Follow TV Tropes

Following

YMMV / Dumbing of Age

Go To

  • Angst? What Angst?: Becky tends to shrug off any moments of sadness easily. In general, Becky would rather hide her pain than let people know she is hurting. She does that both with her dad (as a defense mecanism) and Joyce (mostly because she doesn't want to make her sad). Every now and then, though, her facade breaks.
  • Alternative Character Interpretation: Almost all but the very worst people in this comic have some shade of grey to them, since they almost always have some kind of reason for their actions. Of course views on the characters are going to fluctuate.
    • Walky and Dorothy, specifically in their relationship. Is Walky being an insensitive Jerkass to his girlfriend who just wants him to open up or is he trying to protect himself from getting hurt by a relationship he knows has a deadline? On the other side, is Dorothy expecting too much from a relationship she herself insisted wasn't serious, is she changing her mind about this being just for fun, or is the fact that her only other prior experience was Danny causing her to have a skewed view of how to handle things?
    • Roz: is she a cruel opportunist who intentionally sabotaged her sister Robin's congressional campaign as some of her dorm mates allege, or a Cruel to Be Kind Hypocritical Heartwarming little sister who decided a relationship with Leslie would benefit Robin as well as serve the greater good? It all hinges on whether you believe Roz took or posted the incriminating photographs.
    • As noted below, some readers view Mary as less of a Politically Incorrect Villain and more of a Ineffectual Sympathetic Villain. This mostly depends on whether you view her various comeuppances as Disproportionate Retribution or not.
    • When Ross discharged his gun on campus was he just making a dumb incriminating decision or did he do it to put pressure on Becky to get in the car, essentially holding himself hostage with the threat of the police coming for him after firing a gun? Ross's two major characteristics are that he's a manipulator and an idiot so it depends on which trait the viewer believes he acted on.
    • Because he's mainly used as a Plot Device and is a Flat Character otherwise, people are hard pressed when it comes to analyzing Mike. His flashback chapters renewed interest in just what makes him tick, and have led to some wildly different interpretations. Some believe he's dead inside and acts like a dick legitimately to those that deserve it, and uses it as a front for making others aware of their flaws. Some think he's just The Sociopath and is playing everyone around him for his amusement. Others Take a Third Option and think that while he is The Sociopath, he has a soft spot for Amber and Ethan, but isn't afraid to call out them or anyone else that pisses him off. Just what makes Mike tick is effectively a riddle for the ages. For what it's worth, Book 10 has him take a multiple-story dive to save Amber from her father and admit in what turned out to be his last words that Amber and Ethan "were always good friends. My best friends".
    • Viewers are divided on just what Jocelyne was thinking here, in these beat panels after Joyce asks if her mother is a good person. While it seems universally agreed upon (and obvious) that she doesn't trust her mother, the specifics of what exactly are going through her head are... less so.
      Fart Captor: The heartbreaking part is that I can’t tell whether Jocelyne is lying to herself, trying to be gentle on Joyce, or hiding what she really thinks about Carol because she still isn’t sure how much she can trust Joyce.
  • Aluminum Christmas Trees: A good indication of whether or not something in the comic relating to Joyce is based on Willis' autobiographical experience is whether or not someone claims it's too dumb to be real. Such as Willis relating in one comic that he learned about firebreathing dinosaurs as a kid... or, perhaps as the best example, Hymmel the Humming Hymnal is based on the very real Psalty the Singing Songbook. Cue YouTube comments expressing disbelief that it actually exists (that and "Oh God, what did I just watch?").
  • Base-Breaking Character:
    • Early on, Joyce was one, with one half of the fanbase seeing her as an adorable Christian who needs to break out of the effects of her sheltered life, and the other seeing her as an idiotic bible-thumping xenophobe. This died down with time as she decisively shifted towards the former, but Joyce became once again a divisive character after several events turned her into a much more jaded person, who has no issue being very contemptuous towards her own friends.
    • Becky: Understandably living out after a lifetime of repression or a complete asshole?
      • Even her haircut has become this.
