"You're in our hearts. Who knows if we could even keep going if that something were to happen to you." - Liv Skyler/Kingskin
"I know you will because I love you." - Doug Meat
"You're in our hearts. Who knows if we could even keep going if that something were to happen to you." - Liv Skyler/Kingskin
"I know you will because I love you." - Doug Meat
my birthday present to myself after working all day long is clipping this lil moment of Doug (once again) showing what an incredibly smart and insightful man he is
as an entire queer trans allosexual i think it's weird when other allosexuals don't like the term allosexual for themselves. it just means not asexual. smacks of cis people who scream and howl and pee their pants about being called cis
"it lumps me in with my oppressors I don't like it" cis does that too. lumps your lgbt ass right in with cishet people. so like. why are you ok being called cis but not allo
allosexual isn't a slur it isn't perjorative it's just a word for not asexual. so that ace people don't have to feel othered as hell when talking about people outside their community. what the fuck do you want them to call you? "normal"? your mask is slipping
ok im done with discourse now i prommy. please treat me really niceys
There's a few people in the notes complaining that allo- is a stupid prefix because it means other. They think that the categories should just be "asexual" and "sexual."
But, like, that's what we did. When I was first realizing my sexuality and hanging out on thr AVEN forums a decade ago, that's what the categories were.
And you know what? It didn't work. Virgin and celibate allos didn't appreciate being called a sexual being. Even those who have sex often don't like just being called "sexual."
So we needed an alternative. One of the earliest definitions of asexual is "self-contained sexuality." It's been put aside in favor of the current definition of lacking sexual attraction, but it still resonates with a lot of people. And especially did back when we were trying to figure out a better term for "not asexual."
So allosexual was proposed. It was chosen because allosexual means that you are sexually attracted to other people. To people not yourself.
So yes, the etymology does make sense. You just didn't bother to look into it.
(I hope the people complaining are doing so in good faith, but I'm not willing to test that by replying to anyone directly. Now the information is out there if anyone wants to bother to look.)
Making me like a white rich deadbeat dad takes a lot, so I want to talk about my mans Stede Bonnet and his character development because from the very beginning of Our Flag Means Death it took hold of me and it hasnāt let go. Like most of the fictional white men I have grown to love in my 30 years on this earth, Stede Bonnet makes extremely questionable decisions, is deeply flawed, and has a heart so full of love it spills out everywhere. His story is one of the most compelling in the show for me.
What I canāt take my mind off of (besides everything) is one of the most emotional and climactic scenes towards the end. Chauncey takes Stede out at gunpoint, and tells him heās reached the only logical conclusion to everything that has happened in the season. āStede Bonnet is not human,ā Chauncey says with bitterness. Then, in a move that tore me apart, instead of getting confused or angry at this bizarre statement, Stede asks Chauncey to breathe so he can calm down, only for Chauncey to spit back, āYouāre a monster. You defile beautiful things.ā
I was shocked at the power of the accusation. The Badminton twins seem *hardly* the type to be concerned with beauty, yet here is Chauncey telling Stede he defiles beautiful things. The severity and sacrilegious nature of Stedeās monstrosity is plain and evident in just so many words. And then it gets worse when Chauncey proceeds to list the three beautiful things Stede has defiled the most: his twin Nigel, Stedeās own family⦠and Edward Teach.
My heart broke along with Stedeās, who begins to cry at this point (I love a good crier) and says Chauncey is right, and he deserves to be punished. The admiralās point is further proven right when he missteps and falls, shooting himself in the face right in front of Stede, almost to demonstrate that everything Stede barely even touches in his attempts to be someone he isnāt gets obliterated. Stede is of course so afraid and shocked by the encounter it sends him right into his basest insecurities, and he returns to his wife and children without a word to Ed (not unlike the way he abandoned his wife and children in the first place), leaving all of us heartbroken along with Ed and shouting āTHEREāS ONLY ONE EPISODE LEFT, WTF.ā
I havenāt been able to stop thinking about this moment. Iāve been hung on the way Stede doesnāt fret at āStede Bonnet is not human,ā almost as if the accusation is not a foreign thought to Stede himself. This accusation is the ādarkest hourā of Stedeās arc this season, which is established from episode 1 with a very easy but extremely effective reference to Pinocchio when he reads the book to his crew. I knew then one of the main themes for Stede was going to be, if I may borrow from the Velveteen Rabbit, Becoming Real.
