Jocelyn Fairchild and Valentine Morgenstern are basically the same person, just in two different flavors.
This post by balladofbells dives deeper into the actual similarities between the two characters and does a better job than I can hope to in explaining their shared traits, so give it a read if you havenât already.
(Iâll put some more of my thoughts about this under the cut if anyone is interested)
I think itâs fascinating to think about how Valentine and Jocelynâs personalities are incredibly alike, and to consider how it was their different upbringings and divergent moral alignments that significantly impact where each of their stories end up going. It showcases how personality traits donât define a person, their choices do. It also gives a unique opportunity to further understand characters who are otherwise pretty locked in to their archetypical roles in the Mortal Instruments series- Valentine as âThe Villainâ and Jocelyn as âThe Motherâ. By taking Jocelynâs positive traits and mapping them onto Valentine, itâs easier to understand why he was so beloved in the Circle era. Likewise, by taking Valentineâs toxic tendencies and mapping them onto Jocelyn, she becomes more complex as an individual than the Lily Potter-esque âangelic badass mother who sacrificed everything for her childâ character. (Granted, she was more complex than this in TMI, and there are plenty of people out there who donât like Jocelyn- whereas disliking Lily Potter would be a pretty hot take to say the least. But the basic threads are there- Jocelynâs main role is as Claryâs beloved mother who did the most to keep her child safe from the bad guy.)
One example of what this kind of trait swapping can do for the story is how it is able to reconcile the seemingly conflicting narratives about how Jocelyn and Valentineâs association with one another began.
For instance, both times he shares his story (first in City of Bones and then again later in Who the Wolf Loves) Luke highlights an initial dislike and tension between the two of them that seemed to spring up almost immediately.
-City of Bones, pg 518
-Better in Black, pg 130
This isnât solely a Jocelyn problem. Two separate places in WtWL, there are allusions that the dislike was at least somewhat mutual (although I believe the mutual attraction already existed as well, even if both hid it well.)
-Better in Black, pg 130
-Better in Black, pg 136
But all this is contradicted by Jocelynâs story in City of Glass, where she essentially says she was infatuated with Valentine from the very beginning- when she was âClaryâs ageâ- which wouldâve been when she was 16.
-City of Glass, pg 504
Typically, Iâm inclined to trust Jocelynâs report a bit less simply because of how much this woman rewrites history in her own mind in order to ease her own cognitive dissonance (I mean, this is the Queen of âwe arenât lying to Clary, nothing weâve told her is technically untrue, itâs just not⊠the whole truth.â đ) However, this feels like a strange thing to reconfigure⊠in hindsight, wouldnât she be eager to claim a time when she didnât like Valentine? It would be easy to point to this and say that she always knew something was off, but out of the kindness of her heart she gave him a chance when he was miserable and grieving and he took advantage of her. But she doesnât do that at all- in fact, she completely neglects to mention the animosity that Luke was so sure lay between them. So while there is plenty in Jocelynâs story that raises my eyebrows, I choose to believe that this piece of information is more or less correct.
This is interesting on a couple of levels, but it does raise the question about why these tales are so different. However, if we look at Jocelyn and Valentine as being really similar people at their core, I think it âma(kes) a terrible sort of sense already.â (Better in Black, pg 138)
It is only Luke who tells about the friction between Jocelyn and Valentine. He was an outside observer and can only report on their actions and whatever else they may have told him. And if WtWL establishes anything, itâs that these three constantly lied to each other (and everyone else) about⊠a lot of things, actually, but especially about their emotions. Luke lies to Jocelyn about his feelings for her, he tries to lie to Valentine about the same thing (until Valentine pries it out of him), he lies to both of them that their marriage doesnât bother him. Jocelyn lies to Luke about the depth of her regard for him, she lies to Valentine and pretends animosity towards him rather than admiration⊠and we donât even need to start on Valentineâs lies to the two of them. So just because Luke thinks that Jocelyn hated Valentine in the beginning, it doesnât necessarily make it true- it just means she acted like she did.
Jocelyn self-reports instant attraction to Valentine, but that doesnât mean she was showing that to anyone. But why would Jocelyn go so far in the other direction with her actions if in reality she already liked Valentine? In her story she highlights three reasons that could have guided her behavior.
1) She admits she didnât think she had a chance with him.
