The Haunting of Bly Manor as Allegory: Self-Sacrifice, Grief, and Queer Representation
As always, I am extremely late with my fandom infatuationsâthis time, Iâm about three years late getting smitten with Dani and Jamie from The Haunting of Bly Manor.
Because of my lateness, Iâll confess from the start that Iâm largely unfamiliar with the fandomâs output: whether fanfiction, interpretations, analyses, discourse, what have you. Iâve dabbled around a bit, but havenât seen anything near the extent of the discussions that may or may not have happened in the wake of the showâs release, so I apologize if Iâm re-treading already well-trod ground or otherwise making observations thatâve already been made. Even so, Iâm completely stuck on Dani/Jamie right now and have some thoughts that I want to compose and work through.
This analysis concerns the showâs concluding episode in particular, so please be aware that it contains heavy, detailed spoilers for the ending, as well as the show in its entirety. Additionally, as a major trigger warning: this essay contains explicit references to suicide and suicidal ideation, so please tread cautiously. (These are triggers for me, and I did, in fact, manage to trigger myself while writing thisâbut this was also very therapeutic to write, so those triggering moments wound up also being some healing opportunities for me. But definitely take care of yourself while reading this, okay?).
After finishing Bly and necessarily being destroyed by the ending, staying up until 2:00 a.m. crying, re-watching scenes on Youtube, so on and so forth, I came away from the show (as others have before me) feeling like its ending functioned fairly well as an allegory for loving and being in a romantic partnership with someone who suffers from severe mental illness, grief, and trauma.
Without going too deeply into my own personal backstory, I want to provide some opening context, which I think will help to show why this interpretation matters to me and how Iâm making sense of it.
Like many of Blyâs characters, Iâve experienced catastrophic grief and loss in my own life. A few years ago, my brother died in some horrific circumstances (which you can probably guess at if you read between the lines here), leaving me traumatized and with severe problems with my mental health. When it happened, I was engaged to a man (it was back when I thought I was straight (lol), so Iâve also found Daniâs comphet backstory to be incredibly relatableâŠbut more on this later) who quickly tired of my grieving. Just a few months after my brotherâs death, my then-fiancĂ© started saying things like âI wish youâd just go back to normal, the way you wereâ and âIâve gotten back on-track and am just waiting for you to get back on-track with me,â apparently without any understanding that my old ânormalâ was completely gone and was never coming back. He saw my panic attacks as threatening and unreasonable, often resorting to yelling at me to stop instead of trying to comfort me. He complained that he felt like I hadnât reciprocated the care that heâd provided me in the immediate aftermath of my brotherâs loss, and that he needed me to set aside my grief (and âheal from itâ) so that he could be the center of my attention. Although this was not the sole cause, all of it laid the groundwork for our eventual breakup. It was as though my trauma and mourning had ruined the innocent happiness of his own life, and he didnât want to deal with it anymore.
Given this, I was powerfully struck by the ways that Jamie handles Daniâs trauma: accepting and supporting her, never shaming her or diminishing her pain.
Early in the showâin their first true interaction with one another, in factâJamie finds Dani in the throes of a panic attack. She responds to this with no judgment; instead, she validates Daniâs experiences. To put Dani at ease, she first jokes about her own âendless well of deep, inconsolable tears,â before then offering more serious words of encouragement about how well Dani is dealing with the circumstances at Bly. Later, when Dani confesses to seeing apparitions of Peter and Edmund, Jamie doesnât pathologize this, doubt it, or demean it, but accepts it with a sincere question about whether Daniâs ex-fiancĂ© is with them at that momentâfollowed by another effort to comfort Dani with some joking (this time, a light-hearted threat at Edmund to back off) and more affirmations of Daniâs strength in the face of it all.
All of this isnât to say, however, that Daniâs grief-driven behaviors donât also hurt Jamie (or, more generally, that grieving folks donât also do things that hurt their loved ones). When Dani recoils from their first kiss because of another guilt-inspired vision of Eddie, Jamie is clearly hurt and disappointed; still, Jamie doesnât hold this against Dani, as she instead tries to take responsibility for it herself. A week later, though, Jamie strongly indicates that she needed that time to be alone in the aftermath and that she is wary that Daniâs pattern of withdrawing from her every time they start to get closer will continue to happen. Nonetheless, itâs important to note that this contributes to Daniâs recognition that sheâs been allowing her guilt about Eddieâs death to become all-consuming, preventing her from acting on her own desires to be with Jamie. That recognition, in turn, leads Dani to decide to move through her grief and beyond her guilt. Once sheâs alone later in the evening after that first kiss, Dani casts Eddieâs glasses into the bonfireâs lingering embers; she faces off with his specter for a final time, and after burning away his shadow, her visions of him finally cease. When she and Jamie reunite during their 6:00 a.m. terrible coffee visit, Dani acknowledges that the way that she and Jamie left things was âwrong,â and she actively tries to take steps to âdo something rightâ by inviting Jamie out for a drink at the village pubâŠwhich, of course, just so happens to be right below Jamieâs flat. (Victoria Pedrettiâs expressions in that scene are so good).
Before we continue, though, letâs pause here a moment to consider some crucial factors in all of this. First, there is a significant difference between âmoving through oneâs griefâ and simply discarding itâŠor being pressured by someone else to discard it. Second, there is also a significant difference between âmoving through oneâs griefâ and allowing oneâs grief to become all-consuming. Keep these distinctions in mind as we go on.
Ultimately, the resolution of the showâs core supernatural conflict involves Dani inviting Violaâs ghost to inhabit her, which Viola accepts. This frees the other spirits who have been caught in Bly Manorâs âgravity well,â even as it dooms Dani to eventually be overtaken by Viola and her rage. Jamie, however, offers to stay with Dani while she waits for this âbeast in the jungleâ to claim her. The showâs final episode shows the two of them going on to forge a life together, opening a flower shop in a cute town in Vermont, enjoying years of domestic bliss, and later getting married (in what capacities they canâmore on this soon), all while remaining acutely aware of the inevitability of Daniâs demise.
The allegorical potentials of this concluding narrative scenario are fairly flexible. It is possible, for instance, to interpret Daniâs âbeast in the jungleâ as chronic (and/or terminal) illnessâin particular, thereâre some harrowing readings that we could do in relation to degenerative neurological diseases associated with aging (e.g. dementia, Alzheimerâs, Parkinsonâs, progressive supranuclear palsy, etc.), especially if we put the final episode into conversation with the showâs earlier subplot about the death of Owenâs mother, its recurring themes of memory loss as a form of death (or, even, as something worse than death), and Jamieâs resonant remarks that she would rather be âput out of her miseryâ than let herself be âworn away a little bit every day.â For the purposes of this analysis, though, Iâm primarily concerned with interpreting Violaâs lurking presence in Daniâs psyche as a stand-in for severe grief, trauma, and mental illness. âŠBecause, even as we may âmove throughâ grief and trauma, and even as we may work to heal from them, they never just go away completelyâtheyâre always lurking around, waiting to resurface. (In fact, the final minutes of the last episode feature a conversation between older Jamie and Flora about contending with this inevitable recurrence of grief). Therapy can give us tools to negotiate and live with them, of course; but that doesnât mean that theyâre not still present in our lives. The tools that therapy provides are meant to help us manage those inevitable resurfacings in healthy ways. But they are not meant to return us to some pre-grief or pre-trauma state of ânormalityâ or to make them magically dissipate into the ether, never to return. And, even with plenty of therapy and with healthy coping mechanisms, we can still experience significant mental health issues in the wake of catastrophic grief, loss, and trauma; therapy doesnât totally preclude that possibility.
In light of my own experiences with personal tragedy, crumbling mental health, and the dissolution of a romantic partnership with someone who couldnât accept the presence of grief in my life, I was immediately enamored with the ways that Jamie approaches the enduring aftereffects of Daniâs trauma during the showâs final episode. Jamie never once pressures Dani to just be ânormal.â She never once issues any judgment about what Dani is experiencing. At those times when Daniâs grief and trauma do resurfaceâwhen the beast in the jungle catches up with herâJamie is there to console her, often with the strategies that have always worked in their relationship: gentle, playful ribbing and words of affirmation. There are instances in which Dani doesnât emote joyfulness during events that we might otherwise expect her toâconsider, for instance, how somber Dani appears in the proposal scene, in contrast to Jamieâs smiles and laughter. (In the year after my brotherâs death, my ex-fiancĂ© and his family would observe that I seemed gloomy in situations that they thought should be fun and exciting. âThen why arenât you smiling?â theyâd ask, even when I tried to assure them that I was having a good time, but just couldnât completely feel that or express it in the ways that I mightâve in the past). Dani even comments on an inability to feel that is all too reminiscent of the blunting of emotions that can happen in the wake of acute trauma: âItâs like I see you in front of me and I feel you touching me, and every day weâre living our lives, and Iâm aware of that. But itâs like I donât feel it all the way.â But throughout all of this (and in contrast to my own experiences with my ex), Jamie attempts to ground Dani without ever invalidating what sheâs experiencing. When Dani tells her that she canât feel, Jamie assures her, âIf you canât feel anything, then Iâll feel everything for the both of us.â
A few days after I finished the show for the first time, I gushed to a friend about how taken I was with the whole thing. Jamie was just soâŠnot what I had experienced in my own life. I loved witnessing a representation of such a supportive and understanding partner, especially within the context of a sapphic romance. After breaking up with my own ex-fiancĂ©, Iâve since come to terms with my sexuality and am still processing through the roles that compulsory heterosexuality and internalized homophobia have played in my life; so Dani and Jamieâs relationship has been incredibly meaningful for me to see for so, so many reasons.
âIâm glad you found the show so relatable,â my friend told me. âBut,â she cautioned, âdonât lose sight of what Dani does in that relationship.â Then, she pointed out something that I hadnât considered at all. Although Jamie may model the possibilities of a supportive partnership, Daniâs tragic death espouses a very different and very troubling perspective: the poisonous belief that Iâm inevitably going to hurt my partner with my grief and trauma, so I need to leave them before I can inflict that harm on them.
Indeed, this is a deeply engrained belief that I hold about myself. While I harbor a great deal of anger at my ex-fiancĂ© for how he treated me, thereâs also still a part of me that sincerely believes that I nearly ruined his and his familyâs lives by bringing such immense devastation and darkness into it. On my bad days (which are many), I have strong convictions about this in relation to my future romantic prospects as well. How could anyone ever want to be with me? I wonder. And even if someone eventually does try to be with me, all Iâll do is ruin her life with all my trauma and sadness. I shouldnât even want to be with anyone, because I donât want to hurt someone else. I donât want someone else to deal with what Iâve had to deal with. I even think about this, too, with my friends. Since my brotherâs death and my breakup, Iâve gone through even more trauma, pain, grief, and loss, such that now I continue to struggle enormously with issues like anhedonia, emotional fragility, and social anxiety. I worry, consequently, that Iâm just a burden on my friends. That Iâm too hard to be around. That being around me, with all of my pain and perpetual misfortune, just causes my friends pain, too. That theyâre better off not having to deal with me at all. I could spare them all, I think, by just letting them go, by not bothering them anymore.
I suspect that this is why I didnât notice any issues with Daniâs behavior at the end of Bly Manor at first. WellâŠthat and the fact that the reality of the showâs conclusion is immensely triggering for me. Probably, my attention just kind of slid past the truth of it in favor of indulging in the catharsis of a sad gay romance.
But after my friend observed this issue, I couldnât stop thinking about it.
I realized, then, that I hadnât extended the allegory out to its necessary conclusionâŠwhich is that Dani has, in effect, committed suicide in order toâor so she believes, at leastâprotect Jamie from her. This is the case regardless of whether we keep Violaâs ghost in the mix as an actual, tangible, existing threat within the showâs diegesis or as a figurative symbol of the ways that other forces can âhauntâ us to the point of our own self-destruction. If the former, then Daniâs suicide (or the more gentle and elusive description that Iâve seen: her act of âgiving herself to the lakeâ) is to prevent Violaâs ghost from ever harming Jamie. But if the latter, if we continue doing the work of allegorical readings, then itâs possible to interpret Blyâs conclusion as the tragedy of Dani ultimately succumbing to her mental illness and suicidal ideation.