      • Becky and Dina's relationship. Cute and fluffy, or an annoying couple thrown together with no build up that now dominates the comic? It's less base breaking because a lot of fans loves the fact this relationship doesn't have drama between the two girls.
    • Amber/Amazi-girl, besides the fact that Amazi-girl is Amber's way of running from her issues, there are many that find her increasingly haughty attitude to be annoying, especially when she doesn't seem to realize that vigilantism is far more illegal than some of the crimes she claims to be against. Her treatment of Sal has pushed her to damn near scrappy territory. While some understand why Amber has such negative feelings toward Sal, many feel that she is being overly wangsty about their shared past and that she needs to get over it. Also breaks bases in that she already got over her issues in Shortpacked, only to regain and have to retread them again in a new universe.
    • Ross MacIntyre: Loving dad afraid to lose his daughter (especially after his wife passed away) and willing to sacrifice his own life to "save" her, or misguided, violent and ignorant bigot who doesn't care about his daughter's feelings, so much that he went as far as kidnapping her with a gun, and whose behaviour was responsible for his wife's suicide to begin with?
    • Mike has been getting hit with this regarding whether his actions are a form of necessary Tough Love, if he's merely an abusive bully who frequently pulls Karma Houdini routines, or whether both are irrelevant and he's just meant to be a Flat Character for comedy's sake. His sacrifice didn't help - it's either proof that he had a heart of gold after all, or does not override years of bullying inflicted on people he called friends.
    • Joe and the kind of humor he brings. He's either funny in a Crosses the Line Twice sort of way or he's annoying and his jokes are at odds with the rest of the comic. Him falling Out of Focus is either a good thing or a waste.
    • Rachel. While normally a Recurring Extra, she became this after giving Ruth a "The Reason You Suck" Speech. She's either entirely right in her speech, partially right, but mainly in that she doesn't know all the details surrounding Ruth, a Hypocrite who chose to hit Ruth while she was down, or is suffering from a Dark and Troubled Past and was triggered by Ruth's attempt at redemption.
      • Made more complicated is her idea of redemption being non-existent.... saying it in front of several characters that for one reason or another are desperately trying to redeem themselves.
    • Booster is either a good if socially inept person trying their best to help others, or a Mike-tier cold-reading insensitive jerk.
  • Broken Base:
    • The whole Billie vs Ruth thing had people picking sides, until they became an item and it ceased being an issue for several years, only to reignite in full after their breakup during the timeskip. On one side, you've got Jennifer's supporters who feel Ruth was in the wrong for causing the breakup on faulty logic that neither of them never get to be happy and it's better to break up on a high note, and Jennifer is entirely within her rights to be pissed off at Ruth's Condescending Compassion. On another side, you've got Ruth's supporters who see Jennifer as being way too much of a bitch and needlessly antagonistic while only justifying Ruth's decision to break up with her, and that Ruth was entirely within her right to end the relationship on her own terms. On a third side, you've got people just happy the relationship is over due to how toxic it was on both ends, and wishing the two would stay as far away from each other for their own sakes. And on a fourth side, you've got people just sick of this plotline overall and wanting nothing more than for Jennifer and Ruth to just shut up. That, or at least find a middle ground so they're not at each other's throats with each encounter. On that note, you have a fifth group who just want Ruth and Jennifer to eventually work things out and get back together, albeit in a much healthier fashion.
    • The storyline involving Sal and Walky's parents preferring Walky based on racial preferences created a massive outpouring of both complaints and support from fans.
    • "Outrage" has become a particularly polarizing strip amongst fans, with many saying that Roz was wrong to blatantly antagonize Joyce, especially after Leslie told her to stop several times. Others say that Joyce had it coming, and that Roz is right that she doesn't deserve a parade for the smallest of epiphanies. It got so bad that eventually Willis put in a filter to change all uses of "bitch" to "bongo" in the comments, which did serve to provide some much needed levity.
    • 'To Those Who'd Ground Me' has been the subject of debate. Either it's a fun piece of catharsis for people who have had to deal with misguided parents, or the fun moments such as clever girl and unlimited, coupled with the extensive car chase sequence, broke all the dramatic tension that had been built and ruined an arc that could have been well-written and realistic.
