Does it speak to the fandom that I hope that's what she meant as opposed to any other possible meaning?
Go cannibalism Choose cannibalism
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Does it speak to the fandom that I hope that's what she meant as opposed to any other possible meaning?
Go cannibalism Choose cannibalism
It says something (what I'm not sure) that cannibalism could be the less disturbing choice.
Amy, yes. I started skimming and then really skimming, and had a minor freakout that Dean was now eating Cas, while giving him a BJ. Couldn't figure out where the blood was coming from, and couldn't bear to go back and find out.
(sending brain out for professional steam cleaning)
With extra bleach.
I'll take that as a sign not to read the whitefont, then.
Going back to the ep, did we get any clue as to how long Bobby and Ellen had been married? I really enjoyed how the two played off each other in this episode. It felt very natural.
I don't think so, but the logical time would be sometime after the Season 2 finale when they were both involved in the business at the Devil's Gate.
That makes sense, Matt. This episode has me missing Ellen all over again (which I suppose was the intent).
Oh me too. I wish there was some way we could have kept Ellen and Jo.
I'm discussing Sam's time in hell with a friend.
She thinks Lucifer tortured Adam, and that Sam got in on the action, and I like to think that Sam was fairly untouched, and that simply being there at all was torture enough. Or that Lucifer did take out his rage on those around him, but somehow Sam remained untouched, and that Sam's psychological torture is all about Sam's guilt about being left alone, a helpless witness to Lucifer venting his frustrations out on Adam and Michael (leaving Sam alone in the hopes of escaping/being freed and reclaiming his true vessel). I don't think Sam's time in the cage should be a retread of Dean's time in hell, torturing and enjoying it, which is where she's at. And I also don't just want to go for straight torture of Sam, as it seems the obvious choice. So, maybe Sam's experience was one of just witnessing. And being unable to stop it.
So, if my leanings were to be true, would the psychological ramifications be devastatingly on par to being the victim of torture? Bearing helpless witness, and then the survivor's guilt that would come with being saved while Adam is left behind? Or is this a case of Occam's Razor, and the obvious, simple answer is the right one.
I really just want the four of them to have been in the cage playing poker, bored out their minds, all equally helpless. And Sam's trauma was ennui for hundreds of years. People go insane from that shit, yo.