So it turns out that going to sleep isn't easy when you're on caffeine. Go me. Well, the rebuttal, if you have the patience and sobriety to read it.
Mealforthree wrote:There was no such thing on behalf of Hanako, her confession smelled like she was boasting ("he is better than you blah blah", were she regretful and trying to establish trust, she'd have chosen the words more carefully) and just feeling bad about it because she's insecure as USA's budget.
I don't see how sugarcoating her words would have helped the situation any. The whole point was to give context for her apology. And in the end, "Why?" would have been Hisao's first question anyway. Leaving out the details would be no better than lying.
Mealforthree wrote:
So you agree that she still doesn't regret it. That doesn't sound like a resolved situation to me.
Well, she did express regret over only regretting her actions once she got hurt. Regret over the failure to regret. She's aware of how apathetic she is about the situation, and hates it. That's getting there, right?
Mealforthree wrote:She didn't want his pity because she quite simply didn't give a flying rat's ass about his pity. Her whole wallowing in self-pity was caused by the fact that she started taking into account the delicate aspect of SOCIAL STANDARDS. "Cheating is unacceptable, shit, I transgressed, better rethink my game here."
And yet she was prepared to kill herself because she believed
he would no longer accept her, not this society you speak of. She pitied herself because she knows he was one of the only people that ever loved her, and that she might have fucked that all over. The only other people she even considers being ashamed of her are Hisao and her parents, the latter having the fortunate proposition of being dead.
Mealforthree wrote:I'd say the other way around. Hisao is now completely dependent on her. His thoughts are basically littered with bullshit contemplation trying to find an excuse for her and he successfully manages to come up with some really stupid ideas which in his mind redeem her somewhat.
Hisao was calling bullshit on his own actions, not Hanako's. He was dealing with emotional turmoil that her rape caused him - his love for her made it painful to him, but he decided to be a dumbass and cater to her feelings regarding the incident rather than his own. It has little to do with "redeeming" her. He was at least that aware of himself.
Mealforthree wrote:I sincerely doubt that Hanako cares about Hisao any more. The whole "back together" thing on the rooftop smells more like social pressure on her part. She feels that if they don't get back together, she'll be the ultimate social outcast for having destroyed its norms and not done the "right" thing.
Again, this makes no sense in the context of her being ashamed of hurting the person closest to her. Social pressure has nothing to do with it. She wasn't about to throw herself off the roof because she thought the world hated her, she was going to do it because she thought it was the only way to give the single most important person to her peace. If she didn't give a fuck about him she'd just blitz through high school and do whatever the hell she wanted for the rest of her life.
Mealforthree wrote:Oh, I couldn't agree more. The problem is that this relationship will be such a feelercoaster that it will probably induce the most dysfunctional family in the whole period of the existence of fried chicken.
Assuming that they linger on this moment for the rest of their conceivable lives, but that would be ignoring the entire point of moving forward with their lives instead of sitting on their asses eating fried chicken and getting too fat to do so.
Mealforthree wrote:Don't try to justify her, please. This whole situation is fucked up and there is no justification now. If she had just been sincere with everyone - including herself (acknowledging the fact that she obliterated her idiosyncratic standing in society, accepting the fact that she doesn't feel sincerely guilty about it and telling Hisao about it without all the irrelevant juicy details),then it could work. Now - not so much.
And therein lies the point. I'm not trying to justify Hanako, I'm trying to justify Hisao's ability to forgive her. Everybody else seems intent on dumping her ass and drinking mind bleach. It's not even a question of whether she deserves it, because we have absolutely no emotional investment in her. Hisao on the other hand, does. And that's all from taking it all literally.
Making it more complicated than it really is seems to be what you're doing. This isn't like the Scarlet Letter or anything. Or Easy A. That was a funny movie. I should watch it again.
Anyway, some small part of me still thinks that Brogurt
planned this all.