    • The Mary vs. Carla arc split fans so badly that Willis shut off comments for the strips. To make a long story short, a character the reader is supposed to hate, a character whose motivation is to annoy and be hated, and a character who is somewhat of a Jerkass herself come into conflict. Willis himself has made it clear who he intends to be the bad guy, but whether the situation was put together in a way to be judged so solely by the comic's events is up for debate.
    • The portrayal of Christians in the story has had some readers feel they are always being painted in a bad light while others counter this by pointing out that Joyce is frequently portrayed as a positive character, as well as several other positive Christian identifying characters, and most of the negative portrayals are based on real people.
    • Joyce's conflict with her friends after turning to vocal atheism. While many can agree that, after all the trauma she's had to experience ever since coming to college, it's understandable Joyce would have been negatively impacted, her attitude and her friends' reaction to it ended up dividing the readership. On one side, you've got people completely understanding why Joyce is the way she is now, and condemning her "friends" for constantly infantilizing her and acting like she needs to change back to her "old self" or is just going through a phase, while acknowledging that she is making mistakes after she Took a Level in Jerkass, she needs to be able to learn from them on her own rather than be constantly coddled. On the other side, you've got people thinking Joyce's friends are entirely right in their worry for Joyce and she's just being an Ungrateful Bitch, not helped by her new Holier Than Thou attitude following becoming an atheist, and are hoping Joyce gets punished for her behavior by the narrative. Then of course there's those who Take a Third Option, that Both Sides Have a Point, but that are ultimately hindering their own efforts, as Joyce's friends unintentionally alienate her by acting like it's "wrong" for her to feel the way she feels, while Joyce is doing herself no favors by coming across as a self-destructive jerk to her friends.
  • Complete Monster: Blaine O'Malley, Amber's father, only values himself. After years of abusing his wife and daughter, Blaine tries to make the latter drop out of college, just so he doesn't have to pay for her tuition anymore. What follows is him harassing her, threatening her, and luring her boyfriend to get back at her for standing up for herself and punching him in the face. Ultimately, after getting beaten up by Amazi-Girl—who, unbeknownst to him, is Amber's alter ego—Blaine decides to disguise himself as a supervillain and to act like one, leading him to fatally injure Mike and to kidnap Amber and her friends, just to get a chance at revenge. When his plans go awry because Ross goes against his orders, Blaine murders the latter in a fit of rage, and decides that Murder Is the Best Solution by attempting to kill every kid he kidnapped, to make sure that no witnesses remain. Confronted by Amber as Amazi-Girl, Blaine relishes the thought that he turned her into a broken and violent person.
  • Crosses the Line Twice:
    • The strip in which Joyce recaps "the whiteboard ding-dong bandit" incident to Becky.
      Becky: This is the best day of my life. (beat, as she glances down at the corpse of her murdered father) Okay, top five.
    • When Asher suggests Sal might be jealous of his relationship with Jennifer, Jennifer nosedives straight back into Billie mode, cackling like a supervillain and producing this all-timer:
      Jennifer: I finally have something Sal wants! Besides, of course, the adoration of her parents.
    • Amber hallucinating Mike after he sacrifices himself to save her life? Tragic and concerning. Amber not incorrectly assuming Danny is into men and declaring Mike/Danny could have been "canon" and imagining hallucinatory Mike making out with him with a wide grin on her face? Concerning and hilarious.
  • Diagnosed by the Audience: Many readers have speculated whether Dina has Asperger's Syndrome given her obsessive interest in dinosaurs, social problems, frequent lack of expression, and various other traits. David Willis shrugged this off for a long time before admitting Dina was based on his own undiagnosed social deficiencies, and therefore probably has Asperger's Syndrome.
  • Draco in Leather Pants:
    • The author has often lamented on Tumblr that a small contingent of people do this for Blaine O'Malley (who beat Amber's mom and emotionally abused Amber) and Ross MacIntyre (who is trying to drag Becky to conversion therapy.) In many cases, people claim that said parents only want what is best for their children, and that said children blow their flaws out of proportion. In almost all cases, their comments are not approved to be in the comments section.