Stede Bonnet, the wooden boy who wants to be alive.
Boy, does the show deliver.
To dissect my feelings about this particular theme, which I adore to the bone, I want to look at three elements from the show which are close to Stedeās arc (and indeed spelled out by Chauncey), and which for me summarize what makes me go the most feral about his story: the nature of Stedeās monstrosity; the symbol of the lighthouse; and one of Stedeās main foils, our mans Ed Teach himself.
1. Stede, the Monster
āStede Bonnet is not human,ā says Chauncey. Stede agrees. I cry. This is the gist of it, isnāt it? Stede doesnāt believe heās a person, or worthy of being called a person. He believes there is something inherently wrong with him. He isnāt a real man. Heās a fake. A monster.
The guilt within Stede is so powerful it leads him to leave Ed on the beach to return to his house. Itās strong and gripping and it has been present since episode one (and way before we meet him), but weāve been so distracted by his good times at sea and his ever-closer relationship with his crew and especially Ed (heād just kissed the man some hours earlier!), that we may have forgotten that Stede has that chain tied around his heart, a weight he picked up when he was a child and never put down.
Monstrosity is maybe a topic more easily connected to Ed, who has the whole āI am the Krakenā thing going on (more on that later), and whose issues stem from more violent conflicts/trauma than Stedeās. But this is why what gets to me the most about this scene is the nature of Stedeās self-perceived monstrosity.
Because, first of all, we also know thatās not a perspective he gained by himself. Because of the abuse endured from his father and his bullies, Stede has a long-running concern about being āinadequate.ā Itās a very mild word for his issues but good lord is it descriptive. Because of course he feels inadequate to be a man. A Real Man. Stedeās main crime is that he cannot perform masculinity in the way itās expected of him. Heās always been tender-hearted, imaginative, compassionate, nurturing, physically weak. Stede is unmanly. He likes fine fabrics and flowers and theatre and he is called a woman a couple of times to prove just how āemasculatedā he is. Heās gay and falls in love with a man. We know in a patriarchal society none of that flies.
So when Chauncey tells Stede he defiles beautiful things, this means whatever Chauncey mentions is something he considers beautiful by patriarchal standards too. His brother Nigel makes a lot of sense. A brother you love is a beautiful thing to you, but Nigel was more than just Chaunceyās twin. Nigel was an example of a Real Man. As a naval officer for the British Crown, Nigel was strong and commanding, fearless and violent. He had disdain for weakness and he was racist and homophobic. Stede tells himself Nigel might even have children, turning him into the potential paterfamilias everyone expects a Real Man to be. Nigel was a beautiful thing because he was loved and respected by his brother and his peers, and he was loved and respected for not loving or respecting men like Stede. Stede didnāt want to kill anyone in the first place, but the fact Nigel dies because of him eats him alive because it adds to the narrative that there is something wrong with him, something that damages others. He provoked an ugly thing, he who by othersā standards has never been able to do anything right or be anything properly, and he ended the life of a man who is everything he never could be.
And it gets worse, because!!! And this is the crucial thing!!!! Stede never wanted any of those roles in the first place. He is caught in the middle between wanting to be approved by those around him and refusing to perform the rituals of something he isnāt. He knows he canāt change who he is and what he wants, but feels guilty to be and want as himself if that means he hurts others.
This is why the second item is Stedeās family. Stede obtained Mary through his father, never felt happy with the arrangement, and failed to be and do what was expected of him. He had two children but he canāt be completely present in their life either because of how dissatisfied he was with everything, because he couldnāt be truly himself. He canāt even play with the kids in the ārightā way, either, indulging in the pirate fantasy. He had a house and a devoted wife and he disdained both. He very obviously does not have any intimacy with her, neither emotional nor physical. And the worst is he isnāt strong enough to stay put and endure it all.