The problems with this allegoryâs import really start cropping up, however, when we consider the ways that the show valorizes Daniâs actions as an expression of ultimate, self-sacrificing loveâa valorization that Bly accomplishes, in particular, through its sustained contrasting of love and possession.
The Implications of Idealizing Self-Sacrifice as True Love
During a pivotal conversation in one of the showâs early episodes, Dani and Jamie discuss the âwrong kind of loveâ that existed between Rebecca Jessel and Peter Quint. Jamie remarks on how she âunderstands why so many people mix up love and possession,â thereby characterizing Rebecca and Peterâs romance as a matter of possessionâas well as hinting, perhaps, that Jamie herself has had experiences with this in her own past. After considering for a moment, Dani agrees: âPeople do, donât they? Mix up love and possession. [âŠ] I donât think that should be possible. I mean, theyâre opposites, really, love and ownership.â We can already tell from this scene that Dani and Jamie are, themselves, heading towards a burgeoning romanceâand that this contrast between love and possession (and their self-awareness of it) is going to become a defining feature of that romance.
Indeed, the show takes great pains to emphasize the genuine love that exists between Dani and Jamie against the damaging drive for possession enacted by characters like Peter (who consistently manipulates Rebecca and kills her to keep her ghost with him) and Viola (who has killed numerous people and trapped their souls at Bly over the centuries in a long since forgotten effort to reclaim her life with her husband and daughter from Perdita, her murderously jealous sister). These contrasts take multiple forms and emerge from multiple angles, all to establish that Dani and Jamieâs love is uniquely safe, caring, healing, mutually supportive, and built on a foundation of prevailing concern for the otherâs wellbeing. Some of these contrasts are subtle and understated. Consider, for instance, how Hannah observes that Rebecca looks like she hasnât slept in days because of the turmoil of her entanglements with Peter, whereas Jamieâs narration describes how Dani gets the best sleep of her life during the first night that she and Jamie spend together. Note, too, the editing work in Episode 6 that fades in and out between the memories of the destructive ramifications of Henry and Charlotteâs affair and the scenes of tender progression in Dani and Jamieâs romance. Other contrasts, though, are far more overt. Of course, one of the most blatant examples (and most pertinent to this analysis) is the very fact that the ghosts of Viola, Peter, and Rebecca are striving to reclaim the people they love and the lives that theyâve lost by literally possessing the bodies and existences of the living.
The role of consent is an important factor in these ghostly possessions and serves as a further contrast with Dani and Jamieâs relationship. Peter and Rebecca frequently possess Miles and Flora without their consentâat times, even, when the children explicitly tell them to stop or, at the very least, to provide them with warnings beforehand. While inhabiting the children, Peter and Rebecca go on to harm them and put them at risk (e.g. Peter smokes cigarettes while in Milesâs body; Rebecca leaves Flora alone and unconscious on the grounds outside the manor) and to commit acts of violence against others (e.g. Peter pushes Hannah into the well, killing her; Peter and Rebecca together attack Dani and restrain her). The âItâs you, itâs me, itâs us,â conceitâwith which living people can invite Blyâs ghosts to possess them, the mechanism by which Dani breaks the curse of Blyâs gravity wellâis a case of dubious consent at best and abusive, violent control at worst. (âI didnât agree,â Rebecca says after Peter leaves her body, releasing his âinvitedâ possession of her at the very moment that the lakeâs waters start to fill her lungs).
Against these selfish possessions and wrong kinds of love, Jamie and Daniâs love is defined by their selfless refusal to possess one another. A key characteristic of their courtship involves them expressing vulnerability in ways that invite the other to make their own decisions about whether to accept and how to proceed (or not proceed). As we discussed earlier, Dani and Jamieâs first kiss happens after Dani opens up about her guilt surrounding her ex-fiancĂ©âs death. Pausing that kiss, Jamie checks, âYou sure?â and only continues after Dani answers with a spoken yes. (Letâs also take this moment to appreciate Amelia Eveâs excellent, whispered âThank fuck,â that isnât included in Netflixâs subtitles). Even so, Dani frantically breaks away from her just moments later. But Jamie accepts this and doesnât push Dani to continue, believing, in fact, that Dani has withdrawn precisely because Jamie has pushed too much already. A week later, Dani takes the initiative to advance their budding romance by inviting Jamie out for a drinkâwhich Jamie accepts by, instead, taking Dani to see her blooming moonflowers that very evening. There, in her own moment of vulnerability, Jamie shares her heart-wrenching and tumultuous backstory with Dani in order to âskip to the endâ and spare Dani the effort of getting to know her. By openly sharing these difficult details about herself, Jamie evidently intends to provide Dani with information that would help her decide for herself whether she wants to continue their relationship or not.
Their shared refusal to possess reaches its ultimate culmination in that moment, all those years later, when Dani discovers just how close sheâs come to strangling Jamieâand then leaves their home to travel all the way back to Bly and drown herself in the lake because she could ânot risk her most important thing, her most important person.â Upon waking to find that Dani has left, Jamie immediately sets off to follow her back to Bly. And in an absolutely heartbreaking, beautiful scene, we see Jamie attempting the âyou, me, us,â invitation, desperate for Dani to possess her, for Dani to take Jamie with her. (Yâall, I know Iâm critiquing this scene right now, but I also fuckinâ love it, okay? Ugh. The sight of Jamie screaming into the water and helplessly grasping for Dani is gonna stay with me forever. brb while I go cry about it again). Dani, of course, refuses this plea. Because âDani wouldnât. Dani would never.â Further emphasizing the nobility of Daniâs actions, Jamieâs narration also reveals that Daniâs self-sacrificial death has not only spared Jamie alone, but has also enabled Dani to take the place of the Lady of the Lake and thereby ensure that no one else can be taken and possessed by Violaâs gravity well ever again.
And so we have the showâs ennoblement of Daniâs magnanimous self-sacrifice. By inviting Viola to possess her, drowning herself to keep from harming Jamie, and then refusing to possess Jamie or anyone else, Dani has effectively saved everyone: the children, the restive souls that have been trapped at Bly, anyone else who may ever come to Bly in the future, and the woman she loves most. Dani has also, then, broken the perpetuation of Blyâs cycles of possession and trauma with her selfless expression of love for Jamie.
The unfortunate effect of all of this is that, quite without meaning to (I think? I hopeâ), The Haunting of Bly Manor ends up stumbling headlong into a validation of suicide as a selfless act of true love, as a force of protection and salvation.
So, before we proceed, I just want to take this moment to sayâdefinitively, emphatically, as someone who has survived and experienced firsthand the ineffably catastrophic consequences of suicideâthat suicide is nothing remotely resembling a selfless ârefusal to possessâ or an act of love. Iâm not going to harp extensively on this, though, because Iâd rather not trigger myself for a second time (so far, lol) while writing this essay. Just take my fuckinâ word for it. And before anybody tries to hit me with some excuse like âBut Squall, it isnât that the show is valorizing suicide, itâs that Dani is literally protecting Jamie from Viola,â please consider that Iâve already discussed how the showâs depiction of this lent itself to my own noxious beliefs that âall I do is harm other people with my grief, so maybe I should stop talking to my friends so that they donât have to deal with me anymore.â Please consider what these narrative details and their allegorical import might tell people who are struggling with their mental healthâeven if not with suicidal ideation, then with the notion that they should self-sacrificially remove themselves from relationships for the sake of sparing loved ones from (assumed) harm.
Okay, that said, now letâs proceedâŠâcause Iâve got even more to say, âcause the more I mulled over these details, the more I also came to realize that Daniâs self-sacrificial death in Blyâs conclusion also has the unfortunate effect of undermining some of its other (attempted) themes and its queer representation.
What Bly Manor Tries (and Fails) to Say about Grief and Acceptance
Letâs start by jumping back to a theme weâve already addressed briefly: moving through oneâs grief.
The Haunting of Bly Manor does, in fact, have a lot to say about this. OrâŠit wants to, more like. On the whole, it seems like itâs trying really hard to give us a cautionary tale about the destructive effects of unprocessed grief and the misplaced guilt that we can wind up carrying around when someone we love dies. The show spends a whole lot of time preaching about how important it is that we learn to accept our losses without allowing them to totally consume usâor without lingering around in denial about them (gettinâ some KĂŒbler-Ross in here, yâall). Sadly, though, it does kind of a half-assed job of itâŠdespite the fact that this is a major recurring theme and a component of the characterizations and storylines of, like, most of its characters. In fact, this fundamentally KĂŒbler-Rossian understanding of what it means to move through grief and to accept loss and mortality appears to be the showâs guiding framework. During his rehearsal dinner speech in the first episode, Owen proclaims that, âTo truly love another person is to accept that the work of loving them is worth the pain of losing them,â with such eerie resonanceâas the camera stays set on Jamieâs unwavering gazeâthat we know that what weâre about to experience is a story about accepting the inevitable losses of the people we love.
Bly Manor is chock full of characters whoâre stuck in earlier stages of grief but arenât really moving along to reach that acceptance stage. I mean, the whole cause of the main supernatural haunting is that Viola so ferociously refuses to accept her death and move on from her rage (brought about by Perditaâs resentment) that she spends centuries strangling whoever she comes across, which then effectively traps them there with her. And the other antagonistic ghostly forces, Rebecca and Peter, also obviously suck at accepting their own deaths, given that they actually believe that possessing two children is a perfectly fine (and splendid) way for them to grasp at some semblance of life again. (ActuallyâŠthe more that Iâve thought about this, the more that I think each of the pre-acceptance stages of grief in KĂŒbler-Rossâs model may even have a corresponding character to represent it: Hannah is denial; Viola is anger; Peter and Rebecca are bargaining; Henry is depression. Just a little something to chew on).
But letâs talk more at-length about this theme in relation to two characters we havenât focused on yet: Hannah and Henry. For Hannah, this theme shows up in her struggles to accept that her husband, Sam, has left her (Charlotte wryly burns candles in the chapel as though marking his passing, while Hannah seems to be holding out hope that he might return) and in her persistent denial that Peter-as-Miles has killed her. As a ghost, she determinedly continues going about her daily life and chores even as sheâs progressively losing her grip on reality. Henry, meanwhile, wonât issue official notifications of Dominicâs death and continues to collect his mail because doing otherwise would mean admitting to the true finality of Dominicâs loss. At the same time, he is so, completely consumed by his guilt about the role that he believes he played in Charlotte and Dominicâs deaths that heâs haunting himself with an evil alter-ego. His overriding guilt and despair also result in his refusal to be more present in Miles and Floraâs livesâeven with the knowledge that Flora is actually his daughter.
In the end, both Hannah and Henry reach some critical moments of acceptance. But, honestly, the show doesnât do a great job of bringing home this theme of move through your grief with either of themâŠor with anybody else, really. Peter basically winds up bullying Hannah into recognizing that her broken body is still at the bottom of the wellâand then she accepts her own death right in time to make a completely abortive attempt at rescuing Dani and Flora. Henry finally has a preternatural Bad Feeling about things (something about a phone being disconnected? whose phone? Blyâs phone? his phone? I donât understand), snaps to attention, and rushes to Bly right in time to make an equally abortive rescue attempt that leaves him incapacitated so that his not-quite-ghost can hang out with Hannah long enough to find out that sheâs dead. But at least he decides to be an attentive uncle/dad to Miles and Flora after that, I guess. Otherwise, Hannah and Henry get handwaved away pretty quickly before we can really witness what their acceptance means for them in any meaningful detail. (I blame this on some sloppy writing and the way-too-long, all-about-Viola eighth episode. And, on that note, what about the âacceptancesâ of Rebecca, Peter, and Viola there at the end? Rebecca does get an interesting moment of acceptanceâof a sortâwith her offer to possess Flora in order to experience Floraâs imminent drowning for her, thereby sparing the child by tucking her in a happy memory. Peter justâŠdisappears at the end with some way-too-late words of apology. Violaâs âacceptance,â however, is trickyâŠWhat she accepts is Daniâs invitation to inhabit her. More on this later).
