Guest Poster wrote:
I personally think Lilly's overprotectiveness is only a small part of it. The most major breakdown she had in her own route came through the revelation that Lilly and Hisao had been looking into throwing her a party...which had no babysitting aspects to it whatsoever and still caused a panic attack.
I think a good argument against the theory that Lilly's actively been hampering Hanako's growth is the fact that Hanako and Lilly didn't even know each other during the whole first year of high school and despite the fact that there was no "babysitter" around, Hanako wasn't exploring her potential or making new friends or doing anything other than hanging out in her library corner and avoiding all interaction between herself and the rest of the student body.
What Lilly excels in is offering company, safety and comfort to others and those traits are also what caused Hanako to initially seek her out. What she lacks in is pushing and challenging Hanako to grow beyond the status quo. Hisao eventually becomes the catalyst for challenge in Hanako's route while the newspaper club becomes the challenging factor in Lilly's route. There are several points in her own route where Hanako is seen trying to prove herself to Hisao in some way or another.
I think in order to stretch her boundaries, Hanako needs two things: a source of comfort and safety and someone who challenges her. Without challenge, there's no growth, but without safety she'll be afraid to try new things because she won't have anyone to fall back on. Meaning her friendship with Lilly on its own is unlikely to help her advance, but at the same time that doesn't mean Lilly doesn't play a very important role in Hanako's life.
It's a small part of it, no less.
But when you accumulate all that small part and has it going for most of their high school history, then it becomes a central point. Not really, but...I cant' find the right word for it. Hanako's first year in Yamaku (converting it to US-standard is...year 9 I think?) doesn't grant her any friends because she doesn't seek out--understandable, considering it's her new school and all. I don't discredit Lilly and her babysitting entirely since I do believe her little 'care' for Hanako boosts her self-esteem a bit, enough for her to seek out new friends in Lilly's route. But, by the time Hanako and Lilly is in their 3rd year (when Hisao joins in the Yamaku crew), it is way overdone and is acting more or less as Hanako's 'safe' inhibitor.
And I'm guessing Hanako actually did attempt to prove herself to Lilly, the same way she does to Hisao (albeit differently, I think); it's just how Lilly actually takes it is entirely different to how Hisao actually did.
Also, i believe Hanako's birthday happened at around the same day when she burned her house down and got herself that scar--isn't that what the party is all about, I believe? The party in Lilly's route is her farewell party and that does not generate any panic attack from her. Anyway, the party and her birthday. That's quite a traumatic memory, even when your friends want to celebrate your birthday party, if you have something really bad that happened in the same day (either you burn your house down, your parents are dead, you become batman, etc.), your thoughts would most likely gravitate towards that tragedy instead of thinking 'hey, it's my birthday!'
Which is why I believe her panic attack on her route about the party is all about; it reminded her of the day she got the scars and everything that comes with it, thus she's not too keen on celebrating it. Which in turn it kinda went on the 'wrong' end of its purpose.
Atario wrote:Not really. The end of Hanako's route happens before Lilly even gets back from Scotland, yet she's ready for a cheeky public kiss by then.
Ah, I disregarded and forgotten her route on that one--my mistake. Hisao's an acting catalyst that actually brought Hanako to challenge her past so true, she recovers a lot faster in her route (well, not
fully recovered, but she has a start going which is nice)