Stede longs for a freedom he isnāt sure how to search for. He wants to be āadequate,ā but he canāt be an adequate husband nor does he feel he can be an adequate father. Heās full of fantasies and frills and he feels so trapped by the world that tells him heās been wrong all the time for wanting something different that he has the strong urge to rip his whole life apart, betray his contract with Mary, and run for the seas in search of something to feel, desperate for something Real to experience. Stede feels extremely guilty for this too, knowing he was causing pain and trouble and humiliating his family by leaving. But he was in a catch-22. If he stayed, he wronged them (and himself), because he couldnāt do what they expected of him without destroying himself, without becoming bitter and self-isolated, and hurting them in the process. If he left, he wronged them too and himself by becoming a monster. Isnāt a family what every man wants? Chauncey knows itās so. Stede had it. It was beautiful, and no matter what he did, he defiled it.
Which leads us to the third on the list, none other than the precious Edward Teach. I love this part in particular because when Chauncey mentions him, heās thinking about the greatest pirateās career, brought to a stop because Stede, once again, was afraid and needed saving. The infamous Blackbeard represents another ideal of manhood, even if itās one that goes against the law. But Blackbeard was feared, and strong and resourceful and quick to kill and ready to commit any atrocity to those who questioned his right to do so. Of course Chauncey would respect that fame, in a way. Itās still a patriarchal masculine ideal. All that time, however, Stedeās mental image of Ed is when he is finally beardless and open and vulnerable at the foot of their bunk bed. The point of view of looking down on Edward in such a state is intimate in a way Chauncey could never even imagine, and itās why, for Stede, Ed hurts the most. One of the most terrible things I could think of is to bring pain and destruction upon someone I love dearly, upon someone who trusts me and doesnāt deserve the pain I can cause. I see that fear reflected in Stede. It didnāt matter that Ed told him it was okay, that it was his choice. Stede had heard Ed complaining about how there hadnāt been any passion in his life. He had seen Ed enjoying the pirate life. He had seen Ed forced to admit his illiteracy when he had to sign the contract right under Stedeās name with an X. Everything Ed had worked for during his whole life was destroyed in a matter of hours. Because of Stede, who had invited Chauncey on board in the first place, leading to the whole ordeal.
So when Chauncey mentions Blackbeard, Stede reaches a moment of extreme frailty and self-doubt, and he sees only one truth: he deluded himself about being able to change his life. He deluded himself about being able to find happiness the way he wanted. He literally touched happiness and kissed it that afternoon on the beach, but at what cost did it come? Ed is the most beautiful thing of all, and Stede defiled him by failing to be a Real Man, by being too weak to tell Chauncey no or too weak to accept death and forcing Ed to abandon everything for him. Of course Stede decides not to follow Ed, because Stede believes that Ed deserves better, and that he must return to the life he had had before, in an attempt to fit back into place where he ābelonged.ā
The fact that the show does keep Stede as the apparent source of tragedy for all these things is excellent character work, in my opinion. Because he is at the center of those events that seem to prove Chauncey is right while he voices Stedeās own flagellations. Stede cannot uphold those ideals he was supposed to embody, neither for his family nor for his crew. His father always told him he would never amount to anything, and that that meant he was a disgrace. He did everything halfway and never finished anything properly and so, Stede decides to go back, to try to fulfill the role he was meant to have all along, or maybe to be punished with the life he never wanted, but thought he had to have.
He returned to be a lighthouse.
2. Stede, the Lighthouse
We have a saying in my country that roughly goes, āIf you canāt be an example to be followed, be a warning to be avoided.ā I found it funny that they went with that sentiment almost verbatim when they mention the lighthouse in episode 4, and I think itās rather fitting for Stedeās own journey, because of this burden he feels.
Stede is constantly connected to the symbol of the lighthouse. Itās in the background when he gets married, and then ever-present in Maryās painting, a gift to Stede to remind them that theyāre meant to be a lighthouse for each other. Yet, when he mentions this painting to Ed, he says that he was meant to be a lighthouse to his family, and that he failed at being a guiding light for them. Stede has been worried about this for a long time. If he canāt be that path to follow, he has failed at doing his job. Itās Ed who changes his perspective, and mentions that technically lighthouses are there to be avoided. Stede cheers up at this, because there is a truth here. If he can be an example of what not to do, what not to be, he surely is doing the job of guiding his family away from himself, away from his path.
