There’s Something About Mary: Secrets and the shame of Sophie’s choice.

At the time, we didn’t know what the connection between Mary and Amara/The Darkness would be, but they were brought into close parallel through visual storytelling in season 11.  

Since season 1, Mary’s been commonly associated with pink, red, and white colors, but particularly pink and red flowers.  Here she is in WIAWSNB and In the Beginning.

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Amara, too, was associated with pink and red, and introduced with pink and red  flowers.  Little did we know at the time, but that was foreshadowing Mary’s return.

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I’ve said elsewhere that flowers are often used by Supernatural as a visual storytelling device to foreshadow secrets or things that are yet to be revealed.

And here Mary is now in Season 12:

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Well, then, we have something else to learn about Mary, don’t we.  We’ve already learned that she didn’t cook that meatloaf or pie that Dean remembers so fondly.  What else is going to be revealed?

I think we’re being given clues in the parallel that is being drawn between Mary and Toni. They’re both mothers, obviously, but there have been other visual motifs that are drawing them into association.  I get the feeling that, like Mary and Amara, there’s something more going on here.  

Here we have Toni on the phone with her son, re-establishing that, yes, she is a mother.  “I know, darling, but mummy will be home soon.  I miss you, too.  I love you so, so much.”  Note the pink flowers on the wallpaper behind her. 

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Here is Toni surrounded by pink flowers, again.

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Now, you could argue that the flowers there hint that this interaction was a manipulation, that things are not quite what they seem, but I think there’s more. Toni and Mary are the only people with whom Sam was physically intimate.  We didn’t get that greatly anticipated Dean and Sam reunion embrace this time, like we’ve come to expect.

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Toni wears red (associated with demons/danger in Supernatural visual motifs) and white (associated with death) in her confrontation with Mary.  Mary wears red and white when she first confronts Toni.

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Toni likes tea and seeks information about hunters from Sam.  She finds that the way to get to Sam isn’t through pain, it’s through intimacy and the promise of affection and acceptance that he has longed for.  (”Really, you don’t ever want something more? You don’t ever think about something? Not marriage, or whatever, but, something, you know, with a hunter? Someone who understands the life?” Season 11: Baby)

Sam wonders if Mary likes tea.

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And he brings her his emotional vulnerability, and, importantly, information.

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Not only that, but he opens a new world of knowledge to her about John and American hunters, all while he’s wearing an orange shirt.  Orange has been used in Supernatural as a visual storytelling device that is associated with the danger of getting too close to monsters. It’s that effect of staring too long into the abyss and the abyss staring back.  You become what you fight.  

~*~

So here we are.  Mary and Toni are being brought into close parallel, all surrounded by themes of death, danger, betrayal, and choices that may lead them down the path of becoming monstrous.

Supernatural has carefully reminded the audience about Mary’s initial deal with the YED and the culpability that she feels.  We’ve been reminded that she chose John over the rest of her family.  It may have been 30 years for her sons, but for her, she just lost John.  And now she’s learning all the ways that her death changed him and her children into something they weren’t before.  

Why bring up Ruby, and make sure the audience remembers her? Again, Ruby was someone with whom Sam was intimate, someone who manipulated and betrayed him. But why also bring up Benny?  Did Toni, too, make a Sophie’s choice at one point like Mary did?  Where is her husband/the father of her child?  What happened to him?  Is that why she is so adamantly against any association with monsters? Did she make a choice that horrifies her and gives her that fierce belief that anyone who associates themselves with monsters isn’t no better than them?  Does she HAVE to believe that, or else she wouldn’t be able to live with herself?  What did the British MOL make her do?

And so, what does this mean for Mary?  Mary, like Ruby, betrayed Sam once.  What will learning about hunters do for her?  What choice is going to be presented to her?  What is Mary going to do?  

foolscapper:

foolscapper:

foolscapper:

……………………………………………………………..

what the fuck.

no but how did tweedles already make this skeevy!!!!

I’M SORRY I’M STILL TRYING TO PROCESS 

WHY IS DEAN WORRIED ABOUT ‘SMALL TALK NORMAL’ WITH MOM WHILE SAM IS MISSING????? WHY ARE THEY BACK AT THE BUNKER CHILLIN IN A ROBE WHERE IS THE RESCUE STUFF WHY WAS SAM IN BED WITH HIS TORTURER WHY WHAT WHAT DID I MISS 10 EPISODES

Annnnd we have a square on the Bucklemming bingo card:  OOC and plothole in one.  

Okay, I’ve officially lost any sympathy for Toni I might have had.

If she ends up redeemed and she becomes yet another abuser/violator that Sam has to welcome into his daily life, I’m going to be royally pissed.

theneuroscienceside:

thesmileoctopus:

linddzz:

So Tako has recently added to the list of why she is The Best Octopus (all octos are the best but we don’t tell her that of course.)

She’s starting to get a lot more outgoing and spends more time wandering and moving stuff around in her tank as she gets bigger, which is pretty standard. So to help with her newfound confidence and energy we’ve been doing a lot more enrichment, and she now comes right to the top as soon as she sees one of us three handlers.

(I’m still her favorite. The others know this.)

Along with enthusiastically grabbing people-arms and seeing how hard she can pull (very hard. My baby is growing up and leaving weird suction cup hickies up to my elbow), she started spraying water at us with her siphon.

Her predecessor, Quinoa, would spray at us if we were doing something annoying like trying to take a toy back or not handing over food fast enough, or handed her something she didn’t like. So at first when Tako started this up we were like “what is this octos problem” and would just splash back at her because sometimes you are fed up with an 8-armed brat.

Fastforward to now, when it has just come to light that the trainers have been tained.

Tako LIKES being splashed. She waves her arms above the water, tries to grab onto the bubbles made, has a grand time, and now knows how to make us Do The Thing.

She has mastered aiming and firing right at us and lo and behold, when you start splashing her the sprays of 48°F water aimed at your face stop, she turns a bright excited red and frolics around with her arms up and waving about to feel the water getting splashed around.

We now have a splash game of going back and forth with the spraying and splashing. Today was spent with me splashing at different areas of the tank while she chased the splashes, one arm towing her current favorite rubber duck along.

Bless this weird animal she is the best.

We had a GPO that liked to tent over the incoming water flow like

It was pretty dang funny! I think it probably felt good on her skin. Sounds like Tako is a happy camper!

I’m reblogging this exclusively because I love octopuses and they make me happy.

Fiction can show you a different world. It can take you somewhere you’ve never been. Once you’ve visited other worlds, like those who ate fairy fruit, you can never be entirely content with the world that you grew up in. Discontent is a good thing: discontented people can modify and improve their worlds, leave them better, leave them different.

And while we’re on the subject, I’d like to say a few words about escapism. I hear the term bandied about as if it’s a bad thing. As if “escapist” fiction is a cheap opiate used by the muddled and the foolish and the deluded, and the only fiction that is worthy, for adults or for children, is mimetic fiction, mirroring the worst of the world the reader finds herself in.

If you were trapped in an impossible situation, in an unpleasant place, with people who meant you ill, and someone offered you a temporary escape, why wouldn’t you take it? And escapist fiction is just that: fiction that opens a door, shows the sunlight outside, gives you a place to go where you are in control, are with people you want to be with(and books are real places, make no mistake about that); and more importantly, during your escape, books can also give you knowledge about the world and your predicament, give you weapons, give you armour: real things you can take back into your prison. Skills and knowledge and tools you can use to escape for real.

As JRR Tolkien reminded us, the only people who inveigh against escape are jailers.”

― Neil Gaiman

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