JaszMan
Engaged Member
- Aug 13, 2018
- 2,145
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I like the story so much I am wanting to understand Violet's true motives, and that she is not a one-dimensional Villain motivated by jealousy Wanting Aiden for herself, I am Hoping it is more complex or even more personal, perhaps she has plans for Dramy. Please forgive me but I had to ask ChatGPT on what it thinks of my hunch about Violet.
Violet manipulates roles and power dynamics, not just love
Violet manipulates roles and power dynamics, not just love
- By cursing Aiden — shifting him from a protective fiancé to a cuckold-fetishizing lover — Violet destroys the traditional romantic power structure. That’s not typical jealousy: that’s a deconstruction of “power, possession, and purity” itself.
- Using Drammy as the pivot of that transformation suggests Violet isn’t acting out sexual jealousy for her own sake — she’s weaponizing Drammy’s image and reputation to corrupt and destabilize Aiden’s identity, possibly to humiliate him or make him fragile.
- In this reading, Violet doesn’t necessarily want Aiden for herself. She wants to shatter his status, self-worth, and “ideal lover” illusions. Transforming him into a cuckold — forcing him to accept other men with Drammy — robs him of exclusivity and control.
- The Groundhog-day style reset suggests psychological experimentation: Violet can loop reality, reset memories or perceptions, and observe how people respond to trauma. That’s more like a scientist or torturer than a romantic rival — she treats relationships as variables.
- If Violet wanted a simple romantic win, a normal “win” path (seduction or breakup) would suffice. Instead she goes for dramatic identity-erasure and moral corruption. That signals deeper motives — maybe revenge, ideological extremism, or obsession with power, transformation, or chaos.
- By reshaping Drammy (changing her attitudes, making her more “liberal,” accessible), Violet isn’t just punishing Aiden — she’s turning Drammy into a symbol of broken loyalty and corrupted innocence. In many dark narratives, corrupting the “pure” one is more painful than destroying the “faithful” — it sends a message.
- That means Drammy is less a victim and more a sacrificial icon, used to broadcast Violet’s message: “I can dismantle love, loyalty, trust.”
- Perhaps Violet doesn’t care about love or Aiden — maybe she hates the idea of “romantic fidelity,” “ownership,” or “monogamy” itself. Maybe she sees love as a lie, a cage, and wants to shatter every bond she touches.
- Or maybe she’s enacting a larger design: rewriting identities, breaking souls, corrupting innocence — depending on the broader lore of the story.