It breaks me that Stede finds hope in being a warning to others, but it seems to bring him comfort, maybe because he doesnāt seem to be able to change who he is, and he definitely cannot change what heās done. It might as well be of use to someone. Because, we have said, Stede feels he is always insufficient. Everything he touches, hurts. Everything he tries to do, fails. He doesnāt feel like heās up to the task. He doesnāt fit. Like the lonely lighthouse, he isolates himself from others, especially when he feels vulnerable and unwanted, as he tries to avoid the painful truth that he feels inadequate, and that he might truly never be able to Become Real or to Be Enough.
I also like that Ed ends up keeping the painting of the lighthouse to remind himself of that same truth ā opening up to Stede only broke his heart. Stede must be avoided at all costs. Likely, that opening up at all must be avoided at all costs. And like a lonely lighthouse, Ed emotionally retreats in the end and isolates himself as well, seeking protection in the strength of his pirate image, trying to save himself from what he feels.
AND YET!!!! Yet!!!!!!! In spite of it all, in spite of the tail of trouble that follows Stede⦠Stede brings light wherever he goes.
He treats the crew very much like his own children. He reads them stories, gives them outlets to express themselves creatively, encourages them to discuss feelings. He gives a little speech to Lucius about how he wonders what could happen if piracy wasnāt the horrible experience it is. He is actively trying to build at sea what he couldnāt have at home, and to create the type of environment where he would have liked to be in. And even though he feels heās also failing at times, the crew begrudgingly begins to appreciate him for who he is, and to enjoy the benefits of those spaces he makes for them. By the time they do the āfuckeryā against the Dutch, the Swede is singing his heart out and Frenchie is embodying his worst fears to use them against the enemy. The crew even worked out by themselves what to do, cooperating as a team and supporting each other. Lucius and Pete have a romance. And even Ed, who was trying to hype himself into murder, canāt of course even touch Stede with a thread of ill will. They end up crying in the bathtub, Ed spilling his most intimate secrets and fears, seeking comfort from the man he intended to send to doggy heaven. AND Ed does not only receive that comfort, he gets forgiveness, no questions asked!!!! From Stede himself!!!
Stede canāt help but be nurturing. My favorite symbol of this is his little fern, the loot from episode 1. When he steals the little plant at the beginning, itās a little sad-looking and barely hanging in there. By the end of the show, when Olu produces the fern as proof of Stedeās pirating efforts, it has grown, and itās greener, and full of life. Just like his crew, who are defending each other and his captain with a fierceness of their own. Just like Ed, who keeps saying meeting Stede has made him the happiest heās been in a long time.
Itās the most tragic thing to see a character being so absolutely loved and supported by the people around him thinking he doesnāt deserve any of it, thinking he hasnāt been able to fulfill anything worthwhile yet. I was talking to my friend about this and she said it best: Stede is actively a source of life and goodness to those around him, even without meaning to, even though he sees himself as the monster, and a corrupter of good things. Stede is already beautiful, he just canāt see it.
Iāve noticed others pointing this out as well, but the only reason why Stede seems to be around when things break is that he is constantly involved in situations where he was trying to fulfill what others think is ābeautiful,ā what others thought was ārightā and āproperā for a Real Man. Stede tried to watch his father kill a duck, and he couldnāt stomach it, and got verbally and emotionally abused for it. He tried to be married to a woman and make a family with her, but he couldnāt stomach it because he never loved her. He had to endure endless bullying for being himself and picking flowers, and ended up running away from the boys all the time, treated like a coward. The feeling of inadequacy is made worse because many of these people were actively trying to break what they saw in him thatās so different, and he thinks he has to do the sameāthat he has to break himselfāin order to be the lighthouse they all told him he could never be. No wonder he feels relief when Ed suggests thereās no need to do that, since others can see who he is and avoid him if they so see fit.
My friend also pointed out that, when Stede finally decides to abandon that life built on othersā expectations, things actually start going better. We discover in the end that Mary managed to create a life she loves, because his unwilling presence had been actually harming her. Once Stede fails at the pirate captain thing and gets stabbed and almost dies, he meets Ed, and falls in love for the first time. During their time together, Ed starts opening up more, and starts getting out of his depression and is more the way he wants to be. The Revengeās crew still gets regular pay and a supportive environment. Stede makes friends with Lucius and Olu. Everything keeps going well and getting better right until other forcesāwho despise the āunmanlinessā they see in Stede like a diseaseāintervene again, and Stede listens because heās been conditioned to listen to the abuse.