    • Mary gets this a lot too. She has consistently shown herself to not be a very nice person, with extremely bigoted views. Still some fans have sided with her a few times and said that while she may be mean those she is mean to are not undeserving of her ire.
  • Ensemble Dark Horse:
    • Even before becoming a major character, Dina was winning character popularity polls.
    • Dina's parents, despite appearing in six strips in eleven years, are beloved enough to win a few Patreon bonus strip polls (last one in October 2022, nine years after appearing on-panel in the comic proper). Being Good Parents in a setting that severely lacks these helps.
    • Leslie. Despite her limited appearances, she is generally liked by the fans for being a Cool Teacher and having a great sense of humor.
    • When taking a poll on which character Willis should make an extra couple strips for Patreon about, Becky of all people won. Willis was completely baffled, especially since no one but him knew that Becky was going to make a reappearance just three weeks from the poll's end. Once she became a part of the story, her popularity skyrocketed. Her popularity is also helped because she is also the girlfriend of Dina, another Ensemble Dark Horse.
    • Riley DeSanto appears in a grand total of eight strips, and has no lines in her last two appearances. Despite that, she is well-liked by the fandom, mostly because she's rather adorable.
    • Sayid, a character who was only added to give Amazi-Girl a skateboard to chase after Ross, was well loved by the fandom even when he first appeared in the preview panels, does fairly well in Patreon fan votes for a character with only three lines in the entire series, and was included in the "Tales of Sinterest" Slipshine comic due to his popularity.
    • Joyce's father Hank is very quickly earning the love of the fandom by being one of the few good parents in the comic, to the point where in spite of not fully understanding some of Joyce's newfound beliefs, will support them anyway since he believes she's her own woman now. It helps that unlike his wife, Hank doesn't try to defend Ross at all, outright saying that he's wanted to punch Ross a few times himself, even before his gun-point kidnapping of Becky.
    • Joyce's older sister Jocelyne is beloved by the fandom. Her return during When God Closes the Door was met with rousing cheers, and she frequently wins the Patreon fan vote.
  • Escapist Character: The author says Dorothy is at least partially one for him. Certainly, she is quite successful and ambitious, with quite possibly the only good parents we see during Freshman Family Weekend.
    Author Comment: [All my characters] take things from me on some level. [...] Some day, I hope I will be Dorothy. That is my end game. But I still have lots of stuff to work out first.
  • Fan Nickname:
    • To this day there are still people that will call Ross 'Toedad' (after a thought from Dina that his head looks like a toe) as a sign of disrespect for him.
    • Until her name was revealed as Charlie, fans called Booster's twin sister 'Boosister'.
    • After Billie started going by Jennifer instead, some fans took to calling her portmanteaus of both names, such as Billiefer.
  • Genius Bonus: The title of this strip acknowedges that the punchline is only even visible if you read music (or check the comments section, where people who can have explained it).
  • Harsher in Hindsight:
    • Billie's drinking is Played for Laughs as early as the third strip. Later we see she's a full blown alcoholic who's really suffering because of it and she has a DUI in her past that almost killed someone.
    • Walky's casual joke about Sal being blacker than him becomes this whenever Sal uses similar phrasing when lashing out at him for their parents' favouritism.
    • Hell, the entire arc where Joyce was nearly date raped counts as one, as Dorothy's research predated the current outrage over campus assaults by a good few years.
    • Dorothy's mother trying to tell Linda Walkerton not to try so hard becomes a lot more uncomfortable when Dorothy tells us what Danny's mother used to do.
    • The jokes about Joyce not liking Walky but still getting lunch with him take on a darker tone when Joyce spells out she sticks around him because she's scared of being alone in public after she almost got raped.
    • Walky panicking and eating his failed math test was funny when it first came out. Seeing how angry Linda gets once she finds out much later sucks all the comedy out of Walky's fear.
