lordy, what a brilliant show! (Or, what a brat I am. But not like Kennedy. Geez. She's spoiled the word brat for me.)


helentm - Sep 10, 2003 12:53:54 pm PDT #5475 of 10001
Religion isn't the cause of wars. It's the excuse. - Christopher Brookmyre

But my issues with Xander are like unto my issues with Joyce, in that I don't actually have a problem with what the character did in season 2. However having done that, I don't think they should get to pull the self-rightuousness card in season 3.

And for clarity, when I talk about Xander's actions in season 2, I mean partly the lie, but mostly the things he said in Passion. I understand he was grieving, so don't mind it so much then, but cut him less slack in the future because of it.


Daisy Jane - Sep 10, 2003 2:22:21 pm PDT #5476 of 10001
"This bar smells like kerosene and stripper tears."

Have none of you ever said anything in a moment of anger and passion that you regretted later and really didn't mean? Maybe it's just that I grew up in the Emotional Instability Funhouse, but I'm fairly certain we did that on a weekly basis.

Well, yeah. See my later post about Joyce not maning it in the same way my mother didn't mean what she said to me.

Certainly I had similar-sounding arguments with my mother at that age, and statements like Joyce's made it almost irresistable to actually take her up on them, in an "I'll show her" kind of way.

I don't think it's an "I'll show her." kind of thing. When your young and your parent says something as serious as "Get out." or "Don't come back" what are you supposed to think? You're not mature enough to calm down and ask if it's what they really mean, and they're too freaked and angry to take it back. Plus, I think, they're used to having their control unquestioned when their kid is younger. When the kid is a teenager a whole lot of that is lost and the default argument about why they have control is that they provide shelter and food. Look at how many arguments between teenagers and parents come down to "as long as you're under my roof" "I put a roof over your head" etc.


Cindy - Sep 10, 2003 3:06:20 pm PDT #5477 of 10001
Nobody

Buffy had kind of manhandled Joyce, just before she started to leave, and Joyce told her to stay out. I cut Joyce a lot of slack in that scene. I understand why Buffy left; she'd lost everything. But I think she knew Joyce would have taken her back; she just didn't care.


SailAweigh - Sep 10, 2003 3:37:24 pm PDT #5478 of 10001
Nana korobi, ya oki. (Fall down seven times, stand up eight.) ~Yuzuru Hanyu/Japanese proverb

I cut Joyce a lot of slack in that scene. I understand why Buffy left; she'd lost everything. But I think she knew Joyce would have taken her back; she just didn't care.

Ditto. Buffy didn't. She basically told Joyce she had no respect for her intelligence or faith in her daughter. She confided in everyone EXCEPT her mother for two years and then expected Joyce to accept everything she told her after basically lying to her for the whole time? Oh, yeah, I think I'd tell the little snot to get out, too. And, hey, I love Buffy, I really do, but I've been there, done that with my 17-year old (now 23 and we're very good friends because I put my foot down) and I wouldn't put up with 'tude either.


Cindy - Sep 10, 2003 3:43:01 pm PDT #5479 of 10001
Nobody

I don't even chalk it up to not putting up with the 'tude, so much as Joyce being just bowled over. Here was here night...

COPS: Your daughter probably just tried to murder her friends, at school.

*finds Buffy with Spike*

BUFFY: I'm in a band, and I'll tell you more, as soon as I stick this wooden stick in the chest of the man who has attacked and is trying to kill you, and he turns to dust. Get in the house.

JOYCE: Have we met?

SPIKE: You hit me with an axe once.

BUFFY: Vampires are real. I kill them, when I'm not sleeping with them, or teaming up with them to kill others of them.

JOYCE: Call the cops.

BUFFY: No. They have guns, cars, and are generally at least average sized men. I weigh 95lbs soaking wet, and am lucky if I'm size two. I'm much better equipped. Oh, and you're a drunk.

JOYCE: Wait! (she grabs Buffy's arms)

(Buffy pushes her across the room, and starts to leave, even though she's been told not to, is a minor, and Joyce's own daughter.)

I don't think Buffy was wrong in going to stop Angel, or teaming with Spike, or in anything she did. But this was 2 minutes into a whole new world for Joyce.


SailAweigh - Sep 10, 2003 3:53:29 pm PDT #5480 of 10001
Nana korobi, ya oki. (Fall down seven times, stand up eight.) ~Yuzuru Hanyu/Japanese proverb

Not just bowled over, but realizing just how much of her daughter's life she'd been left out of. Not just left out of, but purposely excluded. It's going to happen eventually in any parent/child relationship, but this was done in a particularly brutal way. Because Buffy felt Joyce couldn't deal. And, not too surprising, since Buffy had never given her a chance to when things weren't quite so hectic, she couldn't. So, yeah, she reacted in a not-quite-appropriate way. Just like DMP, it's one of those moments where so many feelings and thoughts get compacted into just a few seconds of action and dialogue, yet we can spend hours deconstructing them. Gotta love it.


helentm - Sep 10, 2003 3:55:06 pm PDT #5481 of 10001
Religion isn't the cause of wars. It's the excuse. - Christopher Brookmyre

I know Joyce was in shock. Buffy was too. She'd just seen a friend die, been expelled from school, Willow was in hospital in a coma, Giles was captured and being tortured. Joyce had been in denial, she had a real pattern of blaming Buffy for things Buffy couldn't help and generally making things worse.

And Joyce said, if you leave, never come back. I understand that she said it because she was afraid for Buffy and didn't mean it, but I still think she doesn't get to play the 'how dare you leave' card.


brenda m - Sep 10, 2003 4:45:28 pm PDT #5482 of 10001
If you're going through hell/keep on going/don't slow down/keep your fear from showing/you might be gone/'fore the devil even knows you're there

And Joyce said, if you leave, never come back. I understand that she said it because she was afraid for Buffy and didn't mean it, but I still think she doesn't get to play the 'how dare you leave' card.

I totally get where Joyce was coming from, and her night of hell - but I'll agree that the "don't come back" card was over the top. And really, the suddenness makes it more so. Yes, they'd had Trouble with Buffy before, and that has to have impacted how she reacted. But "don't come back" is something a frustrated parent drags out when nothing else has worked - not the first night you figure out there's a problem. And it is the kind of thing that, like Heather pointed out, will be taken way too seriously by some teens - while others, like my old self, will be strongly tempted to take it more seriously than they know it's meant out of spite or resentment. I don't think Joyce did anything unforgiveable - but she did take a stance took things to another level, and those consequences were not unforeseeable.