I assume everyone reading this
knows that Buffy the Vampire Slayer
premiered on March 10, 1997, 20 years ago. I thought it would be
worthwhile to review how I think the show still speaks to us.
This may seem redundant, since I
wrote the essays here and the whole book to demonstrate that the show provides
timeless themes. What I want to do in this post is to distill its core message,
not just for reference, but for inspiration. SPOILERS for all episodes and for Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets.
We begin as individuals: “You are
the center. And within you, there is the core of your being ... of what you
are.” It’s that core from which you draw the strength you need to face the
challenges of the world:
Angelus: So that's
everything, huh? No weapons... No friends... No hope.
Buffy closes her eyes and steels
herself for whatever's coming.
Angelus: Take all that
away... and what's left?
He draws the sword back and
thrusts it directly at her face. With lightning-fast reflexes she swings up
with both arms and catches the blade between the palms of her hands. She opens
her eyes and meets his.
Buffy: Me.
You were not born with that core.
You were not given it by someone else. You created
it by the choices you’ve made in your life. Those choices were never entirely
unrestricted. Our abilities have natural limits and we make choices within
those constraints. Others make choices too, and those may constrain us as well.
Past choices may affect the options available to you now.
Don’t mistake those constraints
as traps. “You have a choice. You don't have a good choice, but you have a
choice!” The choices you make going forward today can reinforce or even
redefine the kind of person you are. I wish there were a pithy quote from the
series to highlight this point, but it’s implicitly shown throughout almost
every episode. Instead I’ll quote from Harry
Potter and the Chamber of Secrets (edited for brevity, my bold):
“Professor Dumbledore….. Riddle
said I’m like him. Strange likenesses, he said.”
“Did he now? And what do you think, Harry?”
“The Sorting Hat told me I’d –
I’d have done well in Slytherin. Everyone thought I was Slytherin’s heir for a while…. The Sorting Hat could see
Slytherin’s power in me, and it – ”
“Put you in Gryffindor. Listen to
me, Harry. You happen to have many of the qualities Salazar Slytherin prized in
his hand-picked students. … resourcefulness – determination – a certain
disregard for rules. Yet the Sorting Hat placed you in Gryffindor. You know why
that was. Think.”
“It only put me in Gryffindor
because I asked not to go in Slytherin.”
“Exactly. Which makes you very
different from Tom Riddle. It is our
choices, Harry, that show what we truly are, far more than our abilities.”
Not every choice defines your
life all by itself. Most choices are small ones, though their cumulative impact
may be large. It’s hard to know, though, at any point in time, which choice
will prove to be critical; that’s why we need to make every choice a deliberate
one. “There's moments in your life that make you, that set the course of who
you're gonna be. Sometimes they're little, subtle moments. Sometimes... they're
not.”
Most of the time, though, we
recognize the big moments, maybe not in advance, but when reality slaps us in
the face. “Bottom line
is, even if you see 'em coming, you're not ready for the big moments. No one
asks for their life to change, not really. But it does. So what are we,
helpless? Puppets? No. The big moments are gonna come. You can't help that.
It's what you do afterwards that counts. That's when you find out who you are.”
What is it that you do afterward?
That’s when we remember that we are Buffy:
Thank you, Mark! This post was a perfect way to celebrate the 20th anniversary. That closing quote never fails to give me chills.
ReplyDeleteI'm so glad your daughter wanted to watch the show 20 years ago. Your thinking and writing about it has certainly made my experience richer.
Thank you! I'm pretty glad about it too. Maybe I should listen to her more often. :)
ReplyDeleteMark, great choice of quotes. Thank you.
ReplyDeleteI am not be Buffy, but dammit, I'm trying every day.
Actually trying is getting most of the way.
DeleteHey man. Awesome as always to read your words. Maybe more than two posts this year? I know. I'm greedy. We should be so lucky. :-)
ReplyDeleteAlso, Happy Anniversary!
DeleteI need to do a re-watch for inspiration. But you keep making such good points that it's hard for me to find new ground.
DeleteThanks. It's weird that the next ones -- 25 and 30 -- seem so far away.
DeleteI cheat. I'm taking the very broad "fan" approach. Which lets me pad things with my opinion. It's messy content. You kept things much cleaner.
DeleteI'm pretty sure some of my opinions (cough*Xander*cough) came through.
DeleteHi Mark! Just dropping in to say hello -- I bought your book recently and I have been thoroughly enjoying it. As Erica said, it has enriched my experience of rewatching the series, absolutely. I hadn't ever seen your blog before so I'm pretty thrilled to have come across it! Thanks for the insight :)
ReplyDeleteThank you!
DeleteHi! I'm not sure that this is the way or the place to make this comment, bit I am willing to give it a try. I just finished your chapter on Becoming, parts one and two, and I was again frustrated th,at you seemed to miss a major point that makes Buffy's subsequent reactions and decisions very clear from a character perspective, and possibly metaphically as well. Buffy never killed Angel: if she had the world would have ended. Near the the end of season five, Spike talks about it always needing to be blood. It needed Angel's blood to awaken Acathla, and his blood is needed to close the vortex. 1) If Buffy had killed Angel, he would have been dust: no blood. 2) The only way she could have killed a vampire with a sword would have been decapitation. So Buffy did not kill Angel. What she did was arguably worse: she sent an ensouled creature to Hell--alive. And it was Angel, whom she loved hat she did this to.
ReplyDeleteYou could have put this comment under the essay on Becoming; I get notice either way. MAJOR SPOILERS to follow.
DeleteI just re-read the essay and I very carefully never said that Buffy killed Angel. I did talk (a lot) about "going to kill Angelus" and "kill Angelus". But when I got to the actual event, I used phrases such as "run a sword through Angel". I phrased it the way I did to avoid a major spoiler, of course. I think the distinction is pretty clear in the essays on, say, Faith, Hope & Trick, and Revelations. I'd add that Buffy herself, in Selfless, says that she "killed Angel" and I think she always saw it that way.