    • Walky's quip about what would happen if Mike struck up a conversation with Sarah sounds brutal after Mike's death in Book 10.
  • I Knew It!: Becky being attracted to Joyce was called by a sizable number of the commentators.
  • Jerkass Woobie:
    • While unquestionably an Abusive Parent, Ross MacIntyre managed to get some sympathy points; unlike other Hate Sink villains, his motivation is a horribly distorted desire to keep what's left of his family. His death at Blaine's hands is genuinely tragic, if only because of its impact on Joyce and Becky.
    • Joe. On the Jerkass end, he's a womanizer with somewhat shaky ethics and zero patience for stuff that doesn't get him laid. On the Woobie end, his unwillingness to form meaningful attachments is all-but-explicitly stated to be a defense mechanism developed after seeing his parents' marriage dissolve because of his father's cheating and womanizing.
      I am shallow. Everyone knows I'm shallow. [...] Do you realize how much worse it would be if anyone actually cared about me?
    • Following becoming an atheist, Joyce has, for understandable reasons related to her religious trauma, become a far more testy person when it comes to religion and in general, causing strain in her friendships as they show distaste for her more Hollywood Atheist behavior. This is especially true when it comes to Becky, who unlike Joyce has kept her faith despite their shared upbringing, and has been passive-aggressively attempting to get her to convert back to Christianity.
  • Memetic Loser: Danny's loser status, while present in canon, is a running joke among fans regarding when, and how badly, he will "Dan something up."
  • Memetic Mutation:
    • FAAAAACE!
    • With my penis tends to pop up in the comments of most strips involving Joe. It eventually become the response to any action, regardless of if Joe is in any way involved. Usually immediately followed by Mike's catchphrase "For a nickel."
    • The Show Within a Show "Dexter and Monkey Master" is often treated as if it were an actual show. Creating the most bizarre meta-fandom, as the show's "fans" argue about which episodes are the best, wishing the series had continued, even criticising Walky's and Leslie's lack of taste in episodes. Comics featuring D&MM will typically have a long comment chain featuring the input of an irascible and argumentative fandom for a show that DOES NOT EVEN EXIST. This mentality has even carried over to Joyce's favourite Christian cartoon, Hymmel the Hymnal!
    • Ever since Willis started doing comics for the porn comic site Slipshine, when something even mildly sexual happens in the strip, you can expect at least one reference to the site in the comments.
    • Sal's habit of breaking the rules is taken to hilarious levels here;
    • After Dina referred to Ross MacIntyre as a toe, commenters took to referring to him as "Toedad".
    • Following Willis's pattern of naming each book after a bizarre quote from one of the characters, the comments section now suggests any funny or weird bit of dialogue be the title of the next book.
  • Moe: Much to Billie's surprise (and the readers'), Ruth turns into one after getting help at the hospital. She also realized that deep down, she doesn't want to die, and is tearfully begging Billie to not let her die.
  • Moral Event Horizon:
    • Mary, while disliked by much of the fandom for having Joyce's fundie attitudes with none of her empathy or ethics, finally crossed it in the eyes of many when she escalated a simple noise complaint to destruction, bigotry, and blackmail.
    • Linda Walkerton, already established to be in the running for "Crappiest Mother" in the webcomic, taking money from Sal that Sal had been saving up to pay for medical care for Marcie simply because she didn't like Marcie, while also brushing off any of Sal's concerns.
    • Blaine's is when he kidnaps Danny to use him as leverage against Amber.
    • Ross spends all of "To Those Who'd Ground Me" flying over the line when he kidnaps his daughter at gunpoint because of her rebellion against his extremist fundamentalist views.
    • Carol crosses it at the end of "Sometimes the Sky Was So Far Away" when she helps provide bail money for Ross, who threatened her own daughter at gunpoint in the above incident.
  • More Popular Spin-Off: Shortpacked! was this to the rest of the Walkyverse, and DOA is this to Shortpacked. Willis even said that DOA had twice the viewership of Shortpacked when he announced the latter's closure.
