They had a fuinjutsu master on speed dial

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@aerugonian
They had a fuinjutsu master on speed dial
Kakashi Hatake's life through the lens of trauma - grief, endurance and the peace that followed.
Kakashi Hatake is often remembered as a prodigy - the genius child, the masked teacher, the calm, nonchalant man who can walk through chaos as if it was nothing. But that image is only half of him. The other half is not about skill. It is grief.
Kakashi’s life is not shaped by a single tragedy. It is shaped by repeated loss, layered so early and so persistently that pain becomes not just another chapter in his life, but the language his nervous system learns to speak. And yet, what makes him stand out is not that he survives trauma (because many characters in Naruto do.) What makes him stand out is that he survives without becoming cruel.
In fact, he becomes someone who still chooses goodness, despite everything that has happened.
Kakashi is not traumatized in the way an adult is, with an already formed sense of self to fall back on. His trauma is developmental. It begins when his mind is still building its first beliefs about love, safety, and belonging.
He grows up in a world where connection does not mean comfort, it means risk instead.
The death of Sakumo Hatake (his father) is not just a loss, but a fracture in his understanding of what it means to be good. His father chooses compassion, he chooses people over the mission, yet he is publicly disgraced for it. The village he served, the very people he once saved turn on him. And because of that, he dies in shame.
To a child, this kind of tragedy quickly becomes a lesson.
Do the right thing, and you will be abandoned. Be compassionate, and you will suffer for it.
Kakashi learns early that morality does not guarantee protection and in fact that it may even be the thing that gets you killed.
It is impossible to grow up under that lesson and remain emotionally untouched.
People do not simply die once in Kakashi’s story. They die repeatedly, and always at the moment a meaningful connection begins to form.
Obito is not merely a teammate, not yet a friend either. But he becomes the first person who openly anchors Kakashi back into his humanity when he insists that rules are not worth more than lives.
In that moment, Kakashi is about to repeat his father’s perceived mistake, but in reverse, choosing the mission over his comrades. Obito reframes everything. He declares that Sakumo Hatake was a hero in his eyes, and that those who abandon their friends are worse than scum. With that, he restores Sakumo's honor and forces Kakashi to confront the rigidity he built around himself. It is only then that Kakashi and Obito truly begin to connect, the hostility between them dissolves into mutual recognition, and for the first time in his life, Kakashi allows himself to truly stand beside someone.
But then Obito dies - or rather, Kakashi is forced to endure a death that becomes the foundation of his survivor’s guilt. It plants the belief in his mind: If I had acted differently, this would not have happened. And the conclusion follows naturally: I am responsible.
Then there is what happens to Rin...
Her death is not just another trauma. It is a moral injury, the kind of wound that forms when someone believes they have participated in something unforgivable, whether or not they truly had control. Kakashi does not mean to kill Rin. She chooses her death in order to protect the village. At the time, they are child soldiers in the middle of a war, and in wars like that, children are forced to carry responsibilities that even adults struggle to survive.
But the fact that it was Rin’s choice does not change how his mind reacts. Trauma does not argue with logic, it records feeling. And what Kakashi’s mind records is a crushing belief that will follow him for years: My hands did this. Therefore, it was my fault.
After that, he is no longer just grieving. He is haunted by loss.
What follows deepens his trauma even more, because he is not given time to heal. Instead, he is sent into the ANBU, to an environment that reinforces the very rules he has built to survive after losing his father.
ANBU does not teach connection, which is what he needs most at that time. It teaches silence instead. It does not reward vulnerability, it rewards control and the ability to suppress one’s own emotional needs and personal feelings.
When a child who is already shaped by loss is placed into a system which is built on secrecy, violence, and moral compromise, survival slowly hardens into identity. Hypervigilance becomes professionalism, emotional shutdown becomes discipline, and isolation becomes the normal way of approaching connection.
ANBU does not create Kakashi’s trauma, but it amplifies it, not by adding another single catastrophic event, but by preventing his nervous system from relearning safety.
Losing Minato Namikaze is another significant loss for Kakashi, because in the aftermath of his father’s suicide, Minato becomes more than a teacher. He becomes a stabilizing presence, perhaps the first adult after his father who allows him to be young, even in the middle of a war.
He sees Kakashi’s hardness and perfectionism for what they truly are: a child’s attempt to survive a devastating and confusing loss. He validates that experience and answers it with calm faith and understanding. In the middle of a war that requires children to grow up quickly, Minato does not rush Kakashi.