The moment Stede feels vulnerable and insecure and tries to undo all of this progress by returning to Barbados, things go extremely sideways once again. He canāt connect with his children, who feel confused by the whole thing and resent him. He canāt connect with Mary, who had found her art and a supportive community and a boyfriend in his absence, and sees all is threatened again by his presence. Stede even ruins Maryās art exhibit by being drunk and mean and reacting with violence (which he seems to recognize was out of place, a testament to Stedeās ways) towards Doug, the man who is technically cuckolding him but, he can also recognize, is good to Mary. Stede begins turning bitter as he restarts to make everyone around him unhappy through his unhappiness and forced position as a patriarch, even if he was an insufficient one. Not to mention that back on the Revenge, Ed spirals back into depression and has several crises of his own which end up in half the crew being stranded or kidnapped (and Izzy also loses a toe, though Iām sure heās happy about that bit).
By trying to be someone he isnātāby trying to uphold at least some of the patriarchal ideals of manhood he never wanted to be in the first placeāStede does end up almost destroying completely those things that were actually beautiful and good. Some of it was salvaged by the end of the season, most of it remains to be salvaged for the second season (fingers crossed), but this is only possible for one reason, and one reason only: Stede accepts the truth.
The actual truth. This is one of the reasons I love Stede so much. Right at the end, when he sees the way heās hurting again his children and Mary, and the way heās hurting himself in the process, he decides to open up about it. He decides to admit he canāt be what his society told him he had to be. What he promised he was going to be. But he does an extra step beyond this. He resolves the guilt he felt about unfulfilling those expectations.
It takes him getting almost murdered to realize that they couldnāt shadow the sun with a thumb (another saying of ours). When he stops isolating himselfāwhen he stops trying to be āthe lighthouseāāthings start going well again. He gets friendly with Mary, and they talk openly about their feelings and desires and resentment. He reconnects with his children, and ends up sharing half a petrified orange with his daughter, a symbolic bridge between what heās leaving and what heās looking for.
Mostly, Stede learns a tough lesson that is difficult to accept sometimes: in order to Become Real, he has to get rid of the weight of othersā expectations, especially from those who were supposed to love him or support him but didnāt. Itās that simple and that hard. Itās the only way he can actually become free where it matters, inside. Itās the only thing that lets him be who he truly is, and fight for what he wants and for who he loves.
Stede starts the season thinking of himself as a monster because, among several reasons, he canāt be a metaphorical lighthouse. It turns out, of course, that he was indeed bringing goodness to those around him just by virtue of being himself, he just didnāt fully appreciate it. By the last episode, with a strong acceptance of who he is, a better understanding of what he feels, and a certainty he hasnāt exhibited yet through the story, he finally embraces one final truth.
Heās not a monster, heās in love. And heās in love with the most beautiful man of them all.
3. Stede, the Man who Loves Edward Teach
LISTEN!!!! I have!!!!!! SO MANY FEELINGS about this!!!
Because throughout the show, Stede shows that he understands that there is something terribly wrong with the way men are expected to perform masculinity, and he rebels against that. He refuses to abandon his clothes and his books. He refuses to play along when folks like Calico Jack or Nigel try to make a show of their own manliness. Stede refuses almost at every turn to perform toxic masculinity, and refuses to have others mistreat his men for not exhibiting toxic traits or āmanlyā skills.
But he canāt seem to find resolution for himself amidst all this. Heās haunted by his own guilt, heās haunted by the chain around his heart and the expectations that came with it and the people he feels heās hurt in the process. Heās trying to find a way to cut it and fumbling a bit in the dark, but my mans was trying from even before the show starts. He was trying to leave the wooden boy behind.
To help Stede grow in the process, the narrative gives him a series of foils so we can compare and contrast and so he can learn from them. Lucius is probably one of the main ones (I have so many feelings about Lucius!!!), and even Izzy (the man most obsessed with his masculine image is the one Stede canāt stand at all, and shows no fear of him). But today, and especially because of that climactic scene with Chauncey, I want to talk about Edward Teach. It is their relationship what gives Stede that final push to face the truth.
