- Aug 23, 2023
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Those are some very good points overall. I'd just like to add that it doesn't require Akira to convince Ami that her mother was a monster for him to conclude and face that she was one (in his thoughts). What's most important imo is that he talks about her with someone.I think Ami might be the last person Akira wants to have a serious conversation about Sekai with.
He doesn't want Ami to become like Sekai, but he also very quiet and reluctant on commenting on the reason why. Ami has a very skewed idea about Akira & Sekai's relationship, thinking it is similar to her own feelings on Sensei: a forbidden relationship unacceptable to society, but that still managed to blossom into something beautiful because of the pure love they had for each other.
Her delusion towards Sekai is to the same extent or even worst to the delusional image Chika has towards Akira.
Ami has read Sekai's poems, and has been heavily influenced by them, but most likely she ignores or blanks out the parts that paint Sekai as a monster, while Wakana and Nodoka are capable of seeing the whole picture through their own unfiltered perspective
Let's say Ami talks all about how Sekai loved him and that gives her motivation to also face hardships in name of their love. If Akira is able to listen to this without breaking, that also means that he can confront that vision of events and think about them logically. Does he think Sekai is a monster? Does he not? It works out for him either way in terms of stability.
If he thinks she's a monster, well, that enables him to talk to someone else about it. If he thinks it started out bad but grew into something beautiful, then he can also talk to someone about it. Basically, he just really needs to be able to talk.