- Joined
- Apr 10, 2020
- Messages
- 1
I sometimes feel like I'm the only one who still likes Jeanette haha.
I understand why Ezekiel said what he did. He doesn't want people to get the impression that he has deeper feeling for Jeanette (Athy kept thinking he does because the original novel said so and maybe that didn't sit well with him) or he doesn't wants the burden of always having to take care of her. Essential, he just want to control his life and pursue the relationships that matter to him.(Not having to take care of Jeanette and listen to his father ect)..But the way he phrased that was honestly a bit was too harsh for me. It could have been taken in the wrong way or maybe that is what he really meant, that he doesn't care and only cares out of a sense of duty.
Personally, I never saw Jeanette as having romantic feelings for Ezekiel (in the tea party when all the other girls talked about boys and he came up, she didn't really show signs of blushing or being embarrassed. Just overall, interactions between them never really showed romantic feelings. The only evidence I see is what happened in the original lovely princess novel or when she was being quite clingy to him when they were young ), it just seemed like she thought of him as her 2nd family (believing her real one was with Claude and Athy). I never really got the impression that she thought he liked him or they had a mutual love going on. She just really saw him like a brother. So this response from Ezekiel ,for me, was not so much that he likes Athy over her but rather that he didn't care for Jeanette at all as a person.
In addition, this might be the first real rejection she had from someone she cared for (well yes there was that time with Claude but she used the excuse that he doesn't know she is his daughter, even though she is not). We see that Jeannette has a great desire to be loved and fantasize about her "real" family, that they will be the solution to her loneliness. Whenever she doubts that maybe Athy and Claude don't care about her, she tries to brush it off because if she is faced with reality that maybe no one loves her and she is truly alone I, then that's when she will break.
Honestly, despite how the response was once, I'm kinda curious to see how Jeannette will react considering this is probably the first of many harsh truths that she'll have to go through.
(Sorry for the rambling!)
I understand why Ezekiel said what he did. He doesn't want people to get the impression that he has deeper feeling for Jeanette (Athy kept thinking he does because the original novel said so and maybe that didn't sit well with him) or he doesn't wants the burden of always having to take care of her. Essential, he just want to control his life and pursue the relationships that matter to him.(Not having to take care of Jeanette and listen to his father ect)..But the way he phrased that was honestly a bit was too harsh for me. It could have been taken in the wrong way or maybe that is what he really meant, that he doesn't care and only cares out of a sense of duty.
Personally, I never saw Jeanette as having romantic feelings for Ezekiel (in the tea party when all the other girls talked about boys and he came up, she didn't really show signs of blushing or being embarrassed. Just overall, interactions between them never really showed romantic feelings. The only evidence I see is what happened in the original lovely princess novel or when she was being quite clingy to him when they were young ), it just seemed like she thought of him as her 2nd family (believing her real one was with Claude and Athy). I never really got the impression that she thought he liked him or they had a mutual love going on. She just really saw him like a brother. So this response from Ezekiel ,for me, was not so much that he likes Athy over her but rather that he didn't care for Jeanette at all as a person.
In addition, this might be the first real rejection she had from someone she cared for (well yes there was that time with Claude but she used the excuse that he doesn't know she is his daughter, even though she is not). We see that Jeannette has a great desire to be loved and fantasize about her "real" family, that they will be the solution to her loneliness. Whenever she doubts that maybe Athy and Claude don't care about her, she tries to brush it off because if she is faced with reality that maybe no one loves her and she is truly alone I, then that's when she will break.
Honestly, despite how the response was once, I'm kinda curious to see how Jeannette will react considering this is probably the first of many harsh truths that she'll have to go through.
(Sorry for the rambling!)