The ship lands on the planet and Merges with the campus. Nothing more, nothing lessI’m so confused.
The ship lands on the planet and Merges with the campus. Nothing more, nothing lessI’m so confused.
I don't think that the writers necessarily had a handle on what to do with his character. It kind of feels like they just needed a Klingon and wanted to make him different, but didn't think much further than that. Sort of the same as TNG in the first season.Overall a decent episode. Jayden to me is the most improved, he was a bit of a limp fish at first but now he’s vocal and interesting enough that I care about his struggle.
Two words: Imposter Syndrome. I know many who suffer from it.I’m a bit confused on Gemini. So I guess you tried to get references for the academy…all of her references said “she’s too afraid”…and then she faked them?
I just can’t reconcile that with the character we see. She is incredibly confident and brave who seems to have excelled her whole life. Sure she might have some things to work on but I can’t imagine such a person couldn’t secure good references.
Imposter syndrome and/or needing to measure up to Dad's achievements & expectations and feeling that if she is not perfect she is not there. Even if her Dad does not actually expect her to be perfect, the example he has set to her for her whole life (she has mentioned many times growing up on starbases and starships) may be hard for her to shake. The military kid trope is a strong one in lots of different fiction because the stereotype of the military parent being a hard-nosed disciplinarian despite loving their child (in fact, because they see risk and need the child to be tough) is common enough in real life, even if not identical to the stereotype we see and hear repeated.I don't think that the writers necessarily had a handle on what to do with his character. It kind of feels like they just needed a Klingon and wanted to make him different, but didn't think much further than that. Sort of the same as TNG in the first season.
Two words: Imposter Syndrome. I know many who suffer from it.
Yup. I took my lead from her comment about whether she had earned her place, or if she had been given it because of who her father is.Imposter syndrome and/or needing to measure up to Dad's achievements & expectations and feeling that if she is not perfect she is not there. Even if her Dad does not actually expect her to be perfect, the example he has set to her for her whole life (she has mentioned many times growing up on starbases and starships) may be hard for her to shake. The military kid trope is a strong one in lots of different fiction because the stereotype of the military parent being a hard-nosed disciplinarian despite loving their child (in fact, because they see risk and need the child to be tough) is common enough in real life, even if not identical to the stereotype we see and hear repeated.
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I can respect she has that, what I am trying to reconcile is....is that really what her references would say about her?Two words: Imposter Syndrome. I know many who suffer from it.