I guess my problem with Sam is that I'm just not seeing the "survivor warrior" part this time around. There's a coolness between him and Dean that suggests he grew to like his new life -- it's not just survival, he actually liked his life with Ruby and Dean's return has proven to be an inconvenient interruption.
If anyone should have rage in him at this point, it's Dean -- 25 years of self-sacrifice, cast into hell for his brother's sake, horrifically tortured for months, raised up to be a divine pawn in some unexplained game, under perpetual threat of being sent back to hell and now more than a little unwelcome in the life of the only person he's ever really cared about. What's Sam got that compares to that?
Re: well...sam getting on with his life is what dean WANTED him to do
Date: 2008-11-16 05:03 pm (UTC)I guess my problem with Sam is that I'm just not seeing the "survivor warrior" part this time around. There's a coolness between him and Dean that suggests he grew to like his new life -- it's not just survival, he actually liked his life with Ruby and Dean's return has proven to be an inconvenient interruption.
If anyone should have rage in him at this point, it's Dean -- 25 years of self-sacrifice, cast into hell for his brother's sake, horrifically tortured for months, raised up to be a divine pawn in some unexplained game, under perpetual threat of being sent back to hell and now more than a little unwelcome in the life of the only person he's ever really cared about. What's Sam got that compares to that?