Ed comes along with his own tail of issues, but he also comes along with a lot more figured out than Stede. He clearly is aware of his queerness, and for that he seems more comfortable with it than Stede. He is the first to notice the romantic tension between them, and he is the first to initiate their kiss (twice!). However, he understands the rituals of violence better than Stede as well, and has a better way to use them in his favor. Of course, his background is very different from Stedeās. A clear example is that Ed canāt read or write, but he never seems to feel insecure about that fact, even if he admires Stedeās love for reading, which is also a fundamental part of his personality. And unlike Stede, who inherited everything he owned, everything Ed has he earned through hard-work, intelligence, and literal fighting. Ed is masculine in a way everyone (both fellow characters and the audience) can admire more easily because itās shown as a slightly more balanced version between extremes. Edās knowledgeable and skilled and commanding, but he exhibits a self-assured charm that makes him easy-going and likable. He is known to be bloodthirsty and he makes fun of the Spanish for dying calling to their god, but he speaks softly to Stede and constantly touches him gently. He has a strong sense of style and has very expressive mannerisms, but he wears leather and sports a full beard that tells you heās a weather-beaten man of action. He looks almost effortless in his coolness, unlike Izzy Hands, for example, who is constantly trying to be feared, or unlike Stede, who canāt make himself intimidating as much as he tries.
This mixture of open acceptance and honesty is what makes Ed so responsive to Stedeās curious ways, but it also means he is trapped in a catch-22 of his own, between the fame of being cruel and terrible and the truth that he doesnāt want to be that at all.
We donāt see a lot of his truly rougher edges until later in the season, since Stedeās built-in instinct to share and his emotional availability makes him responsive to Edās softer sides from the start. Thus Ed, who often keeps to himself that side of him, feels safe enough to share around Stede. They share the weight of having to perform, and he finds in Stede a similar soul searching for a way to be himself. Their differences and common ground is what makes them perfect to encourage growth on each other. They decide to start by teaching each other the trick of their trades (piracy and nobility), but it evolves into so much more.
When Ed teaches Stede about how to be an effective pirate, Stede realizes it entails a lot of performance to scare the opposition, but is mostly a life full of violence, drinking, and emotional neglect. Oluwande also expresses this sentiment to Stede early on, warning him that this lifestyle was not a choice, but something he and Jim had needed to do in order to survive. From the get go, the line between ābeing a Real Pirateā and ābeing a Real Manā is blurred, and the parallels deepen more and more as the show progresses, leading us to see the way both Ed and Stede have influenced each other by the end of the season.
Stede almost successfully pulls off that type of masculinity when he goes back to Barbados, both when he impresses his neighbors with his tales of blood and when he attacks Doug at Maryās exhibit. For Stede, though, the anger and resentment within him donāt seem to ease through these demonstrations of machismo, mostly because thatās not who Stede is. He never was. And itās obvious pretty fast that he canāt fix all the things that keep going wrong around him by acting out in anger.
In parallel, Stede also teaches Ed about the epic highs and lows of nobility, and provides him with a space where he can explore other sides of himself. Ed wears flowers in his hair and gets some fancy pants and tells ghost stories and enjoys marmalade. He opens up about his feelings and learns to recognize and honor the effort from others to make him feel included. When Stede leaves him at the beach, and Ed feels abandoned and extremely vulnerable, he first tries to do something different from anything heās done before, and leans on what he learned from Stede about expressing emotions through art and talking through his feelings. He even proposes a talent show. But like Stede, Ed is also in his ādarkest hourā, and where Stede only finds support back in Barbados, Ed finds some resistance from Izzy, who hates the āunmanlinessā that Stede ārubbed onā his captain. Ed, marked by the life he has lead, and so scared he doesnāt know what to do with the abandonment heās experiencing, ends up choosing to embody everything he hated about Blackbeard the Legend, and fully becomes The Kraken.
Edās life has been marked by need and violence, and when he admits to Stede the origin of the Krakenāthat he killed his own dad when he was just a boyāout of need, to stop him from hurting his motherāhe also accepts this is the thing that scares him the most. What he, Edward Teach, can do to other people, is what scares him the most. This is what makes him the Kraken of lore. āIām not a good person,ā he tells Stede. This is what makes him a monster.