He leads with patience, corrects without shaming and guides without hardening what is already fragile.
Losing him, therefore, is not only grief, but the loss of a man who could have been a steady father figure - and proof that one does not have to become cruel, even in the hands of great power.
The moment Kakashi becomes one of the most psychologically realistic characters in Naruto is the moment we begin to understand his coping style - and how he relates to trauma.
Kakashi survives through what professionals would probably describe as "functional collapse." He continues to operate through sheer willpower, but at the cost of narrowing his own life and experiences. He remains effective. He remains competent. But something inside him grows smaller.
He becomes hyper-responsible and forms a belief that if he is vigilant enough, skilled enough, and controlled enough, perhaps the next death can be prevented. Perhaps future harm can be avoided if he takes on the burden of protecting everyone whose lives he believes depend on him.
He also becomes emotionally constricted. He is not emotionless, but he becomes measured and contained, as if any uncontrolled feeling might destabilize what little structure he has left.
His iconic dry humor also serves a purpose in that because it allows him to remain approachable without exposing too much of himself. It becomes one of the few socially acceptable ways he can express warmth without lowering the emotional guard that keeps him functioning.
Perhaps the most painful consequence of his experiences is that he becomes avoidant in attachment. Kakashi loves deeply, but he does not easily allow himself to lean on others. He protects them, but he rarely asks to be protected in return. He most likely also comes to believe that his presence alone can bring harm to those who grow close to him. If loss follows connection (and it did in many cases in his life), then distance begins to feel like protection. And so he keeps himself slightly detached, convincing himself that it is safer for others that way.
But this sets him up for loneliness, even if the intent behind his distance is protective.
Kakashi’s way of dealing with trauma is also different from many characters in Naruto who turn their pain outward. We see others weaponize it, some justify harm because of it, and some even build entire identities around it.
What Kakashi does is much rarer. He turns it inward and unfortunately internalizes the blame. That may be unhealthy - and in many ways, it is - but it also reveals what the kind of person he is. He is not a man who looks at suffering and thinks: "Now I have the right to hurt others because i have been hurt too." He looks at suffering and thinks instead: "I must prevent this from happening again." Even when the burden is not his. Even when it is impossible.
This is why it affects him so deeply when Sasuke leaves Team 7, and why their failed attempts at reconciliation carry such weight. In his eyes, Sasuke’s departure is not just a student choosing the wrong path. It is another fracture in a pattern he has spent his life trying to prevent.
Despite all the trauma and hardships, Kakashi remains ethical. Not because he lacks reasons to become bitter, but because his trauma strenghtens his empathy and compassion instead of eroding them. He has seen what war does. He understands the cost of cruelty. And something within him refuses to become another source of that cruelty.
For that very reason, because Kakashi’s trauma is quiet and private, his healing arc is quiet as well. It is not a dramatic story of redemption or self-forgiveness, but something that unfolds slowly throughout the series. It is understated, yes, but undeniably present.
His recovery does not come through a sudden transformation. It happens gradually, every time he chooses to be present. It begins when he allows himself to attach again - not without fear or hesitation, but slowly, with growing courage.
This is why his bond with Team 7 is not simply mentorship. After so much suffering alone, choosing to become their teacher also means choosing connection again.
But this returning to connection is not limited only to the team he mentors. It is also visible in the way he, over time, acknowledges the bonds that never left him. For example his friendship with Gai, which he once once treated lightly or with humor, becomes something he openly acknowladges. He allows himself to accept that someone has stood beside him all along, not out of obligation, but out of their own choice.
These moments are Kakashi's way of allowing himself to care in a way that creates real emotional investment. And slowly, he begins to carry grief with meaning instead of collapsing by it's weight. He starts to honor his dead not through self-punishment, but through the way he lives.
He stops living solely in survival mode and begins, gradually, to live as himself again.
Seen in this light, him becoming Hokage is more than a promotion. It suggests that he has found stability.
Leadership requires presence. It requires steadiness and a grounded sense of self - the belief that one can carry responsibility without being crushed by it.
Kakashi does not seek the position out of ambition. By the time it comes to him, he is one of the most experienced jonin in the village, a seasoned strategist and survivor of multiple wars. Others recognize not only his experience, but also his judgment and ability to lead.
Still, he hesitates to take on the role. Not out of inadequacy, but because he understands what leadership truly means - that to lead is to take responsibility for many lives. He has lived with the cost of loss. He knows what it means when protection fails.