Hannah and Henryâs stories appear to be part of the showâs efforts to warn us about the ways that unprocessed, all-consuming grief can cause us to miss opportunities to have meaningful relationships with others. Hannah doesnât just miss her chance to be with Owen becauseâŠwell, sheâs dead, but also because of her unwillingness to move on from Sam beforehand. Her denial about her own death, in turn, prevents her from taking the opportunity as a ghost to tell Owen that she loves him. Henry, at least, does figure out that heâs about to lose his chance to be a caring parental figure to his daughter and nephewâbut just barely. It takes the near-deaths of him and the children to finally prompt that realization.
Of the cast, Dani gets the most thorough and intentional development of this move through your grief theme. And, importantly, she learns this lesson in time to cultivate a meaningful relationship that she couldâve easily missed out on otherwise. As weâve already discussed, a critical part of Daniâs character arc involves her realization that she has to directly confront Edmundâs death and start absolving herself of her guilt in order to open up the possibility of a romantic relationship with Jamie. In Episode 4, Jamieâs narration suggests that Dani has had a habit of putting off such difficult processes (whether in regards to moving through her grief, breaking off her engagement to Edmund, or coming to terms with her sexuality), as sheâs been constantly deferring to âanother night, another time for years and years.â Indeed, the showâs early episodes are largely devoted to showing the consequences of Daniâs deferrals and avoidances. From the very beginning, we see just how intrusively Daniâs unresolved guilt is impacting her daily life and functioning. She covers up mirrors to try to prevent herself from encountering Edmundâs haunting visage, yet still spots him in the reflections of windows and polished surfaces. Panic attacks seem to be regular occurrences for her, sparked by reminders of him. And all of this only gets worse and more disruptive as Dani starts acting on her attraction to Jamie.
It's only after Dani decides to begin moving through her grief and guilt that sheâs able to start becoming emotionally and physically intimate with Jamie. And the major turning point for this comes during a scene that features a direct, explicit discussion of the importance of accepting (and even embracing) mortality.
Thatâs rightâitâs time to talk about the moonflower scene.
In a very âI am extremely fed up with people not being able to deal with my traumatic past, so Iâm going to tell you about all of the shit that Iâve been through so that you can go ahead and decide whether you want to bolt right now instead of just dropping me later onâ move (whichâŠlegit, JamieâI feel that), Jamie sits Dani down at her moonflower patch to give her the full rundown of her own personal backstory and worldview. Her monologue evinces both a profound cynicism and a profound valuation of human lifeâŠall of which is also suggestive, to me at least, of a traumatized person who at once desperately wishes for intimate connection, but whoâs also been burned way too many times (something with which I am wholly unfamiliar, lol). She characterizes people as âexhaustive effort with very little to show for it,â only to go on to wax poetic about how human mortality is as beautiful as the ephemeral buds of a moonflower. This is, in essence, Jamieâs sorta convoluted way of articulating that whole âTo truly love another person is to accept that the work of loving them is worth the pain of losing themâ idea.
After detailing her own past, Jamie shifts gears to suggest that she believes that cultivating a relationship with Daniâlike the devoted work of growing a tropical, transient Ipomoea alba in Englandâmight be worth the effort. And as part of this cultivation work, Jamie then acknowledges Daniâs struggles with her guilt, while also firmly encouraging her to move through it by accepting the beauty of mortality: Â
âI know youâre carrying this guilt around, but I also know that you donât decide who lives and who doesnât. Iâm sorry Dani, but you donât. Humans are organic. Itâs a fact. Weâre meant to die. Itâs naturalâŠbeautiful. [âŠ] We leave more life behind to take our place. Like this moonflower. Itâs where all its beauty lies, you know. In the mortality of the thing.â
After that, Jamie and Dani are finally able to make out unimpeded.
Frustratingly, though, Jamieâs own dealings with grief, loss, and trauma remain terribly understated throughout the show. Her monologue in the moonflower scene is really the most insight that we ever get. Jamie consistently comes off as better equipped to contend with lifeâs hardships than many of Blyâs other characters; and she is, in fact, the sole member of the cast who is confirmed to have ever had any sort of professional therapy. She regularly demonstrates a remarkable sense of empathy and emotional awareness, able to pick up on othersâ needs and then support them accordingly, though often in gruff, tough-love forms. Further, there are numerous scenes in which we see Jamie bestowing incisive guidance for handling difficult situations: the moonflower scene, her advice to Rebecca about contacting Henry after Peterâs disappearance, and her suggestion to Dani that Flora needs to see a psychologist, to name just a few. As such, Jamie appears to haveâor, at least, projectsâa sort of unflappable groundedness that sets her apart from everyone else in the show.
Bly only suggests that Jamieâs struggles run far deeper than she lets on. There are a few times that we witness quick-tempered outbursts (usually provoked by Miles) and hints of bottled-up rage. Lest we forget, although it was Flora who first found Rebeccaâs dead body floating in the water, it was Jamie who then found them both immediately thereafter. We see this happen, but we never learn anything about the impact that this must have had on her. Indeed, Jamieâs exposure to the layered, compounding grief at Bly has no doubt inflicted a great deal of pain on her, suggested by details like her memorialization of Charlotte and Dominic during the bonfire scene. If we look past her flippancy, there must be more than a few grains of truth to that endless well of deep, inconsolable tearsâbut Jamie never actually shares what they might be. Moreover, although the moonflower scene reveals the complex traumas of her past, we never get any follow-up or elaboration about those details or Daniâs observation of the scar on her shoulder. For the most part, Jamieâs grief goes unspoken.
Thereâs a case to be made that these omissions are a byproduct of narrator Jamie decentering herself in a story whose primary focus is Dani. Narrator Jamie even claims that the story sheâs telling âisnât really my story. It belongs to someone I knewâ (yes, itâs a diversionary tactic to keep us from learning her identity too soonâbut she also means it). And in plenty of respects, the telling of the story is, itself, Jamieâs extended expression of her grief. By engaging in this act of oral storytelling to share Daniâs sacrifice with othersâespecially with those who would have otherwise forgottenâJamie is performing an important ritual of mourning her wife. Still, itâs for exactly these reasons that I think it wouldâve been valuable for the show to include more about the impacts that grief, loss, and trauma had on Jamie prior to Daniâs death. Jamieâs underdevelopment on this front feels more like a disappointing oversight of the showâs writing than her narrator selfâs intentional, careful withholding of information. Additionally, I think that Bly leaves Jamieâs grieving on anâŠodd note (though, yes, I know Iâm just a curmudgeonly outlier here). Those saccharine final moments of Jamie filling up the bathtub and sleeping on a chair so that she can face the cracked doorway are a little too heavy-handedly tear-jerking for my liking. And while this, too, may be a ritual of mourning after the undoubtedly taxing effort of telling Daniâs story, it may also suggest that Jamie is demurring her own acceptance of Daniâs death. Is the hand on her shoulder really Daniâs ghost? Or is it Jamieâs own hopeful fabrication that her wifeâs spirit is watching over her? (Orâto counter my own point here and suggest a different alternativeâcould this latter idea (i.e. the imagining of Daniâs ghost) also be another valid manner of âacceptingâ a loss by preserving a loved oneâs presence? âDead doesnât mean gone,â after all. âŠAnyway, maybe I would be more charitable to this scene if not for the hokey, totally out-of-place song. Coulda done without that, seriously).
But letâs jump back to the moonflower scene. For Dani, this marks an important moment in the progression of her own movement through grief. In combination, her newfound readiness to contend with her guilt and her eagerness to grow closer to Jamie enable Dani to find a sense of peace that she hasnât experienced since Eddieâs deathâŠor maybe ever, really (hang on to this thought for this essayâs final section, too). When she and Jamie sleep together for the first time, not only does Dani actually sleep well, but she also wakes the next morning to do something that she hasnât done to that point and wonât do again: she comfortably looks into a mirror. (One small qualification to this: Dani does look into her own reflection at the diner when she and Jamie are on their road trip; Viola doesnât interfere then, but whether this is actually a comfortable moment is questionable). Then, shifting her gaze away from her own reflection, she sees Jamie still sleeping soundly in her bedâand smiles. Itâs a fleeting moment of peace. Immediately after that, she spots Flora out the window, which throws everything back into accumulating turmoil. But that moment of peace, however fleeting, is still a powerful one.
However, Bly teases this narrative about the possibilities of finding healing in the wake of traumatic lossâespecially through the cultivation of meaningful and supportive relationships with othersâonly to then totally pull that rug out from under Dani in the final episode.
During that final episode, we see that Daniâs shared life with Jamie has supported her in coming to terms with Violaâs lurking presence, such that âat long last, deep within the au pairâs heart, there was peace. And that peace held for years, which is more than some of us ever get.â But itâs at the exact moment that that line of narration occurs that we then begin to witness Daniâs steady, inexorable decline. Sure, we could say that Dani âacceptsâ Violaâs intrusions and the unavoidable eventuality that the ghost will seize control of her. But this isnât a healthy acceptance or even a depiction of the fraught relationships that we can have with grief and trauma as we continue to process them throughout our lives. At all. Instead, itâs a distinctive, destructive sense of fatalism.
âIâm not even scared of her anymore,â Dani tells Jamie as the flooded bathtub spills around them. âI just stare at her and it's getting harder and harder to see me. Maybe I should just accept that. Maybe I should just accept that and go.â Remember way back at the beginning of this essay when I pointed out that thereâs a significant difference between âmoving through oneâs griefâ and allowing oneâs grief to become all-consuming? Well, by the time we reach the bathtub scene, Daniâs grief and trauma have completely overtaken her. Her âacceptanceâ is, thus, a fatalistic, catastrophizing determination that her trauma defines her existence, such that she believes that all she has left to do is give up her life in order to protect Jamie from her. For a less ghostly (and less suicidal ideation-y) and more real-life example to illustrate what Iâm getting at here: this would be like me saying âI should just accept that Iâm never going to be anything other than a traumatized mess and should stop reaching out to my friends so that I donât keep hurting them by making them deal with what a mess I am.â If I said something like this, I suspect (hope) that you would tell me that this is not a productive acceptance, but a pernicious narrative that only hurts me and the people who care about me. Sadly, though, this kind of pernicious narrative is exactly what we get out of Blyâs ending allegory.
âBut Squall,â you may be thinking, âthis scene is representing how people who struggle with their mental health can actually feel. This is exactly what it can be like to have severe mental illness, even for folks who have strong support systems and healthy, meaningful relationships. And thereâs value in showing that.â
And if youâre thinking that, then first of allâas I have indicated alreadyâI am aware that this is what it can be like. Very aware. And second of all, you make a fair point, butâŠthere are ways that the show couldâve represented this without concluding that representation with a suicide that it effectively valorizes. Iâll contend with this more in the final section, where I offer a few suggestions of other ways that Bly couldâve ended instead.
I just want to be absolutely clear that Iâm not saying that I think all media portrayals of mental illness need to be hopeful or wholesome or end in âpositiveâ ways. But what I am saying is that Blyâs conclusion offers a really fuckinâ bleak outlook on grief, trauma, and mental illness, especially when we fit that ending into the framework of the showâs other (attempted) core themes, as well as Daniâs earlier character development. Itâs especially bleak to see this as someone with severe mental health issues and who has also lost a loved one to suicideâand as someone who desperately hopes that my life and worldview wonât always stay so darkly colored by my trauma.