Edās monstrosity is a nice parallel to Stedeās. Like I said before, his issues with feeling monstrous are a bit more obvious than with Stede because itās more tangible, and more directly named. Itās an absolutely heartbreaking moment to see him so hurt he decides to hurt others in an attempt to save himself, because we know that he knows thatās not who he wants to be, either.
This is not very different from Stedeās own fear, who gets accused of being a defiler of beautiful things. Sure, Ed was defending his mom, but it says a lot about Ed (and the show) that he still sees it for what it was, as an act of despair and horror, and doesnāt try to frame it as one of bravery or heroism.
We see yet another parallel here - Stede received violence from his dad, but unlike Ed, he never felt like he had to act against it to save himself or someone else. Ed, in a more extreme form of that abuse, saw himself forced to commit violence against his dad to preserve his family. All these circumstances, however, led him onto the path of piracy, which Ed seems to be ashamed of. There are many other horrible things he has done in the past (like burning that ship with the crew inside), and doesnāt really want Stede to find out about them because he is afraid that Stede will see how monstrous he is, and stop wanting to be with him, that he would stop loving him.
Itās however, a moot fear. When asked about him in Barbados, Stede claims that Ed is āabsolutely lovely.ā Stede knew Ed tried to kill him, knew the type of things he had done, and still accepted him in full. Stede respects that Ed has a history, and sees beyond the masks and reputation to fully embrace Ed for who he is. This drives me crazy with emotion because, similarly, Ed never sees monstrosity in Stede either. In spite of Stedeās own fears, despite that terrible scene this ramble started with. Quite the opposite.
When theyāre under the moonlight at the end of episode 5, Stede says the line where itās most obvious he thinks Ed is beautiful. He tells Ed that he āwears fine things well.ā The framing of the scene works on various levels, not only showing Stedeās attraction for Ed (he basically called him handsome, for starters), but also the depth of their growing connection and the romantic tension brewing between them. Ed feels itāseems very aware of it, in factā and his breath gets stolen away by the moment of tenderness. He feels seen, even though Stede doesnāt know the full length of Edās feelings about his little piece of red fabric. Itās important that in an episode that shows the many class differences between Ed and Stede, there is also a moment where they stand with each other as equals. Itās a shot full of intimacy where Ed allows Stede to hold the old fabric, the embodiment of the secret desires and insecurities of his heart, and Stede replies in kind by treating it with gentleness, putting it on display on Edās chest, saying it becomes him to have it all on displayāhis heart and his past and his emotions are all fine things to wear with pride. Ed, overcome with emotion, almost (rightfully) kisses Stede right there and then, but refrains from it in the last second. Sadly, we learn later, Stede wasnāt fully grasping the meaning of those gestures, and it takes him a while to understand that it all meant something quite happy and complex and simple all at once: that Stede is falling in love with Ed. And that Ed is falling for him too, and realizes whatās happening between them way before Stede can put it into words.
The beauty of the moment only enhances the contrasts and similarities between them, and it fuels the pain later, when, overcome himself with doubt, Stede thinks heās hurt Ed irreparably and decides to leave him behind.
The show is very adamant in this and many ways about the importance of feelings, especially love. Through Stedeās relationship with Ed, we see another key point in Stedeās arc, one that I want to touch upon. Toxic masculinity often dictates that displaying affection and emotion is even less acceptable than engaging in certain behaviors, depending on specific contexts.
Calico Jack (Calico āI construct intricate rituals which allow me to touch the skin of other menā Jack) expresses it himself when he says heās had ādalliancesā with Ed because āanything goes at sea.ā In this way, he dismisses the importance of their history together and highlights the lack of emotional investment in the act. This is consistent throughout the episode. When Ed responds to Jackās betrayal with anger, because his supposed friend just sold out his new friend, Calico Jack replies by making fun of Edās emotions, dismissing the importance of any connection he may have with other men in the process, himself included, and excuses his behavior as natural and necessary, to avoid Ed from falling into ādisgrace.ā
However (and this is one of the reasons I love Ed so much), Ed has learned a thing or two through the season, particularly from his connection with Stede, about the importance of defending those emotions, and adamantly refuses to behave like his relationships with other men, and especially his relationship with Stede, donāt matter. He immediately jumps back into the water and comes aboard to help the Revenge. This moment is paramount.