And yet, he accepts it. Not for prestige or power, but because he believes that if he can spare the next generation even a fraction of what he endured, then the weight is worth carrying.
The gravity of his past does not vanish when he takes the role. It was never meant to. He still remains private. Still sometimes tired. Still marked by memory.
But healing does not mean forgetting what shaped you to the person you became. Trauma survivors do not erase what happened to them, they learn to integrate it. And that is what Kakashi does. He carries his past without being governed by it. His scars remain, but they no longer dictate his choices.
Kakashi eventually becomes something trauma survivors rarely get to be in fiction: a healed man with a history of trauma, once again capable of connection.
He is not defined by what happened to him anymore, nor is he entirely free from it. But he lives with it, and lives with it well.
By the end of the series, Kakashi’s arc stands complete. He has already fulfilled every role and borne every burden the narrative could place upon him. He has fought wars, carried guilt, and protected others, even at the cost of himself. He has truly given more than most.
Because of that, the most emotionally honest resolution to his story is not another sacrifice. It is belonging.
Not more loss. Not another burden to carry. But a quiet life no longer defined by weight.
In some ways, this resolution is partially realized on him becoming the Sixth Hokage. The role grants him stability, purpose, and a measure of peace. It allows him to lead from a steady heart rather than from survival.
Still, the quieter longing remains - a safe space, a home where he does not have to perform in order to deserve warmth. A life in which he is chosen simply for who he is.
But the narrative gestures toward peace as the natural resolution of his arc.
Because Kakashi’s journey is not ultimately about loss. It is about what happens when someone loses almost everything and still chooses to remain good.
If a character like that deserves anything, it is not more pain. It is peace.
And as a trauma survivor, but more than that, as a human being trying to remain good despite hardship, knowing that a character like Kakashi Hatake exists is a deeply validating experience.
He feels like proof that goodness can survive, that healing can be real and that peace can eventually be earned again.
---
I know this post is quite long, so thank you for taking the time to read it. It took me days to write it this coherently, and I hope I did justice to the character. I have tried my best. Please if you copy it, tag me as the original source of the essey. And please feel free to repost. 💚🍃
If you think Kakashi reads porn, you’ve only watched Naruto through TikTok videos.
[An other long post because this is one of those misconceptions again that take me out.]
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There is a difference between a running gag and a character flaw. And somewhere along the way, fandom decided to collapse that difference... which honestly makes me a little sad.
Yes, Kakashi reads the Icha Icha series written by Jiraiya. That is canon.
But what those books are, and how the narrative frames them, matters a lot.
So let's look at them - what they are:
They are adult romance novels.
They are text-based fiction (yes, with erotica in them, but also with plot, emotional arcs, longing, and melodrama woven into the story.) They are publicly sold and serialized.
They are treated in the Naruto universe as mildly embarrassing comedy.
What they are NOT:
They are not depicted as graphic magazines (everything's based on the reader's imagination)
They are not framed as moral corruption hidden behind a cute cover.
They are not presented as something dark or predatory (They really aren't)
The joke about the books is simple.
Kakashi reads them at the worst possible times - during missions, during conversations, in moments that demand seriousness.
The humor comes from the contrast: An elite, battle-hardened jonin calmly holding a smutty romance novel while chaos unfolds around him.
That’s the punchline.
Not that he’s depraved. Not that he’s secretly sick. Not that he’s a predator.
If that were the intent, the framing would be entirely different.
Canon even reinforces how harmless they are.
When Naruto returns from training with Jiraiya after three years, he brings Kakashi the newest volume of the Icha Icha series as a gift.He also penly admits that what’s inside the book is boring. He says he doesn’t understand why Kakashi likes it. But he gives it to him anyway, because he knows Kakashi enjoys reading them.
And what's also important is that:
He isn’t disgusted. He isn’t scandalized. He isn’t disturbed by the content - and he clearly knows it to some extent.
If these books were meant to signal predatory behavior, the narrative would not treat them this way. Naruto, the teenage protagonist, would not casually hand one over with mild annoyance and a shrug.
The story frames Kakashi's reading habits as a character quirk. Nothing less, nothing more.
And from the Kakashi retsuren novels we also get to know that he genuinely enjoys reading in general... these books just happen to be his favorites.
Then there’s how Kakashi relates to women based purely on what we actually see in the canon materials.
(Yes, i do consider the novels canon as Kishimoto supervised them.)
He respects Tsunade.
Not just formally as Hokage, but genuinely. He listens to her. He trusts her judgment. There is no condescension in how he speaks to her.