Additionally, itâs also worth pausing here to acknowledge that fatalism is, in fact, a major theme of The Beast in the Jungle, the 1903 Henry James novella on which the ninth episode is loosely based. I confess that Iâve only read about this novella, but havenât read the story itself. However, based on my (admittedly limited) understanding of it, there appears to be a significant thematic rupture between The Beast in the Jungle and The Haunting of Bly Manor in their treatments of fatalism. In the end of the novella, its protagonist, John Marcher, comes to the realization that his fatalism has been a horrible mistake that has caused him to completely miss out on an opportunity for love that was right in front of him all along. The tragic fate to which Marcher believed that he was doomed was, in the end, his own fatalism. Dani, in contrast, never has this moment of recognition, not only because her fatalism leads to her own death, but also because the show treats her fatalism not as something that keeps her from love, but instead as leading her towards a definitive act of love.
All of this is exactly why Daniâs portrayal has become so damn concerning to me, and why I donât believe that Blyâs allegory of âthis is what itâs like to live with mental illness and/or to love (and lose) someone who is mentally illâ is somehow value-neutralâor, worse, something worth celebrating.
How Daniâs Self-Sacrifice Bears on Blyâs Queer Representation
In my dabblings around the fandom so far, Iâve seen a fair amount of deliberation about whether or not Bly Manorâs ending constitutes an example of the Bury Your Gays trope.
Honestly, though, I am super unenthused about rehashing those deliberations or splitting hairs trying to give some definitive âyes it isâ or âno it isnâtâ answer, soâŠIâm just not going to. Instead, Iâm going to offer up some further observations about how Daniâs self-sacrificial death impinges on Blyâs queer representation, regardless of whether Bury Your Gays is at work here or not.
I would also like to humbly submit that the show couldâve justâŠnot fucked around in proximity of that trope in the first place so that we wouldnât even need to be having these conversations.
But anyway. Iâm going to start this section off with a disclaimer.
Even though Iâm leveling some pretty fierce critiques in this section (and across this essay), I do also want to say that I adore that The Haunting of Bly Manor and its creators gave us a narrative that centers two queer women and their romantic relationship as its driving forces and that intentionally sets out to portray the healing potentials of sapphic love as a contrast to the destructive, coercive harms found in many conventional dynamics of hegemonic heteronormativity. I donât want to downplay that, because Iâm extremely happy that this show exists, and I sincerely believe that many elements of its representation are potent and meaningful and amazing. ButâŠI also have some reservations with this portrayal that I want to share. I critique not because I donât love, but because I do love. I love this show a lot. I love Dani and Jamie a lot. I critique because I love and because I want more and better in future media.
So, that being saidâŠletâs move on to talk about Dani, self-sacrifice, and compulsory heterosexuality.
Well before Daniâs ennobled death, Bly establishes self-sacrifice as a core component of her characterization. Itâs hardwired into her, no doubt due to the relentless, entangled educational work of compulsory heterosexuality (comphet) and the aggressive forms of socialization that tell girls and women that their roles in life are to sacrifice themselves in order to please others and to belong to men. Indeed, Episode 4âs series of flashbacks emphasizes the interconnectedness between comphet and Daniâs beliefs that she is supposed to sacrifice herself for othersâ sakes, revealing how these forces have shaped who she is and the decisions that sheâs made across her life. (While weâre at it, letâs also not lose sight of the fact that Daniâs profession during this time period is one thatâin American culture, at leastâhas come to rely on a distinctively feminized self-sacrificiality in order to function. Prior to becoming an au pair, Dani was a schoolteacher. In fact, in one of Episode 4âs flashbacks, Eddieâs mother points out that she appreciates Daniâs knack for identifying the kids that need her the most, but also reminds Dani that she needs to take care of herselfâŠwhich suggests that Dani hadnât been: âSave them all if you can, but put your own oxygen mask on firstâ).
In the flashback of her engagement party, Daniâs visible discomfort during Edmundâs speech clues us in that she wasnât preparing to marry him because she genuinely wanted to, but because she felt like she was supposed to. The âchildhood sweetheartsâ narrative bears down on the couple, celebrated by their friends and family, vaunted by cultural constructs that prize this life trajectory as a cherished, âhappily ever afterâ ideal. Further illustrating the pressures to which Dani had been subject, the same scene shows Eddieâs mother, Judy OâMara, presenting Dani with her own wedding dress and asking Dani to wear it when she marries Eddie. Despite Mrs. OâMaraâs assurances that Dani can say no, the hopes that she heaps onto Dani make abundantly clear that anything other than a yes would disappoint her. Later, another flashback shows Dani having that dress sized and fitted while her mother and Mrs. OâMara look on and chatter about their own weddings and marriages. Their conversation is imbued with further hopes that Daniâs marriage to Edmund will improve on the mistakes that they made in their lives. Meanwhile, Daniâs attentiveness to the tailor who takes her measurements, compliments her body, and places a hand on her back strongly suggests that Dani is suppressing her attraction to women. Though brief, this scene is a weighty demonstration of the ways that the enclosures of heteronormativity constrain women into believing that their only option is to deny homosexual attraction, to forfeit their own desires in order to remain in relationships with men, and to prioritize the hopes and dreams and aspirations of the people around them above their own.
Dani followed this pathwayâdetermined for her by everyone else except herselfâuntil she couldnât anymore.
During the flashback of their breakup, Dani explains to Eddie that she didnât end their relationship sooner because she thought that even just having desires that didnât match his and his familyâs was selfish of her: âI shouldâve said something sooner. [âŠ] I didnât want to hurt you, or your mom, or your family. And then it was just what we were doing. [âŠ] I just thought I was being selfish, that I could just stick it out, and eventually I would feel how I was supposed to.â As happens to so many women, Dani was on the cusp of sacrificing her life for the sake of âsticking outâ a marriage to a man, all because she so deeply believed that it was her duty to satisfy everyoneâs expectations of her and that it was her responsibility to change her own feelings about that plight.
And Eddieâs response to this is telling. âFuck you, Danielle,â he says. âWhy are you doing this to me?â
Pay close attention to those last two words. Underline âem. Bold âem. Italicize âem.
âWhy are you doing this to me?â
With those two words, Eddie indicates that he views Daniâs refusal to marry him as something that she is doing to him, a harm that she is committing against him. It is as though Dani is inflicting her will on him, or even that she is unjustly attackinghim by finally admitting that her desires run contrary to his own, that she doesnât want to be his wife. And with this statement, he confirms precisely what she anticipated would happen upon giving voice to her true feelings.
What space did Edmund, his family, or Daniâs mother ever grant for Dani to have aspirations of her own that werenât towards the preordained role of Eddieâs future wife? Letâs jump back to that engagement party. Eddieâs entire speech reveals a very longstanding assumption of his claim over her as his wife-to-be. Heâd first asked Dani to marry him when they were ten years old, after he mistakenly believed that their first kiss could get Dani pregnant; Dani turned him down then, saying that they were too young. So, over the years, as they got older, Eddie continued to repeatedly ask herâuntil, presumably, she relented. âNow, weâre still pretty young,â he remarks as he concludes his speech, âbut I think weâre old enough to know what we want.â Significantly, Eddie speaks here not just for himself, but also for Dani. Daniâs voice throughout the entire party is notably absent, as Eddie and his mother both impose their own wishes on her, assume that she wants what they want, and donât really open any possibility for her to say otherwise. Moreover, although thereâs a palpable awkwardness that accompanies Eddieâs story, the crowd at the party chuckles along as though itâs a sweet, innocent tale of lifelong love and devotion, and not an instance of a man whittling away at a womanâs resistance until she finally caved to his pursuit of her.
All of this suggests that Eddie shared in the socialized convictions of heteropatriarchy, according to which Daniâs purpose and destiny were to marry him and to make him happy. His patterns of behavior evince the unquestioned presumptions of so many men: that women exist in service to them and their wants, such that it is utterly inconceivable that women could possibly desire otherwise. As a political institution, heteropatriarchy tells men that they are entitled to womenâs existences, bodies, futures. And, indeed, Eddie canât seem to even imagine that Dani could ever want anything other than the future that he has mapped out for them. (Oh, hey look, weâve got some love vs. possession going on here again).
For what itâs worth, I think that the showâs portrayal of compulsory heterosexuality is excellent. I love that the writers decided to tackle this. Like I mentioned at the beginning, I found all of this to be extremelyrelatable. I might even be accused of over-relating and projecting my own experiences onto my readings here, butâŠthere were just too many resonances between Daniâs experiences and my own. Mrs. OâMaraâs advice to Dani to âput your own oxygen mask on firstâ is all too reminiscent of the ways that my exâs parents would encourage me to âhealâ from my brotherâs lossâŠbut not for the sake of my own wellbeing, but so that I would return to prioritizing the care of their son and existing to do whatever would make him happy. Iâll also share here that what drove me to break up with my ex-fiancĂ© wasnât just his unwillingness to contend with my grief, but the fact that he had decided that the best way for me to heal from my loss would be to have a baby. He insisted that I could counteract my brotherâs death by âbringing new life into the world.â And he would not take no for an answer. He told me that if I wouldnât agree to try to have children in the near future, then he wasnât interested in continuing to stay with me. It took me months to pluck up the courage, but I finally answered this ultimatum by ending our relationship myself. Thus, like Dani, I came very close to sacrificing myself, my wants, my body, my future, and my life for the sake of doing what my fiancĂ© and his family wanted me to do, all while painfully denying my own attraction to women. What kept me from âsticking it outâ any longer was that I finally decided that I wasnât going to sacrifice myself for a man I didnât love (and who clearly didnât love me) and decided, instead, to reclaim my own wants and needs away from him.
For Dani, however, the moment that she finally begins to reclaim her wants and needs away from Eddie is also the moment that he furiously jumps out of the driverâs seat and into the path of a passing truck, which leaves her to entangle those events as though his death is her fault for finally asserting herself.
Of course, the guilt that Dani feels for having âcausedâ Eddieâs death isnât justa matter of breaking up with him and thereby provoking a reaction that would prove fatalâitâs also the guilt of her suppressed homosexual desire, of not desiring Eddie in the first place. In other words, internalized homophobia is an inextricable layer of the culpability that Dani feels. Internalized homophobia is also whatâs haunting her. As others (such as Rowan Ellis, whose deep dive includes a solid discussion of internalized homophobia in Bly, as well as a more at-length examination of Bury Your Gays than Iâm providing here) have pointed out, the show highlights this metaphorically by having Dani literally get locked into a closet with Edmundâs ghost in the very first episode. Further reinforcing this idea is the fact that these spectral visions get even worse as Dani starts to come to terms with and act on her attraction to Jamie, as though the ghost is punishing her for her desires. Across Episode 3, as Dani and Jamie begin spending more time together, Edmundâs ghost concurrently begins materializing in more shocking, visceral forms (e.g. his bleeding hand in Daniâs bed; his shadowy figure lurking behind Dani after sheâs held Jamieâs hand) that exceed the reflective surfaces to which heâd previously been confined. This continues into Episode 4, where each of Eddieâs appearances follows moments of Daniâs growing closeness to Jamie. A particularly alarming instance occurs when Dani just canât seem to pry her gaze away from a dressed-up Jamie whoâs in the process of some mild undressing. Finally turning away from Jamie, Dani becomes aware of Eddieâs hands on her hips. Itâs a violating reminder of his claims over her, horrifying in its invocation of menâs efforts to coerce and control womenâs sexuality.