  • Narm:
    • Amber's high-speed chase of Ross MacIntyre. A tense story about Becky's father kidnapping her at gunpoint turned into Mad Max. Featuring Ross climbing out of the window to shoot at Amber with a gun, leaving the wheel unattended; a random driver understanding and helping Amber when she crashes into her windshield; superhero gizmos to pop Ross's tire; a semi-truck out of nowhere; and a Deus ex Machina in the form of Sal rushing in to save the day.
    • Blaine starting to recruit other antagonists, as if he were a supervillain assembling a Legion of Doom. Narm intensified when, after being found out by Mike (and threatening to beat him to death with a hammer), the readers get a chase scene... with Mike and Blaine on electric kick-scooters. And then, when Amazi-Girl steps in, Blaine responds by putting on a supervillain get-up.
  • One True Threesome: Plenty of readers are hoping for Amber / Danny / Ethan after "Thoughts."
  • Play-Along Meme: Whenever Amazi-Girl showed up, the guesses would deliberately be everyone except Amber, due to the Paper-Thin Disguise. Finally became a Discredited Meme in this strip's Alt Text.
    this is when you guys stop making the spider-car and ultra car jokes forever, by the way, hint hint
  • Realism-Induced Horror: Part of what makes Ryan such a well-received villain compared to Blaine and Ross is that, unlike being kidnapped to either be forced into conversion therapy or used as a bargaining chip to force your kidnapper's child to drop out of college, getting drugged and raped at a party can happen to anybody. Worse, as pointed out in the strip, most colleges do not have a good track record at dealing with date rape, even when there is lots of supporting evidence and the offender is clearly identified.
  • Rescued from the Scrappy Heap:
    • New!Roz was a lot better received than her Scrappy Shortpacked! counterpart. Unfortunately, New!Robin seems to have taken her place on the heap.
    • Sarah also got a lot more sympathy from the base once her full circumstances were revealed. She didn't call the cops or the school on her roommate, she called said roommate's father, and he pulled her out of school.
    • Danny saw a notable rise in popularity after he started hanging out with Ethan most likely due to the flirtatious nature of their interactions.
    • After his fiasco during Parent Day, Joyce's father Hank quickly won back the crowd later on when he immediately accepted Becky's status as a lesbian, even if he doesn't quite understand it.
    • While more of a Base-Breaking Character now, some consider Ruth rescued after the brutal stuff she's been forced through, her Hidden Depths, Taking a Level in Kindness, and pure sympathy for her.
  • They Wasted a Perfectly Good Plot: Sal's thoughts and feelings about being her parents' unfavorite and her attempted convenience store robbery spent a long time addressed only in passing, as did Ethan's feelings about being held at knifepoint, leading to complaints of this. The 2018 storyline "Flyin' to the Red" finally gave us Sal's perspective alongside numerous flashbacks, as well as exploring Ethan's (lack of) trauma.
  • They Wasted a Perfectly Good Character: Jocelyne, is a mtf trans character who has not come out to her family and has not done any transitioning or attempted passing in the main comic, something very rarely seen in media. Unfortunately, due to having already graduated, she's rarely in the main comic and her status as trans is never explored.
  • Unexpected Character: There are only two concrete rules for the extra strips Patreon supporters vote on: a character can't have back to back strips, and it can't be used to reveal spoilers. Otherwise, any character can win to be the focus of the bonus strip. This has led to some unusual characters (and 'characters') winning, such as Blowjob Cat, Dina's raptor bed, Lester the Corrupt Cop, Rhetta the eye doctor, Pat McHoarney, Joyce's shower jugs, the pharmacist that dispensed Joyce's birth control, and the nude model at Joyce and Joe's life drawing class. There was also a rule that the character had to have appeared in the strip, but this rule is played with somewhat, since the Patreon strip was the first time McHoarney was actually seen, his previous 'appearance' being a comic strip byline. Eventually, Patreon supporters tried to push the no-appearances rule by voting for Tristan, Joyce's high school crush (who's never appeared, only been mentioned), only for Willis to employ Loophole Abuse by making the comic a flashback of Joyce and Becky talking about Tristan.note 
  • Unintentionally Unsympathetic:
    • Happens with characters like Becky and Carla. While we are meant to find them sympathetic, many readers find their personalities too off putting to want to take their side. Complicating the matter is Becky's status as a lesbian and Carla's status as a trans woman, which can cause some of the critiques of their characters to be accused of being homophobic or transphobic.
