JaszMan

Engaged Member
Aug 13, 2018
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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

  • 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.
• It’s psychological warfare: humiliation, manipulation, 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.
• Drammy might be a “tool” or “symbol” — not the true target

  • 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.”
• Violet’s vendetta could be broader — maybe ideological or metaphysical

  • 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.
 
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4.10 star(s) 16 Votes