It is incredibly powerful, then, to watch Dani answer all of this by becoming more resolute and assertive in the expression of her wants and needs. The establishment of her romantic relationship with Jamie isnât just the movement through grief and guilt that we discussed earlier; itâs also Daniâs defiance of compulsory heterosexuality and her fierce claiming of her queer existence. Even in the face of all thatâs been haunting her, Dani initiates her first kiss with Jamie; and Eddieâs intrusion in that moment is only enough to temporarily dissuade her, as Dani follows this up by then asking Jamie out for a drink at the pub to âsee where that takes themâ (i.e. up to Jamieâs flat to bang, obviously). The peace that Dani finds after having sex with Jamie for the first time is, therefore, also the profound fulfillment of at last having her first sexual experience with a woman, of finally giving expression to this critical part of herself that sheâd spent her entire life denying. Compulsory heterosexuality had dictated to Dani that she must self-sacrifice to meet the strictures of heteropatriarchy, to please everyone except herself; but in her relationship with Jamie, Dani learns that she doesnât have to do this at all. This is only bolstered by the fact that, as weâve talked about at length already, Jamie is very attentive to Daniâs needs and respectful of her boundaries. Jamie doesnât want Dani to do anything other than what Dani wants to do. And so, in the cultivation of their romantic partnership, Dani thus comes to value her own wants and needs in a way that she hasnât before.
The fact that the show nails all of this so fucking well is what makes all that comes later so goddamn frustrating.
The final episode chronicles Dani and Jamie forging a queer life together that the rest of us can only dream of, including another scene of Dani flouting homophobia and negotiating her own internal struggles so that she can be with Jamie. âI know we canât technically get married,â she tells Jamie when she proposes to her, âbut I also donât really care.â And with her awareness that the beast in the jungle is starting to catch up with her, Dani tells Jamie that she wants to spend whatever time she has left with her.
But thenâŠ
A few scenes laterâalong with a jump of a few years later, presumablyâJamie arrives home with the licenses that legally certify their civil union in the state of Vermont. Itâs a monumental moment. In 2000, Vermont became the first state to introduce civil unions, which paved the way for it to later (in 2009) become the first state to pass legislation that recognized gay marriages without needing to have a court order mandating that the state extend marriage rights beyond opposite-sex couples. I appreciate that Blyâs creatorsincorporated this significant milestone in the history of American queer rights into the show. But its positioning in the show also fuckinâ sucks. Just as Jamie is announcing the legality of her and Daniâs civil union and declaring that theyâll have another marriage ceremony soon, we see water running into the hallway. This moves us into that scene with the flooded bathtub, as Jamie finds Dani staring into the water, unaware of anything else except the reflection of Viola staring back at her. Thus, it is at the exact moment when her wife proudly shares the news of this incredible achievement in the struggle for queer rightsâfor which queer folks have long fought and are continuing to fight to protect in the presentâthat Dani has completely, hopelessly resigned herself to Violaâs possession.
I want to be careful to clarify here that, in making this observation, I donât mean to posit some sort of âDani should have fought back against Violaâ argument, whichâwithin the context of our allegorical readingsâmight have the effect of damagingly suggesting that Dani should have fought harder to recover from mental illness or terminal disease. But I do mean to point out the incredibly grim implications that the juxtaposition of these events engenders, especially when we contemplate them (as we did in the previous section) within the overall frameworks of the showâs themes and Daniâs character development. After all that has come before, after weâve watched Dani come to so boldly assert her queer desire and existence, it is devastating to see the show reduce her to such a despairing state that doesnât even give her a chance to register that she and Jamie are now legal partners.
Why did you have to do this, Bly? Why?
Further compounding this despair, the next scene features the resumption of Daniâs self-sacrificial beliefs and behaviors, which results in her demise, and which leaves Jamie to suffer through the devastation of her wifeâs death. This resumption of self-sacrifice hence demolishes all of that beautiful work of asserting Daniâs queer existence and learning that she doesnât need to sacrifice herself that I just devoted two thousand words to describing above.
Additionally, in the end, Daniâs noble self-sacrifice also effects a safe recuperation of heteronormativityâŠwhich might add more evidence to a Bury Your Gays claim, oops.
And that is because, in the end, after we see Jamie screaming into the water and Dani forever interred at the bottom of the lake in which she drowned herself, we come to the end of Jamieâs story and return to Bly Manorâs frame narrative: Floraâs wedding.
At the start of the show, the evening of Flora and Unnamed Manâs (Wikipedia says his name is James? idk, w/e) rehearsal dinner provides the occasion and impetus for Jamieâs storytelling. Following dinner, Flora, her fiancĂ©, and their guests gather around a fireplace and discuss a ghost story about the venue, a former convent. With a captive audience that includes her primary targetsâFlora and Miles, who have forgotten what happened at Bly and, by extension, all that Dani sacrificed and that Jamie lost so that they could live their lives free of the trauma of what transpiredâand with a topically relevant conversation already ongoing, Jamie interjects that she has a ghost story of her own to shareâŠand thus, the showâs longer, secondary narrative begins.
When Jamieâs tale winds to a close at the end of the ninth episode, the show returns us to its frame, that scene in front of the cozy, crackling fire. And it is there that we learn that it is, in fact, Jamie who has been telling us this story all along.
As the other guests trickle away, Flora stays behind to talk to Jamie on her own. A critical conversation then ensues between them, which functions not only as Jamieâs shared wisdom to Flora, but also as the showâs attempt to lead viewers through what theyâve just experienced and thereby impart its core message about the secondary narrative. The frame narrative is, thus, also a direct address to the audience that tells us what we should take away from the experience. By this point, the show has thoroughly established that Jamie is a gentle-but-tough-love, knowledgeable, and trustworthy guide through the trials of accepting grief and mortality, and so it is Jamie who leaves Flora and us, the audience, with the showâs final word about how to treasure the people we love while they are still in our lives and how to grieve them if we survive beyond them. (But, by this point in this essay, weâve also learned that Blyâs messages about grief and mortality are beautiful but also messy and unconvincing, even with this didactic ending moment).
With all of this in mind, we can (and should) ask some additional questions of the frame narrative.
One of those questions is: Why is the secondary narrative being told from/within this particular frame?
Answering this question within the showâs diegesis (by asking it of the narrator) is easy enough. Jamie is performing a memorialization of Daniâs life and sacrifice at an event where her intended audience happens to be gathered, ensuring that Miles and Flora begin to recognize what Dani did for them in a manner that maybe wonât just outright traumatize them.
Okay, sure, yeah. True. Not wrong.
But letâs interrogate this question more deeplyâletâs ask it of the show itself. So, Bly Manor: Why is the secondary narrative being told from/within this particular frame?
We could also tweak this question a bit to further consider: What is the purpose of the frame? A frame narrative can function to shape audiencesâ interpretations of and attitudes towards the secondary narrative. So, in this case, letâs make our line of questioning even more specific. What does the frame of Floraâs wedding do for Blyâs audiences?
Crucially, the framing scene at the fireplace provides us with a sense that weâve returned to safety after the horror of the ghost story weâve just experienced. To further assure us of this safety, then, Blyâs frame aims to restore a sense of normality, a sense that the threat that has provoked fear in us has been neutralized, a sense of hope that endures beyond tragedy. Indeed, as we fade from the secondary narrative and return to the frame, Jamieâs narration emphasizes how Daniâs selfless death has brought peace to Bly Manor by breaking its cycles of violence and trauma: âBut she wonât be hollow or empty, and she wonât pull others to her fate. She will merely walk the grounds of Bly, harmless as a dove for all of her days, leaving the only trace of who she once was in the memory of the woman who loved her most.â
What Dani has accomplished with her self-sacrifice, then, is a longstanding, prevailing, expected staple of Westernâand especially Americanâstorytelling: redemption.
American media is rife with examples of this narrative formula (in which an individual must take selfless actionâwhich may or may not involve self-sacrificial deathâin order to redeem an imperiled community by restoring a threatened order) to an extent that is kind of impossible to overstate. Variations of this formula are everywhere, from film to television to comics to videogames to news reports. It is absolutely fundamental to our cultural understandings of what âheroismâ means. And itâs been this way for, ummâŠa long time, largely thanks to that most foundational figure of Western myth, some guy who was crucified for everybodyâs sins or something. (Well, that and the related popularization of Joseph Campbellâs heroâs journey, butâŠIâm not gonna go off onto a whole rant about that right now, this essay is already too long as it is).
In Bly Manor, the threatened order is the natural process of death itself, which Viola has disrupted with a gravity well that traps souls and keeps them suspended within physical proximity of the manor. Daniâs invitation to Viola is the initial step towards salvation (although, I think itâs important to note that this is not entirely intentional on Daniâs part. Jamieâs narration indicates that Dani didnât entirely understand what she was doing with the âItâs you, itâs me, itâs usâ invitation, so self-sacrifice was not necessarily her initial goal). It nullifies the gravity well and resumes the passage of death, which liberates all of the souls that have been trapped at Bly and also produces additional opportunities for othersâ atonements (e.g. Peterâs apology to Miles; Henryâs guardianship of the children). But itâs Daniâs suicide that is the ultimate completion of the redemptive task. It is only by âgiving herself to the lakeâ that Dani is able to definitively dispel Violaâs threat and confer redemptive peace to Bly Manor.
Itâs tempting to celebrate this incredibly rare instance of a queer woman in the heroic-redemptive role, given that American media overwhelmingly reserve it for straight men. But I want to strongly advise that we resist this temptation. Frankly, thereâs a lot about the conventional heroic-redemptive narrative formula that sucks, and Iâd rather that we work to advocate for other kinds of narratives, instead of just championing more âdiversityâ within this stuffy old model of heroism. Explaining what sucks about this formula is beyond the purview of this essay, though. But my next point might help to illustrate part of why it sucks (spoiler: itâs because it tends to prop up traditional, dominant structures of power and relationality).
SoâŠWhat I want us to do is entertain the possibility that Daniâs redemptive self-sacrifice might serve specific purposes for straight audiences, especially in the return to the frame at the end.
Across The Haunting of Bly Manor, weâve seen ample examples of heterosexuality gone awry. The show has repeatedly called our attention to the flaws and failings of heterosexual relationships against the carefully cultivated safety, open communication, and mutual fulfillment of a queer romance between two women. But, while queer audiences may celebrate this about this show, for straight audiences, this whole situation might just wind up producing anxiety insteadâas though heterosexuality is also a threatened order within the world of Bly Manor. More generally, asking straight audiences to connect with a queer couple as the showâs main protagonists is an unaccustomed challenge with which theyâre not normally tasked; thus, the show risks leaving this dominant viewer base uncomfortable, threatened, and resentful, sitting with the looming question of whether heterosexuality is, itself, redeemable.
In answer to this, Daniâs self-sacrifice provides multiple assurances to straight audiences. To begin with, her assumption of the traditional heroic-redemptive role secures audiences within the familiar confines of that narrative formula, which also then promises that Dani is acting as a protector of threatened status quos and not as another source of peril. What Bly Manor is doing here is, in effect, acknowledging that it may have challenged (and even threatened) straight audiences with its centerpiece of a queer romanceâand that, likewise, queers themselves may be challenging the status quos of romantic partnerships by, for instance, demanding marriage rights and improvements in media representationsâwhile also emphatically reassuring those audiences in the wake of that challenge that Dani and Jamie havenât created and arenât going to create too much disturbance with their queerness. Theyâre really not that threatening, Bly swears. Theyâre harmless as a dove. Theyâre wholesome. Theyâre respectable. Theyâand queer folks more generallyâarenât going to totally upend everything, really. Look, theyâll even sacrifice themselves to save everyone and redeem imperiled communities and threatened ordersâeven heterosexuality itself!
A critical step towards achieving this assurance is the leveling of the playing field. In order for the show to neutralize the threat of queerness for straight audiences, comfort them with a return to safety, and promise them that heterosexuality is redeemable, the queer women need to have an on-screen tragic end to their relationship just like all of the straight couples have. And so, Dani must die and Jamie must grieve.
That accomplished, the show then immediately returns to the frame, the scene at the fireplace following Floraâs rehearsal dinner.
Thereâafter weâve witnessed so much queer joy and queer tragedy crammed into this final episodeâwe see Flora and her fiancĂ©, bride and groom, sitting together, arms linked, taking in all that Jamie has to tell them. And with this warm, idyllic image of impending matrimony between man and wife, the safety to which straight audiences return in the frame is, therefore, also the safety of a heterosexuality that can find its redemption through Daniâs self-sacrifice. Not only does Daniâs death mean that Flora can live (and go on to marry her perfectly bland, unremarkable husband, all without the trauma of what happened at Bly), but it also means that sheâand, with her, straight audiencesâcan ultimately benefit from the lessons about true love, loss, and grieving that Daniâs self-sacrifice and Jamieâs story bestow.