He is consistently kind to Sakura.
He mentors her. He protects her. He acknowledges her growth. He takes her potential seriously - not as "the girl on the team," but as a capable fighter and medic.
And No - I don’t think that moment where Kakashi warns Sakura about soldier pills was meant to be inappropriate.
He is cautioning her. The context of the scene is about the physical consequences of using soldier pills. When he says, “especially for a girl your age…” and Sakura reacts before he finishes the sentence, the phrasing creates room for interpretation. Temari responds to how it sounds - and from her perspective, the wording could be taken the wrong way. But the narrative does not give us any confirmation that Kakashi intended it that way. We never see a follow-up that supports a body-shaming or sexual meaning. The scene moves on.
Actually we see a similar pattern in a scene where Kakashi tries to express appreciation toward Naruto and phrases it in a way that sounds unintentionally strange - something along the lines of, “I’m really starting to take a liking to you, Kiddo.
Naruto immediately reacts as if it sounds weird. And all the teenagers start to speculating about their sexuality.
Again, the awkwardness of it comes from the delivery, not from hidden romantic intent.
Kakashi consistently struggles with articulating care in a smooth, emotionally polished way. When he tries to express concern, appreciation, or attachment, it often comes out bluntly or ambiguously - and other characters react to how it sounds rather than what he means.
Now, moving on to Rin.
What Kakashi carries for Rin lasts a lifetime. It shapes him in his youth, haunts him for years, and follows him into adulthood.
Even after a long while, even when his trauma becomes integrated and quieter - he still remembers her, but now from a place of quiet acceptance.
And most importantly:
He never catcalls women.
He never makes sexual comments toward them.
He never disrespects women because they are women.
He never treats women as inherently weaker or lesser.
There is no canon moment where Kakashi belittles a woman’s capability simply because she is female. There is no casual sexism. No entitlement. Nothing.
His “Icha Icha” gag never spills into how he interacts with actual women in his life. The boundary is absolute there.
And when you move into post-war canon - Kakashi Hiden - the direction becomes even clearer.
His romantic interest there is not naive. He doesn't fall for a young and easily influenced women or someone who would be dazzled by his power.
He quietly falls for a mature woman, who is politically competent, emotionally complex, carries her own trauma and strong in her own right.
If Kakashi were written as a shallow pervert archetype, that would not be the narrative choice in the novel either.
Instead, he is drawn to someone who mirrors him in depth and resilience, to an equal in age, experience, and strength.
That is why reducing Kakashi Hatake to a “funny porn addict” ignores the framing, the consistency of his behavior, and the emotional depth of his character.
If we’re going to critique characters, let’s critique what is actually there.
Because canon Kakashi is many things: mildly detached, grieving, guarded, sarcastic, deeply loyal, profoundly shaped by trauma.
But a predatory pervert?
That’s a ridiculously wrong fandom take.
And if his only "perversion" is reading smutty romance novels publicly without harming anyone, without disrespecting anyone, without objectifying the women in his life? Then that says more about how fandom chooses to frame him than about how he is actually written.
Especially when you consider who Kakashi is early in the series.
He is carrying unresolved trauma. He is living with active survivor’s guilt. He is emotionally isolated because he avoids connection out of fear of loss.
It is not unreasonable to read his attachment to those romance novels as escapism - as longing filtered through distance. Stories about connection, intimacy, and emotional closeness consumed safely on a page.
For someone struggling with intimacy because of complex PTSD, that interpretation makes far more narrative sense than the caricature people reduce him to.
You can dislike the gag. That's fair. You can critique Kishimoto’s humor. But turning Kakashi into a meme about porn addiction isn’t all right.
It’s a wild fan take that collapses nuance for the sake of exaggeration.
And Kakashi - as he is written - deserves much better than that.
---
Sorry again for posting such a long take on this one, but my nerves catch on fire when i hear someone casually calls him a pervert because they were too lazy to actually get to know the story and the narrative around the character.
Also: I added some scenes for reference. Please share the post if you like it. And thank you for visiting my blog. 🥰
Ahhhfjjdkdkdld your marvel/fma crossover with Loki being in post-bh!Amestris is so good and fun!!! :D
Ahhh thank you!!! That fic holds a special place in my heart as my first step into writing fanfiction <3 I had a lot of fun with it while I was working on it and it's so nice to hear someone read and enjoyed it this many years later!!
fansketch for @asteroid-duck (Edo Tensei)
Recently found this gem of a fic. @aerugonian
✨Darth Waffle SPECIAL✨
ft. Katoshi (Hatake Kakashi x Hitoshi Shinsou from Road to Nowhere by Aerugonian A03)
Master Waffle has succesfully acquired his young padawan. Though often he snatches them up and uses his infamous puppy eyes which worked really well in this case or they just choose to follow him themselves by taking his Last name (Japaneses conventions) He is Darth Waffle and he is not a sith but having Darth for a first name is not well accepted by the others.
