The âLin Was Always Rightâ Crowd Needs to Breathe Some Fresh Air
I need us to move past the idea that Lin Beifong is some eternally wounded saint, surrounded by selfish, unsympathetic antagonists. Sheâs not a martyr. Sheâs not the only one whoâs been hurt. And no, Suyin and Tenzin are not villains simply because they challenged her worldview or didnât live up to her (very rigid) expectations.
Letâs talk about Suyin, actually. Because the way she gets flattened into âthe selfish sister who never faced consequencesâ is so intellectually lazy, it makes my brain itch. Suyin did mess up. She was reckless in her youth, hurt her family, and buried that damage under art and idealism. But she also changed. She built a life with meaning. She apologized. She reached out. She tried, repeatedly, to reconnect.
But none of that counts to sure fans, because it doesnât fit the narrative of Lin as the always-right, always-wronged victim. To those people, Suyinâs every action is just more ammo. More proof that sheâs manipulative. That sheâs fake. That she owes Lin more and more. Apparently, forgiveness is a luxury Lin never has to offer, not to her sister or herself.
And donât even get me started on Tenzin. The man was raised under the crushing weight of legacy, chose duty over love, and built an identity around never quite being enough. He made hard choices, some selfish, some necessary, but he wasnât some cold-hearted robot. He cared deeply. He struggled openly. And in the end, he grew. But fandom sometimes throws him under the bus, too, all because he didnât center Linâs emotional comfort in every moment of his life.
"And the Winner Is..." (transcript)
Korra: [Folds her arms, smugly.] "So ... Pema stole you from Beifong. I'm surprised our "esteemed Chief of Police" didn't throw her in jail."
Tenzin: [Korra looks at him with a pleased expression.] "Oh, she tried." [The camera slowly zooms toward Tenzin.] "Anyway, Pema didn't steal me, Lin and I had been growing apart for some time. We both had different goals in li-" [Comes to a realization. The camera quickly zooms out to show Korra again.] "Why am I even telling you this? It all happened a long time ago and we've moved passed it."
Korra: "Hm, apparently Beifong hasn't."
Lin and Tenzin drifted apart. Thatâs not betrayal. Thatâs life. But the narrative gets rewritten: he "abandoned" her. He "chose" someone else. And thatâs where the worst distortion comes in: Pema.
Because the way this fandom reduces her to the âhomewreckerâ trope is both tired and cruel. Sheâs not some scheming usurper. She didnât steal anything. She confessed her feelings, like an adult.
The Spirit of Competition (transcript)
Korra: [Turns around and sees Pema on the path.] "Oh, hey Pema. Uh, how long were you standing there?"
Pema: "Long enough. But trust me, I know what you're going through. Years ago I was in the exact the same situation, with Tenzin."
Ikki: [Very surprised.] "Daddy was in love with someone else before you?"
Pema: "That's right."
Korra: "So what did you do?"
Pema: "Well, for the longest time, I did nothing. I was so shy and scared of rejection, but watching my soul mate spend his life with the wrong woman became too painful. So I hung my chin out there and I confessed my love to Tenzin. And the rest is history."
â People love to quote this scene, Pema telling Korra how she confessed her love to Tenzin while he was still with Lin, as if itâs proof sheâs a villain. As if she âstoleâ him. It was as if she deliberately wrecked a relationship and taught Korra to do the same.
Korra is a teenager at this moment. Sheâs brimming with first-crush energy, inexperienced, and deeply impressionable. She hears Pemaâs story and interprets it like a young person would: romantic, bold, and affirming of a âspeak now or regret it foreverâ mindset.
But Pema? She never tells Korra to act now or steal someone. She simply shares her experience of waiting in silence for a long time, fearing rejection, and eventually making a decision after witnessing what she perceived as emotional misalignment.
We arenât told exactly how old Pema was at the time.
We donât know if Tenzin and Lin were actively unraveling already.
We donât even know if Pemaâs confession ended the relationship, or if it was just one part of a much longer emotional transition.
But the fandom acts like she cornered Tenzin in an alley and seduced him from Linâs arms. Thatâs projection. Thatâs fanfiction. Tenzin made his own decision.
But instead of acknowledging that relationships end for complicated reasons, people invent villains to justify Linâs pain. Pema becomes a target. A scapegoat. Never mind that sheâs been respectful, patient, and emotionally grounded. Never mind that she carried the emotional labor of raising four kids while Tenzin spun himself out trying to be his fatherâs ghost. In this fandom? Thatâs irrelevant.
Itâs like people donât want complexity. They want catharsis. They want a scapegoat for every fracture in Linâs life, someone to blame so they never have to look at the part Lin herself played in the distance she feels from others.
Yes, Lin has trauma. Yes, sheâs allowed to be guarded. But sheâs also deeply judgmental, emotionally avoidant, and often more willing to simmer in resentment than engage in vulnerability. Thatâs not a flaw to erase, itâs what makes her real. Itâs what makes her compelling.
But instead of leaning into that complexity, so many of you twist the narrative to make everyone else the villain in Linâs personal tragedy. You flatten nuance in the name of catharsis, turning rich, flawed characters into scapegoats to preserve the idea that Lin was always right.
Youâre not being deep when you woobify her. Youâre just dodging mutual accountability.
Let these characters be messy. Let them make mistakes. Let them fail and forgive. Stop stripping away their emotional depth just to protect one characterâs pain.
Let Suyin be complicated. Let Tenzin be burdened. Let Pema exist. And for the love of nuance, stop treating Linâs trauma like a permission slip for moral infallibility.
(Credit to @beifong-brainrot for the insightful post.)