And so, Bly Manor concludes with a valorization of redemptive self-sacrifice and an anodyne recuperation of heteronormativity, bequeathing Flora with the opportunities to have and to hold the experiential knowledge that Dani and Jamie have provided for her. Here, queer tragedy serves up an educational opportunity for heterosexual audiences in a challengingly âinclusive,â but otherwise essentially non-threatening manner. The ending is a gentle, non-traumatizing, yet frank lesson to heterosexual audiences in the same way that Jamieâs story is a gentle, non-traumatizing, yet frank lesson to Flora.
Did the showâs creators intentionally do all of this to set about providing such assurances to straight audiences? Maybe. Maybe not. I donât really knowâor care! But, especially in light of incidents like the recent âSuletta and Miorineâs relationship is up to interpretationâ controversy following the Gundam: Witch from Mercury finale, I absolutely do not put it past media corporations and content creators to very intentionally take steps to prioritize the comfort of straight audiences against the threats of queer love. And anyway, intentional or not, all of this still has effects and implications loaded with meaning, as I have tried to account for here.
Honestly, though, I canât quite shake the feeling that thereâs some tension between Jamie, Owen, and maybe also Henry about Jamieâs decision to publicly share Daniâs story in front of Flora and Miles. Owenâs abrupt declaration that itâs getting late and that they should wrap up seems like an interventionâlike heâs been as patient and understanding as he possibly could up to that point, but now, heâs finally having to put a stop to Jamieâs deviance. I canât help but read the meaningful stares that pass between them at both ends of the frame as a complex mixture of compassion and fraught disagreement (and I wish that the show had done more with this). The scene where Dani and Jamie visit Owen at his restaurant seems to set up the potential for this unspoken dispute. By their expressions and mannerisms (Daniâs stony stare; the protective way that Jamie holds her as her own gaze is locked on Dani), itâs clear that Dani and Jamie are aghast that Flora and Miles have forgotten what happened and that Owen believes that they should just be able to live their lives without that knowledge. And itâs also clear, by her very telling of Daniâs story, that Jamie disagrees with him. Maybe Iâm over-imposing my own attitudes here, but Iâm left with the impression that Jamie resents the coddling of Miles and Flora just like Iâm resenting the coddling of straight audiencesâŠthat Jamie resents that she and Dani have had to give up everything so that Miles and Flora can continue living their privileged lives just like Iâm resenting the exploitation of queer tragedy for the sake preserving straight innocence. (As Jamie says to Hannah when Dani puts the children to work in the garden: âYou canât give them a pass forever.â Disclaimer: Iâm not saying that I want Miles and Flora to be traumatized, but I am saying that I agree with Jamie, because hiding traumatic shit is not how to resolve inter-generational trauma. Anywayâ).
Also, I donât know about yâall, but I find Flora and Jamieâs concluding conversation to be super cringe. Maybe itâs because Iâm gay and just have way too much firsthand experience with this sort of thing from my own comphet past, but Floraâs whole âI just keep thinking about that silly, gorgeous, insane man Iâm marrying tomorrow. I love him. More than I ever thought I could love anybody. And the crazy thing is, he loves me the same exact amount,â spiel just absolutely screams âwoman who is having to do all of the emotional work in her relationship with an absolutely dull, mediocre, emotionally illiterate man and is desperately trying to convince herself that he does, in fact, love her as much as she (believes) that she loves him.â
I feel like this is a parody of straightness?? Is this actually sincere??
This is what Dani gave up her life to redeem??
To me, this is just more bleak shit that Bly leaves us with. It is so painful to watch.
Bless.
Okay, so I know that I said that I wasnât going to offer a definitive yes or no about whether Bly commits Bury Your Gays with Daniâs death, butâŠafter writing all of this out, Iâm honestly kinda leaning towards a yes.
But Iâm already anticipating that folks are gonna push back against me on this. So I just want to humbly submit, again, that Bly could have just not done this. It could have just not portrayed Daniâs death at all.
To really drive this point home, then, Iâm going to conclude this essay by suggesting just a few ways that The Haunting of Bly Manor could have ended without Daniâs self-sacrificial deathâor without depicting her death on-screen at all.
Bly Manor Could Have Ended Differently
Mike Flanaganâcreator, director, writer, editor, executive producer, showrunner, etc. of The Haunting of Bly Manorâhas stated that he believes that the showâs ending is a happy one.
I, on the other hand, believe that Blyâs ending isâŠnot. In my view, the way that the ending treats Dani is unnecessarily cruel and exploitative. âHappy endingââreally? If I let myself be cynical about it (which I do), I honestly think that Daniâs death is a pretty damn transparent effort to squeeze out some tears with a sloppy, mawkish, feel-good veneer slapped over it. And if we peel back that veneer and look under it, what we find is quite bleak.
To be fair, for a psychological horror show thatâs so centrally about grief and trauma, Bly Manor does seem to profess an incredibly strong sense of hopefulness. Underlying the entirety of the show is a profound faith in all the good and beauty that can come from human connection, however fleeting our lives may beâand even if we make a ton of dumb, awful mistakes along the way. If Iâm being less cynical about it, I do also think that the showâs ending strives to demonstrate a peak expression of this conviction. Butâat least in my opinionâit doesnât succeed in this goal. In my writing of this essay, Iâve come to believe that the show instead ends in a state of despair that is at odds with what it appears to want to achieve.
So, in this final section, Iâm going to offer up a few possibilities for ways that the show could have ended that maybe wouldnât have so thoroughly undermined its own attempted messages.
Now, if I were actually going to fix the ending of The Haunting of Bly Manor, I would honestly overhaul a ton of the show to arrive at something completely different. But Iâm not going to go through all the trouble of rewriting the entire show here, lol. Instead, Iâm going to work with most of whatâs already there, leading out from Violaâs possession of Dani (even though I donât actually like that part of the show either â maybe someday Iâll write about other implications of Violaâs possession of Dani beyond these allegorical readings, but not right now). Iâm also going to try to adhere to some of the showâs core themes and build on some of the allegorical possibilities that are already in place. Granted, the ideas that I pose here wouldnât fix everything, by any stretch of the imagination; but they would, at least (I hope), mitigate some of the issues that Iâve outlined over the course of this essay. And one way or another, I hope that theyâll help to demonstrate that Daniâs self-sacrificial death was completely unnecessary. (Seriously, just not including Daniâs death wouldâve enabled the show to completely dodge the question of Bury Your Gays and wouldâve otherwise gone a long way towards avoiding the problems with the showâs queer representation).
So, here's how this is going to work. First, Iâm going to pose a few general, guiding questions before then proposing an overarching thematic modification that expands on an idea thatâs already prominent across the show. This will then serve as the groundwork for two alternative scenarios. Iâm not going to go super into detail with either of these alternatives; mostly, I just want to demonstrate that the show that couldâve easily replaced the situation leading to Dani drowning herself. (For the record, I also think that the show couldâve benefitted from having at least one additional episodeâand from some timing and pacing restructuring otherwise. So, before anybody tries an excuse like âbut this wouldnât fit into the last episode,â I want to urge that we imagine these possibilities beyond that limitation).
Letâs start off by returning to a point that I raised in the earlier conversation about grief and acceptance: the trickiness of Violaâs âacceptance.â
What Viola âacceptsâ in the end arenât her losses or her own mortality, but Daniâs desperate, last-ditch-effort invitation to inhabit her. Within the showâs extant ending, Viola never actually comes to any kind of acceptance otherwise. Daniâs suicide effectively forces her dissolution, eradicating her persistent presence through the redemptive power of self-sacrifice. But in all of my viewings of the show and in all of my efforts to think through and write about it, thereâs a question thatâs been bugging me to no end: Why does Viola accept Daniâs invitation in the first place?
We know that Peter figured out the âitâs you, itâs me, itâs usâ trick in his desperation to return to some form of life and to leave the grounds of Bly Manor. ButâŠwhat is the appeal of it for Viola? How do her own motivations factor into it? For so long, Violaâs soul has been tenaciously persisting at Bly all so that she can repeatedly return to the physical locus of her connection with her husband and daughter, their shared bedroom in the manor. Sheâs done this for so long that she no longer even remembers why sheâs doing itâshe just goes back there to grab whatever child she can find and strangles whoever happens to get in her way. So what would compel her to accept Daniâs invitation? What does she get out of itâand what does she want out of it? What does her acceptance mean? And why, then, does her acceptance result in the dissipation of the gravity well?
We can conjecture, certainly. But the show doesnât actually provide answers to these questions. Indeed, one of the other major criticisms that I have of Bly is that it confines all of Violaâs development to the eighth episode alone. I really think that it needed to have done way more to characterize her threat and at least gestureat her history sooner, rather than leaving it all to that penultimate episode, interrupting and drawing out the exact moment when sheâs about to kill Dani. (Like, after centuries of Viola indiscriminately killing people, and with so many ghosts thatâve been loitering around for so long because of that, wouldnât Bly Manor have rampant ghost stories floating around about it by the time Dani arrives? But thereâs only one minor suggestion of that possibility: Henry indicating that he mightâve met a soldier ghost once. Thatâs it. And on that note, all of the ghosts at the manor needed to have had more screentime and development, really). Further, itâs disappointing that the show devotes that entire eighth episode to accounting for Violaâs motivations, only to then reduce her to Big, Bad, Unspeakable Evil in the final episode, with no rhyme or reason for what sheâs doing, all so that she can necessitate Daniâs death.
As we continue pondering these unanswered questions, thereâs also another issue that I want to raise, which the show abandons only as an oblique, obscure consideration. And that is: How the hell did Jamie acquire all that extensive knowledge about Viola, the ghosts of the manor, and all that happened, such that she is able to tell Blyâsstory in such rich detail? My own sort of headcanon answer to this is that Violaâs possession of Dani somehow enabled Viola to regain some of her own memoriesâas well as, perhaps, a more extended, yet also limited awareness of the enduring consciousnesses of the other ghostsâwhile also, in turn, giving Dani access to them, too. Dani then could have divulged what she learned to Jamie, which would account for how Jamie knows so much. I bring this up because it provides one possible response to the question of âWhat does Viola get out of her possession of Dani?â (especially given the significant weight that the show places on the retention of oneâs memoriesâmore on this in a moment) and because this is an important basis for both of my proposed alternative scenarios.
Before we dig into those alternative scenarios, however, thereâs also a thematic modification that I want to suggest, which would help to provide another answer to âWhat does Viola get out of her possession of Dani?â while also alleviating the issues that lead into the valorization of Daniâs suicide. That thematic modification involves how the show defines love. Although Blyâs sustained contrasts between love and possession have some valuable elements, I think that the ending wouldâve benefitted from downplaying the love vs. possession theme (which is where we run into so much trouble with Daniâs self-sacrifice, and which has also resulted in some celebratory conflations between âselflessnessâ and self-sacrifice that Iâve seen crop up in commentary about the showâbut, yâall, self-sacrifice is not something to celebrate in romantic partnerships, so please, please be careful idolizing that) to instead play up a different theme: the idea that love is the experience of feeling such safety and security with another person that we can find opportunities for peace by being with them.
Seeking peaceâand people with whom to feel safe enough to share traumas and experience peaceâis a theme that already runs rampant across the show, so this modification is really just a matter of accentuating it differently. Itâs also closely linked to the moving through grief theme that weâve already discussed at length, as numerous characters in Bly express desires for solitude with loved ones as a way of finding relief and healing from their pain, grief, and trauma. (And I suspect that I latched onto this because I have desperately wanted peace, calm, and stillness in the midst of my own acute, compounding traumasâŠand because my own former romantic partner was obviously not someone with whom I felt safe enough to experience the kind of peace that wouldâve allowed me to begin the process of healing).