Hi! I was reading through all of your Rin-centric works on AO3 (they're all seriously amazing BTW) and I especially loved the RTN spin-off where Rin is reincarnated as Eri! Do you think you could draw Erin/some of her interactions with her new family?
Yes! I realized I haven’t actually posted this piece I drew a while back so this is a good opportunity for me to do so :)
Also enjoyed myself with some Erin and Katoshi doodles.
For anyone wondering, this is for my fic To the Heart (But We Beat On), which features Rin as Eri in BNHA! Specifically, Road to Nowhere universe by @aerugonian.
✨MERRY CHISSNAST GUYS✨
Two year Redraw. Of our darling Katoshi. (Kakashi/Hitoshi) from Road to Nowhere by Aerugonian Ao3. Im so happy really.
Truthfully though, the second one isnt katoshi but a parody of a Akirai, who is my naruto oc who looks like hitoshi.
Since people loved the other one! Id like to share this paint doodles I did two years ago where the third one was actually made to be a banner for discord server, which im very proud of! (the prompt was kakashi and katoshi doing ballet!)
gasp katoshi and taro
and how taro's mask looks like
Hark! Hark! I have wares to peddle!
…
Well, sort of. It’s a group effort.
I’m an artist on Crossroads! A zine for the Road To Nowhere fanfiction/fandom. Pictured above is a sneak peak of my short comic adapting the scene where Katoshi decides he’s going to live with Aizawa and Yamada!
The zine contains art, fics, and merchandise from a bunch of other cool and epic creatives that you can own, physically! To hold! In your own two hands!
Head over to @rtnanthology to order your copy before preorders end on December 31st!
Also I would like to say thank you to @aerugonian for writing such an amazing fic. this comic wouldn’t exist without your banger prose, voice, and character motivations
An Archive of Our Own, a project of the Organization for Transformative Works
Chapters: 1/? Fandom: Avatar: The Last Airbender (Cartoon 2005), Naruto (Anime & Manga) Rating: Teen And Up Audiences Warnings: No Archive Warnings Apply Characters: Hatake Kakashi, Aang (Avatar), Iroh (Avatar), Zuko (Avatar), Katara (Avatar), Sokka (Avatar), Suki (Avatar), Avatar: The Last Airbender Ensemble Additional Tags: Crossover, Dimension Travel, Alternate Universe - Canon Divergence, Mistaken Identity, Kakashi gets mistaken for the Avatar, Humor, Hatake Kakashi-centric, BAMF Hatake Kakashi, Hatake Kakashi is a Troll, Crack Treated Seriously, POV Alternating Summary:
"It can't be," a man in green breathes. "After all these years? Here?"
Kakashi palms a kunai, watching him warily. No one here seems like much of a threat, but there are way too many unknowns to take any chances. He lightens his tone when he speaks. "Ah, it seems I've gotten a bit lost. Mind telling me where we are?"
The soldier who'd initially shot fire at him raises a shaking hand, pointing at Kakashi. "I saw you. You bent both earth and air."
The crowd watches him with growing recognition. Murmurs turn to shouts, and to Kakashi's bemusement, a war cry starts echoing.
"The Avatar has returned!"
--
In which Kakashi wakes up in the middle of a battlefield before Aang is found, gets mistaken for the Avatar, and rolls with it.
Drawings I've done for my AU of RtN Universe (@aerugonian)
The first one is a little bit spoilery for my next fic but eh, alright time to skeedadle.
Scene from chapter 3 of my fic Don't Read Porn on the Train! (And Other Rules by Sakura).
Happy RtN server anniversary!!
RtN sticker sheet since I've been obsessed with making sticker sheets lately.
Summing up the various characters:
The Katoshis (casual, hero outfit, school uniform) are from Road to Nowhere by @aerugonian
Sukea from Idol AU, Katoshi from Flowershop AU
And the twins and Erin are from my RtN spinoff fics bitter promises bleed true and To the Heart (But We Beat On).
I love Katoshi and co. so much <3 <3