    • Ruth occasionally gets this reaction from readers who feel that her previous acts of abuse tend to be swept under the rug. That she was in conflict with somebody she's previously assaulted does not help either. Overlaps with her being a Base-Breaking Character.
  • Unpopular Popular Character: Walky. The entire cast seems to like insulting him (especially Billie and Joyce), but fans love him.
  • The Woobie:
    • Joyce, the world is tailor made to force her to deal with things she has no ability to deal with, starting with an attempted rape which leaves her with serious PTSD issues. Her worldview is constantly taking hits, she is seeing people being happy sinning while she is unhappy being "pure" which is causing her to feel hate towards her friends and to hate herself for feeling hate. She is in a relationship that even she is aware is both wrong and doomed to failure. Then to top it off her childhood friend confesses to her and Joyce ends up hurting her because she doesn't have the same feelings for her. Thankfully, her relationships with Ethan and Becky actually improve after some introspection and after she decided to be honest with them and herself. Unfortunately, then she has a gun pointed at her by Becky's father, whom she has known since childhood. And after he is arrested, her own mother bails him out so he can come after Becky again, and she doesn't see anything wrong with what she did. Post-timeskip, we also find out that Joyce's parents have divorced, and Joyce herself has not only become an agnostic or atheist, but is having difficulty admitting even to her friends that she has lost her faith.
    • Amber can't let go of her past to the point her alter ego was developed as a way to violently deal with them. Unfortunately, this didn't do anything but make her consider her normal persona to be "evil" and "broken", not helped by the fact that she inherited some traits from her asshole father.
    • Ethan can't accept himself and would rather live a painful lie. And then he loses one of his closest friends (and briefly lover) when Mike's murdered by Blaine...and Ethan's last words to Mike were dismissive sarcasm at the idea that Mike can show empathy.
    • Poor, poor Sal. Being The Unfavorite as a child led her to hang around with some questionable people, and when her best friend was permanently handicapped, her attempt to raise money to pay for her surgery ends in her mother stealing the money to try and force her to break things off with Marcie. This pushes Sal over the edge and leads to her trying to rob a gas station with a knife, earning her a permanent scar on her hand from Amber stabbing her. Then she gets sent off to a boarding school by her parents as they continue to pamper Walky instead of giving her the attention she needs. Things still aren't over for her in the present day, as Amber continuously stalks her as Amazi-Girl, picking fights with her until her best friend, whom she ruined her own life for in the first place, starts to distance herself from her.
    • Ruth and Billie have set themselves on a path that can only end badly with all the alcohol involved, and nearly did in Ruth's case. While Ruth is getting help, Billie isn't out of the woods yet.
    • Dina, to a lesser extent - while she has yet to go through the kind of trauma listed above, she is increasingly aware of her difficulties with social interaction.
    • Becky was forced to leave college after she was caught messing around with a girl (said girl decided to turn on her, claiming Becky was the one to put the move on her). Her father was not supportive at all of her homosexuality, and she decided to run away. She went to meet Joyce, her best friend since childhood, but also her long-time crush, and was devastated when Joyce didn't reciprocate her feelings. Becky being Becky, she was able to compose herself rather quickly and is now living with Joyce, but it is abundantly clear that she still has romantic feelings for Joyce, and that her situation affects her a lot more than she let on. Not to mention the guilt from watching Joyce lie to her parents for her sake, even though Joyce clearly tells her it's not her fault. And then there is the part where her dad kidnaps her at gunpoint...
    • In the same vein, Jocelyne. Having seen all of the above, being pre-op trans in a fundamentalist family, gradually learning just how conditional her family's love is, and knowing that she will almost certainly go through some of the same things is gonna give her some trouble sleeping at night.


Top