We run into this idea early in the development of Jamie and Daniâs romance, as narrator Jamie explains in the scene leading up to their first kiss, âThe au pair was tired. Sheâd been tired for so long. Yet without even realizing she was doing it, she found herself taking her own advice that sheâd given to Miles. Sheâd chosen someone to keep close to her that she could feel tired around.â Following this moment, at the beginning of Episode 5, narrator Jamie then foregrounds Hannahâs search for peace (âThe housekeeper knew, more than most, that deep experience was never peaceful. And because she knew this ever since sheâd first called Bly home, she would always find her way back to peace within her daily routine, and it had always workedâ), which calls our attention to the ways that Hannah has been retreating into her memory of her first meeting with Owen as a crucial site of peace against the shock of her own death. Grown-up Flora even gushes about âthat easy silence you only get with your forever person who loves you as much as you love themâ when sheâs getting all teary at Jamie about her husband-to-be.
Of course, this theme is already actively at work in the showâs conclusion as well. During her âbeast in the jungleâ monologue, Dani tells Jamie that she feels Viola âin here. Itâs so quietâŠitâs so quiet. Sheâs in here. And this part of her thatâs in here, it isnâtâŠpeaceful.â As such, Violaâs whole entire issue is that, after all those centuries, she has not only refused to accept her own death, but sheâs likewise never been at peaceâsheâs still not at peace. Against Violaâs unpeaceful presence, however, Dani does find peace in her life with JamieâŠat least temporarily, until Violaâs continued refusal of peace leads to Daniâs self-destructive sense of fatalism. Still, in her replacement of Viola as the new Lady of the Lake, Dani exists as a prevailing force of peace (sheâs âharmless as a doveâ); however, incidentally, she only accomplishes this through the decidedly non-peaceful, violent act of taking her own life.
ButâŠwhat if that hadnât been the case?
What if, instead, the peace that Dani finds in her beautiful, queer, non-self-sacrificing existence with Jamie had also enabled Viola to find some sense of peace of her own? What if, through her inhabitation of Dani, Viola managed to, likeâŠcalm the fuck down some? What if Daniâs safety and solitude worked to at least somewhat assuage Violaâs rageâand even guide her towards some other form of acceptance?
Depending on how this developed, the show couldâve borne out the potential for a much more subversive conclusion than what we actually got. Rather than All-Consuming-Evil Violaâs forced dissolution through the violence of Daniâs redemptive self-sacrifice (and its attendant recuperation of heteronormativity), we couldâve instead had the makings of a narrative about sapphic love as a source of healing thatâs capable of breaking cycles of violence and trauma. And I think that it wouldâve been possible for the show to accomplish this without a purely âhappyâ ending in which everything was just magically fine, and all the trauma dissipated, and there were no problems in the world ever again. The show could have, in fact, managed this while preserving the allegorical possibilities of Violaâs presence as mental and/or terminal illness.
But, before I can start describing how this couldâve happened, thereâs one last little outstanding problem that I need to address. In the video essay that I cited earlier, Rowan Ellis suggests that there are limitations to the âViola as a stand-in for mental/terminal illnessâ reading of the show because of the fact that Dani invites Viola into herself and, therefore, willingly brings on her own suffering. But I donât think that this is quite the case or that it interferes with these allegorical readings. As Iâve already mentioned at various points, Dani doesnât entirely understand the implications of what sheâs doing when she issues her invitation to Viola; and even so, the invitation is still a matter of a dubious consent that evidently cannot be withdrawn once initially grantedâat the absolute most generous characterization. Daniâs invitation is a snap decision, a frantic attempt to save Flora after everyone and everything else has failed. Consequently, we donât necessarily have to construe Violaâs presence in Daniâs life as a matter of Dani âwillingly inviting her own suffering,â but can instead understand it as the wounds and traumas that persist after Dani has risked her life to rescue Flora. In this way, the show could have also challenged the traditional heroic-redemptive narrative formula by offering a more explicit commentary on the all-too-often unseen ramifications of selflessly âheroicâ actions (instead of just heedlessly perpetuating their glorification and, with them, self-sacrifice). Dani may have saved Floraâbut at what cost to herself? What long-term toll might this lasting trauma exact on her?
And with that, we move into my two alternative ending scenarios.
Alternative Ending 1: Progressive Memory Loss
Memory and its loss are such significant themes in Bly Manor that theycould use an essay all their own.
I am, however, going to refrain from writing such an essay at this moment in time (Iâm already super tired from writing this one, lol).
Still, the first of my alternative scenarios would bring these major themes full-circleâand would make Jamie eat her words.
In this alternative scenario, Viola would find some sense of peaceâeven if fraught and, at times, tumultuousâin her possession of Dani. As her rage subsides, she is even able to regain fragmented pieces of her own memory, which Dani is also able to experience. The restoration of Violaâs memory, albeit vague and scattered, leads Dani to try to learn even more about Violaâs history at Bly in an effort to at least partially fill in the gaps. As time goes on, though, Violaâs co-habitation within Daniâs consciousness leads to the steady degradation of Daniâs own memory. The reclamation of Violaâs memories would occur, then, concomitant with a steady erosion of both herself and Dani. Thus, Dani would still undergo an inexorable decline across the showâs ending, but one more explicitly akin to degenerative neurological diseases associated with aging, accentuating the âViola as terminal illnessâ allegory while also still carrying resonances of the residual reverberations of trauma (given that memory loss is often a common consequence of acute trauma). Jamie would take on the role of Daniâs caregiver, mirroring and more directly illuminating the role that Owen plays for his mother earlier in the show. By the showâs conclusion, Dani would still be alive, including during the course of the frame narrative.
I mentioned earlier in this essay that Iâve endured even more trauma and grief since my brotherâs death and since my breakup with my ex-fiancĂ©. So, Iâll share another piece of it with you now: shortly after my breakup, my dad was diagnosed with one of those degenerative neurological diseases that I listed way back at the very beginning. I moved home not only to get away from my ex, but also to become a caregiver. In the time that Iâve been home, Iâve had no choice but to behold my dadâs continuous, irreversible decline and his indescribable suffering. He has further health issues, including a form of cancer. As a result, he now harbors a sense of fatalism that heâll never be able to reconcileâhe does not have the cognitive capacities to address his despair or turn it into some other form of acceptance. He is merely, in essence, awaiting his death. Hence, fatalism is something that I have had to âacceptâ as a regular component of my own life. (In light of this situation, you may be wondering if I have thoughts and opinions on medical aid in dying, given all that I have had to say so far about fatalism and suicide. And the answer is yes, I do have thoughts and opinionsâŠbut they are complex, and I donât really want to try to account for them here).
Indeed, I live in a suspended, indefinite state of grieving. Day in and day out, I watch my father perish before my eyes, anticipating the blow of fresh grief that will strike when he dies. I watch my motherâs grief. I watch my fatherâs grief. He forgets about the symptoms of his disease; he looks up his disease to try to learn about it; he re-discovers his inevitable demise anew; the grieving process restarts again. (âShe would wake, she would walk, she would forget [âŠ] and she would fade and fade and fadeâ).
What, then, does acceptance look like when grief is so ongoing and so protracted?
What does acceptance look like in the absence of any possibility of acceptance?
KĂŒbler-Rossâs âfive stages of griefâ model has been a meaningful guide for countless folks in their efforts to navigate grief and loss. Yet, the model has also been subject to a great deal of critique. Critics have accused the model of, among other things, suggesting that grieving is a linear process, whereby a person moves from one stage to the next and then ends conclusively at acceptance (when grieving is, in fact, an incredibly uneven, nonlinear, and inconclusive process). Relatedly, they have also called attention to the fact that the model commonly gets used prescriptively in ways that usher grieving folks towards the end goal of acceptance and cast judgment on those who do not reach that stage. These are criticisms that I would level at Blyâs application of KĂŒbler-Ross as well. Earlier, we thoroughly covered the showâsissues with grief and acceptance as major themes; but in addition to those issues, Bly alsotends to steer its characters towards abrupt endpoints of acceptance, while doling out punishments to those who ârefuseâ to accept. At root, there are normative ascriptions at work in the showâs very characterization of deferred acceptance as refusal and acceptance itself as an active choice that one has to make.
This alternative ending, then, would have the potential to challenge and complicate the showâs handling of grief by approaching Jamieâs grieving and Daniâs fatalism from very different angles. As Daniâs caregiver, Jamie would encounter and negotiate grief in ongoing and processual ways, which would continue to evolve as her wifeâs condition worsens and her caregiving responsibilities mount, thereby lending new layers of meaning to the message that âTo truly love another person is to accept that the work of loving them is worth the pain of losing them.â Daniâs fatalism here could also serve as a different interpretation of Jamesâs Beast in the Jungle; perhaps her sense of fatalism ebbs and flows, morphs and contorts along with the progression of her memory loss as she anticipates the gradual whittling-away of her selfhoodâor even forgets that inevitability entirely. Still a tragic, heart-rending ending to the show, this scenario may not have the dramatic force of Jamie screaming into the waters of the lake, but it would be a relatable depiction of the ways that many real-life romances conclude. (And, having witnessed the extent of my momâs ongoing caregiving for my dad, lemme tell ya: if yâall really want a portrayal of selflessness in romantic partnerships, I can think of nothing more selfless than caring for oneâs terminally ill partner across their gradual death).
Additionally, this scenario could allow the show to maintain the frame narrative, while also packing fresh complexities into it.
Perhaps, in this case, Dani is still alive, but Jamie has come to Floraâs wedding alone, leaving Dani with in-home caregivers or within assisted living or some such. She comes there determined to ensure that Miles and Flora regain at least some awareness of what Dani did for themâthat they remember her. The act of telling Daniâs story, then, becomes not only the performance of a mourning ritual, but also a vital way of preserving and perpetuating Daniâs memory where both the children and Dani, herself, can no longer remember. To be sure, such purposes already compel Jamieâs storytelling in the show: Narrator Jamie indicates that the new Lady of the Lake will eventually lose her recollection of the life she had with the gardener, âleaving the only trace of who she once was in the memory of the woman who loved her most.â But in the context of a conclusion so focused on memory loss, this statement would take on new dimensions of import. In this way, the frame narrative might also more forcefully prompt us, the audience, to reflect on the waysthat we can carry on the memories of our loved ones by telling their storiesâand also, maybe, the responsibilities that we may have to do so. âAlmost no one even remembers how she was when her mind hadnât gone,â Jamie remarks after returning from Owenâs motherâs funeral, a subtle indictment of just how easily we can lose our own memories of those who suffer from conditions like dementiaâhow easily we can fail to carry on the stories of the people they were before and to keep their memories alive. (âWe are all just stories in the end,â Olivia Crain emphasizes during the eulogy for Shirlâs kitten in The Haunting of Hill House. In fact, thereâre some interesting comparative analyses we could do about storytelling and the responsibilities incumbent on storytellers between these two Flanagan shows).
Along those lines, I think that this wouldâve been an excellent opportunity for the show to exacerbate and foreground those latent tensions between Jamie and Owen (and maybe also Henry) about whether to share Daniâs story with the now-adult children.
In the showâs explorations of memory loss, thereâre already some interesting but largely neglected undercurrents churning around about the idea that maybe losing oneâs memory isnât just a curse or a heartbreaking misfortune (as it is for Viola, the ghosts of Bly Manor, and Owenâs mother), but can, in certain circumstances, be a blessing. Bly impliesâvia Owen and the frame narrativeâthat Miles and Flora have been able to flourish in their lives because they have forgotten what happened at Bly and still remain blissfully unaware of itâŠwhich, to be clear, is only possible because of the sacrifices that Dani and Jamie have made. But this situation raises, and leaves floating there, a bunch of questions about the responsibilities we have to impart traumatic histories to younger generationsâwhether interpersonally (e.g. within families) or societally (e.g. in history classrooms). Cycles of trauma donât end by shielding younger generations from the past; they especially donât end by forcing impacted, oppressed, traumatized populations (e.g. queer folks) to shoulder the burdens of trauma on their own for the sake of protecting another populationâs innocent ignorance. But how do we impart traumatic histories? How do we do so responsibly, compassionately, in ways that respect those harrowing pastsâand those who lived them, those most directly impacted by themâwithout actively causing harm to receiving audiences? On the other hand, if we over-privilege the innocence of those who have forgotten or those who werenât directly impacted, what do we lose and what do we risk by not having frank, open conversations about traumatic histories?
