 | | 02-23-2007, 07:57 AM | |
#170 |
| Obsessed Fan
Joined: Jul 2005
Posts: 5,464
| Quote: | Point. The irony is that it led to Lorelai's ruin after Rory left home, when her daughter is on the verge of graduating and going out to conquer the world.
But the ghost of Rory's father returns and destroys the independence, the moral center and the caring heart that propelled Lorelai so far over those 21 years - only to lose it all at the very end. George, How does it benefit Lorelai to gain an 'empire' of worldly success and lose her soul? | But Lorelai's constant running into Christopher's arms isn't Rory's fault. Maybe we could blame ASP and DSR, but not Rory... We could also blame, you know, Lorelai (it was her choice after all)
And it's time for Lorelai to take some responsibility for her problems. It's easy to blame her parents for her unhappinnes, to blame Luke for not see her unhappiness when they were engaged...
If the writers make Lorelai aware of her part in the failure of her engagement to Luke and also in her estrangement from her parents, she'll end the show in a better place.
And honestly I find really sad when parents blame their failures on their children. I always ask myself why those people became parents in the first place.
Last edited by gilmorebrazil : 02-23-2007 at 08:08 AM.
Reason: to fix spell
|
| |