Ed had felt insecure about Stede not liking him because of the type of man Ed has been (he never heard Stede saying āEdās past is Edās business,ā which Iām very !!!! about), and tried to hide those fears until he had no other real choice than to look at his situation in the face. He first tried to one-up his fears by taking himself out of Stedeās life before Stede had a chance to kick him out, only for Ed to realize this wasnāt something he could live with. After understanding that Calico Jack was manipulating him to separate them on purpose, Ed chooses to return, even when things were getting extremely bad (especially then). Incidentally, I love that Fleetwood Macās āThe Chainā plays at this turning point, and the lyrics echo Edās insecurities with the lyrics (āif you do not love me now, you will never love me againā).
Of course, Stede, once more, fully accepts Ed back, as he did with his bathtub confession.
The build-up of their relationshipāshowing each other over and over again that theyāre willing to accept the other, that they genuinely like each other and are willing to teach and learn from the other, to see each other blossom and growāis what makes that scene on the beach at the end so tragic.
Ed trusted Stede because Stede had been gentle and constant, no matter what he saw Ed do or say. Ed trusted Stede to love him back and run away because he said heād do it. Ed was finally happy, heaven knows in how long, and he had expressed that fact in a million ways, including kissing Stede.
And then, during yet another horrible and traumatic event, all of the guilt and self-hatred Stede hadnāt been able to work through return. Even though he had painstakingly built a solid relationship with Ed, even though he had fostered a place where their love could blossom, Stede betrays the man he loves without a further word.
Edward Teach, left on a beach, is a poignant moment. I was devastated, but it made so much sense. It made so much narrative sense. Because Stedeās story doesnāt end there, of course. Neither does Edās.
The scene when Stede comes out to Mary points at the fact he had no framework to know he had fallen in love with Ed. He clearly wants to be with him, he clearly wants to share spaces and time with him, and share an intimacy neither of them displays with other people⦠but, unlike Ed, Stede couldnāt fully process what it meant. This is unsurprising (and very sad), since everyone tried to beat feelings out of Stede from an early age. Itās really hard to identify feelings if no one teaches you how to do that, and even more if no one allows you to express feelings that are considered gentle or effeminate.
I go feral because it doesnāt take him much to realize his mistakes. As soon as Stedeās able to open upāas soon as heās able to accept that he was hurting Mary and the kidsāas soon as he has some guidance about what love feels likeāas soon as he is able to name the fact heās fallen in love with Edāhe is able to accept the reality of the situation. He sees thereās no shame in his failed marriage, because neither of them had wanted it in the first place. He understands he was right all along to want his freedom, and devises a way to apologize and make things as right as he can with Mary and their children. He sets out to find Ed again, because Stede no longer believes he has to run away from what his heart wants, now that he knows where the North lays. It all falls into place so quickly my chest wants to burst. And he sails off.
Stede Bonnet becomes real on that beach, on an afternoon of 1717. He becomes free. He wins this round, by virtue of being himself, but it would also have been so different without Ed Teach, without his candor and his humor and his tenderness and his love and his anger and his boredom. And keeping with the spirit he showed from day one, Stede is trying very hard to fix everything again, this time by wearing his heart on his sleeve, and going back to sea to find Ed to, hopefully, make things right with him too.
Isnāt it the most beautiful thing?
Heās ALL that. Heās a white rich man who made so many mistakes I canāt even count. A guy who in his self-absorption and misery hurt others. A man traumatized and emotionally stunted. A man so loving it was tearing him apart, and so convinced of its worth he jumps on that dinghy to face the ocean alone.
Itās not a difficult question anymore ā Stede wants to live. And by god, he will try.
It is actually extremely important to me that y'all understand the importance of the talent show subplot to the structure of ofmd being not just a gay romcom but a story fiercely thematically opposed to toxic masculinity and amatonormativity; how Ed the Emo crying into his blanket fort and silk gown writing sad boy poetry music is the most emotionally healthy heās ever been and a hairsbreadth away from sustained happiness.
Which is a hard sell with Stede still playing house and straight man a million lightyears and then one (1) rowboat trip away, but I swear the reason that Ed has this subplot instead of disappearing for twenty minutes of B-plot about mutinying against Izzy only to swan in as The Kraken at the end is because Our Flag Means Death correctly believes with its whole big gay pirate heart that Ed doesnāt need Stede to be happy.