As it stands, I think that Bly is remiss in the way it tosses out these issues, but never actually does anything with them. It could have done much, much more. In this alternate ending, then, there could be some productive disagreement among Jamie, Owen, and Henry about whether to tell Flora and Miles, what to tell them, how to tell them. Perhaps, in her seizing of the conversation and her launching of the story in such a public way, Jamie has taken matters into her own hands and has done so in a way that Owen and Henry canât easily derail. Perhaps Owen sympathizes but does, indeed, abruptly cut her off just before her audience can completely connect the dots. Perhaps Henry is conflicted and doesnât take a standâor perhaps he does. Perhaps we find out that Henry had been torn about whether to even invite Jamie because of the possibility of something like this happening. Or, perhaps Henry wants the children to know and believes that they should hear Daniâs story from Jamie. Perhaps we see scenes of past quarrels between Jamie and Owen, Owen and Henry. Perhaps, once the story has ended, we see a brief aftermath conversation between Owen and Jamie about what Jamie has done, their speculations about how it may impact Miles and Flora. Perhaps the show presents these conversations in ways that challenge us to reflect on them, even if it does not provide conclusive answers to the questions it raises, and even if it leaves these conflicts open-ended, largely unresolved.
Alternative Ending 2: Living with the Trauma
If Blyâs creators had wanted Violaâs inhabitation of Dani to represent the ongoing struggles of livingâand loving someoneâwith severe mental illness and trauma, they could have also justâŠdone that? Like, they could have just portrayed Jamie and Dani living their lives together and dealing with Viola along the way. They could have just let that be it. It wouldnât have been necessary to include Daniâs death within the showâs depicted timeline at all.
The show couldâve more closely aligned its treatment of Daniâs fatalism with Jamesâs Beast in the Jungleâbut with, perhaps, a bit more of a hopeful spin. Perhaps, early on, Dani is convinced that her demise is imminent and incontrovertible, much as we already see in the final episodeâs diner scene. For a while, this outlook continues to dominate her existence in ways that interfere with her daily functioning and her relationship with Jamie. Perhaps thereâs an equivalent of the flooded bathtub scene, but it happens much earlier in the progression of their partnership: Dani despairs, and Jamie is there to reinforce her commitment to staying with Dani through it all, much like her extant âIf you canât feel anything, then Iâll feel everything for the both of usâ remarks. But maybe, as a result of this, Dani comes to a realization much like The Beast in the Jungleâs John Marcherâbut one that enables her to act on her newfound understanding, an opportunity that Marcher never finds before itâs too late. Maybe she realizes that her fatalism has been causing her to miss out on really, truly embracing the life that she and Jamie have been forging together, thus echoing the showâs earlier points about how unresolved trauma can impede our cultivation of meaningful relationships. Maybe she realizes that her life with Jamie has been passing her by while sheâs remained so convinced that Viola will claim that life at any moment. Maybe she comes to understand that her perpetual sense of dread has been hurting Jamieâthat Jamie needs her in the same ways that she needs Jamie, but that Daniâs ever-present sense of doom has been preventing her from providing for those needs. And maybe this leads to a re-framing of the âyou, me, us,â conceit, with a scene in which Dani acknowledges the extent to which her fatalism has been dictating their lives; in light of this acknowledgement, she and Jamie resolveâtogetherâto continue supporting each other as they navigate Violaâs lasting influences on their lives.
By making this suggestion, I once again do not want to seem like Iâm advocating that âDani should fight back against Violaâ (or, in other words, that âDani should fight harder to win the battle against her mental illnessâ). But I do want to direct us back to a point that I raised at the very beginning: grieving, traumatized, and mentally ill folks can, indeed, cause harm to our loved ones. Our grief, trauma, and mental illness donât excuse that fact. But what that means is that we have to take responsibility for our harmful actions. What it absolutely does not mean is that our harms are inevitable or that our loved ones would be better off without us.It means recognizing that we still matter and have value to others, despite the narratives we craft to try to convince ourselves otherwise. It means acknowledging the wounds that fatalistic, âeverybody is better without meâ assumptions can inflict. It means identifying the ways that we can support and care for our loved ones, even through our own struggles with our mental health.
âFighting harder to win the battle against mental illnessâ is a callous and downright incorrect framing of the matter; but there are, nevertheless, intentional steps that we must take to heal from trauma, to receive treatment for our mental illnesses, to care for ourselves, to care for our loved ones. For instanceâŠthe very process of writing this essay incited me to do a lot of reflecting on the self-defeating narratives that I have been telling myself about my mental health and my relationships with others. And that, in turn, incited me to do some course-correcting. I thought about how much I want to work towards healing, however convoluted and intricate that process may be. I thought about how I want to support my family. How I want to foster a robust social support network, such that I feel a genuine sense of community. How I want to be an attentive friend. How, someday, if Iâm fortunate enough to have a girlfriend, I want to be a caring, present, and equal partner to her; I want to emotionally nourish her through lifeâs trials and turmoil, not just expect her to provide that emotional nourishment for me. I started writing this essay in August; and since then, because of it, Iâve held myself accountable by reaching out to friends, spending time with them, trying to support them. Iâve also managed to get myself, finally, to start therapy. And my therapist is already helping me address those self-defeating narratives that have led me to believe that Iâm just a burden on my friends. So, yâknow, Iâm workinâ on it.
But it ainât pretty. And it also ainât a linear upward trajectory of consistent improvement. Itâs messy. Sometimes, frankly, itâs real ugly.
It could be for Dani, too.
Even with her decision to accept the certainties and uncertainties of Violaâs intrusive presence in her life, to live her life as best she can in the face of it all, perhaps Dani still struggles from day to day. Perhaps some days are better than others. Perhaps Viola, as I suggested earlier, begins finding some modicum of peace through her possession of Dani; nonetheless, her rage and disquiet never entirely subside, and they still periodically overtake Dani. Perhaps Dani improves, only to then backslide, only to then find ways to stabilize once again. In this way, the show couldâve more precisely portrayed the muddled, tumultuous lastingness of grief and trauma throughout a lifetimeâwithout concluding that struggle with a valorized suicide.
Such portrayals are not unprecedented in horror. As I contemplated this ending possibility, I couldnât help but think of The Babadook (2014), another piece of horror media whose monster carries allegorical import as a representation of the endurance and obtrusion of unresolved trauma. The titular monster doesnât disappear at the filmâs end; Sam emphasizes, in fact, that âyou canât get rid of the Babadook.â And so, even after Amelia has confronted the Babadook and locked him in the basement of the familyâs home, he continues to lurk there, still aggressive and threatening to overcome her, but able to be pacified with a bowlful of worms. Like loss and trauma, the Babadook can never be totally ignored or dispelled, only assuaged with necessary, recurrent attention and feedings.
Bly could have easily done something similar with Viola. Perhaps, in the same way that Amelia has to regularly provide the Babadook with an offering of worms, Dani must also âfeedâ Viola to soothe her rage. What might those feedings look like? What might they consist of? Perhaps Viola draws Dani back to Bly Manor, insisting on revisiting those same sites that have held implacable sway over her for centuries. Perhaps these visits are what permit Dani to gradually learn about Viola: who she was, what she has become, why she has tarried between life and death for so long. Perhaps Dani also learns that these âfeedingsâ agitate Viola for a while, stirring her into fresh furorâbut that, in their wake, Viola also settles more deeply and for longer periods. Perhaps they necessitate that Dani and Jamie both directly confront their own traumas, bring them to the surface, attend to them. Perhaps, together, they learn how to navigate their traumas in productive, mutually supportive ways. Perhaps this is also what quiets Viola over time, even if Dani is never quite sure whether Viola will return to claim her life.
You may be wondering, then, about what happens with the frame narrative in this scenario. If Dani doesnât meet some tragic demise, what happens to the role and significance of grieving in the act of Jamieâs storytelling? Would Jamieâs storytelling even occur? Wouldnât Dani just be at Floraâs wedding, too? Would we miss the emotional gut-punch of the reveal of the narratorâs identity at the end? Â
Perhaps, in this case, the ending removes some of the weight off of the grief theme to instead foreground those troubled deliberations about how to impart traumatic histories (as we covered in the previous scenario). As such, the frame could feature those conflicts between Jamie (and Dani here too this time), Owen, and Henry concerning whether or not to tell Daniâs story to Miles and Flora. Perhaps Dani decides not to attend the wedding, wary of contributing to this conflict at the scene of what should be a joyous occasion for Flora; perhaps she feels like she canât even face the children. And then, without Dani there, perhaps an overwrought Jamie jumps into the story when the opportunity presents itselfâwhether impulsively or premeditatedly.
OrâŠPerhaps the show couldâve just scrapped the frame at Floraâs wedding and couldâve done something else instead. What might that be? I have no idea! Skyâs the limit.
At any rate, even with these changes, it wouldâve still been possible to have the show conclude in a sentimental, tear-jerking way (which seems to be Flanaganâs preference). Perhaps Jamieâs storytelling does spark the return of the childrenâs memories. Perhaps, as they begin to remember, they reach out to Dani and Jamie, wanting to connect with them, wanting especially to see Dani again. And then, perhaps, the show couldâve ended with a scene of Miles and Flora finally reuniting with Daniâemotional, sweet, and memorable, no valorized suicide or exploitation of queer tragedy needed.
Conclusion
In my writing of this essayâand over the course of the Bly Manor and Hill House rewatches that it inspiredâIâve been finding myself also doing a great deal of reflection about the possibilities and purposes of horror media. Iâve been thinking, in particular, about the potential for the horror genre to provide contained settings in which we can face and explore our deepest fears and traumas in (relatively) safe, controlled ways. Honestly, I think that this is part of why I enjoy Flanaganâs work so much (even if it also enrages me at the same time). If youâve read this far, youâll have seen just how profoundly I relate to so much of the subject matter of The Haunting of Bly Manor. It has been extremely meaningful and valuable for me to encounter the showâs depictions of topics like familial trauma, grief, loss, compulsory heterosexuality, caregiving for aging parents, so on, all of which bear so heavily on my own existence. Bly Manor produced opportunities for me to excavate and dig deeply into the worst experiences of and feelings about my life: to look at them, understand them, and give voice to them, when Iâm otherwise inclined to bury them into inconspicuous docility.
Even so, the show does not handle these relatable topics as well as it could have. Flanagan and the many contributors to this horror anthology canât just preach at us about the responsibilities of storytellers; they, too, have responsibilities as storytellers in the communication of these delicate, sensitive, weighty human experiences. And so, to reinforce a point that I made earlier, this is why Iâve written this extensive critique. Itâs not because I revile the show and want to condemn itâitâs because I cherish Bly Manor immensely. Itâs because I wanted more out of it. Itâs because I want to hold it and its creators accountable. Itâs because I want folks to think more critically about it (especially after how close I came to unreflectively accepting its messages in my own initial reception of it).
Television usually doesnât get me this way. Itâs been a long time since I was this emotionally attached to a show. So this essay has been my attempt to honor Bly with a careful, meticulous treatment. I appreciate all of the reflection and self-work that it has inspired me to undertake. Iâve wanted to pay my respects in the best way I know how: with close, thorough analysis.
If youâve read all this mess, thanks for taking the time to do so. I hope that youâve been able to get something out of it, too.
Representation matters, yâall.
The end.



















