i’ve talked a lot about catra being the scapegoat, but now i want to talk about adora being the golden child. it’s not all sunshine and rainbows, that’s for sure.

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when adora was a child, shadow weaver told her that she was responsible for catra’s behavior, and by extension, her punishments. no, adora wouldn’t be punished for it, but catra would, and that was probably worse. this likely instilled the idea that, if catra got hurt because she “misbehaved” (read: did normal kid things), then it was actually adora’s fault–not catra’s (which it isn’t) nor shadow weaver’s (which it is). if catra suffered, then it was because adora wasn’t trying hard enough–to distract shadow weaver with her own accomplishments or convince catra to stay in line or whatever. 

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catra completely misinterpreted this, assuming that adora enjoyed this favoritism. is this the reaction of someone who enjoys being the golden child, or is this the reaction of someone who’s terrified

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a lot of people have assumed that adora’s behavior is arrogant, but i think it’s actually just…what she’s been told and taught–

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–that she’s important, but not necessarily useful unless she’s doing everything the “right” way. sometimes, being important isn’t actually very comforting; it just gives you more power to make mistakes and let people down. 

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shadow weaver gave adora the illusion of control over more than her own behavior, and when that illusion crumbled, adora was left with…herself, and a sword. it’s no wonder that she clung to the sword as a source of validation and importance, a way for her to actually help people. 

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this also explains why she feels such strong guilt for anything bad that happens around her, which light hope recognizes and exploits. all adora wants to do is protect her friends (and, y’know, etheria–no pressure though), but what if she only hurts them? she’s convinced that she does have the power to save everyone, that she is important enough to do everything, and yet, she fails, again and again. even when she has the physical power to throw things around, she can’t heal plumeria’s tree or glimmer’s abilities, because she’s just not good enough. 

being the golden child, being told that you’re special and amazing and perfect…a lot of people buckle under that pressure and end up paralyzed by fear that they can’t truly accomplish anything. 

luckily, adora has found friends who truly do not blame her for not being able to save everyone, and she finds the strength to get up again and try

horrible (read: great) idea if that theory is true–what if catra finds out that shadow weaver has been erasing adora’s memories around the same time that entrapta finds out that her friends had thought she was dead? 

OKAY BUT LIKE

IF THAT THEORY IS TRUE

HOW IS CATRA GOING TO REACT TO THIS REVELATION?

this whole time, she’s felt like adora abandoned her, on the presumption that, y’know, adora remembers everything.

isn’t it interesting how the “i promise” memory was only seen when catra was alone? almost as if…adora doesn’t have that memory. 

basically, how would catra process that a) adora didn’t break the promise because her memory of it had been erased; b) adora only failed to recognize the true extent of the horde’s evil despite what they did to catra because shadow weaver fucked with her head to make sure she’d stay in line

it’s something that i’ve seen a lot of people criticize adora for–that she somehow only realized the horde was Bad, not when they hurt her best friend, but when they hurt a bunch of strangers. i understand the criticism, even though i think we need to account for adora also being abused, albeit in a different way. adora isn’t perfect.

but god, what if that doesn’t even actually apply to adora?

and it would make so much sense, because of course shadow weaver would want to make sure her golden child stayed in line.