2) She says that everyone at school loved him.
3) He was close with Luke, who was her closest friend. (She doesnât explicitly talk about this in her story, but itâs an important factor to consider nonetheless.)
If we examine each of these three points and imagine how Valentine wouldâve perceived them if he had been in her shoes, we can see why Jocelyn may have acted like she was uninterested or even disgusted with Valentine while secretly feeling admiration or even attraction towards him.
âShe didnât think she had a chance with himâ
If Valentine felt he didnât have a chance with someone, what would he do? Itâs a bit hard to imagine because Valentine had such an outsized ego, but my best guess is that he would belittle the person, put them down, and make it seem like they werenât worthy of his time or attention. All of this would create an illusion that he held all the power and control. The relationship is only not occurring because he doesnât want it to occur, not because that person is out of his league. What a ridiculous notion.
This connects to the idea of the psychological need for competency. There is a theory that states that all humans have psychological needs as well as physical ones. These needs have been identified as the need for competency, autonomy, and relatedness- and it can mess people up badly when these needs are thwarted or not met. Threats to these needs are triggered by different things for different people, and every individual is unique in how high or low their needs are in each category, but when we register a threat to one of these needs, our actions change accordingly.
I think both Valentine and Jocelyn had relatively high competency needs- they got very ashamed and frustrated if they felt they failed in an area or were too reliant on someone else. So in this case, where Jocelyn feels there are too many others vying for Valentineâs attention and that he probably wouldnât choose her anyway, she decides to not even try in the first place. This echoes Lukeâs own decision not to pursue Jocelyn out of fear of rejection, although that comes from an entirely different (though no less fucked up) psychological place for him.
For Jocelyn, if she doesnât try, she canât fail- but sheâs going to come up with reasons and lies to tell herself about why Valentine was never even that great in the first place. âHeâs actually annoying, heâs arrogant, heâs this, heâs thatâŠâ and if you repeat something to yourself enough, you can start to believe it. Now she doesnât have to admit that sheâs holding back from him because sheâs too scared of failure- no, no, no, sheâs holding back because she doesnât even like Valentine, ew, gross.
âEveryone at school loved himâ
If Valentine moved into a space where everyone was fawning over somebody else, (even someone whom he thought was admirable and deserved the attention) I doubt he wouldâve been content with simply joining the ranks of adoring followers. Valentine feels born to lead, not to follow. He might not be openly antagonistic, and he may even give lip service to respecting such a person- but he would certainly view them as a rival and his pride wouldnât allow him to mix his group with theirs.
Jocelyn has her pride too, even if it takes a less overt form than Valentineâs blatant self-confidence. Even if she would never admit it to herself, I think Jocelyn reacts similarly to Valentine and his well-established place at the top of the schoolâs social food chain. The comparisons to both Jocelyn and Valentine being âangelicâ and âon a different planeâ are frequent- a lot of times from Lukeâs POV, but both Valentine and Jocelyn talk about the other this way as well. They obviously drew the eye and instantly had devoted friends/fans. In a way, they seem to occupy the exact same social niche- an apex predator spot thatâs only really big enough for one. Jocelyn may not have had specific aims to be the most popular girl in school, but it does read as false modesty to me when she claims to be ânothing special.â Her assertions that she wasnât even that popular seem almost insulting when read next to Lukeâs story about his continual social struggle and isolation. Maybe, like Valentine, she felt that she didnât have too many people she could genuinely bare her soul to- but WtWL makes it decently clear she wasnât lacking in people to hang out with, and they just so happened to be people (like Madeline Bellefluer) who werenât âinâ with Valentineâs crowd.
She may not have been a Regina George type of popular in the sense that she wanted people scraping and bowing to her, but she does seem to like the idea of being Barbie popular- she thrived off of being at the center of a network of friends and relationships. In fact, she says that one of her favorite things about the Circle was how she got to be the First Lady in the social center of everyone and everything. So Valentineâs magnetism wasnât lost on her⊠in fact, she recognized it in the mirror. Maybe it made her uncomfortable to see this reflection of herself (we often attack others more viciously for having traits we despise or fear in ourselves) or maybe she realized that some of the people she would have liked as friends were in Valentineâs Circle instead (Luke, Maryse, etc) because letâs face it, without him most of them wouldâve likely gravitated to her. Either way, it wasnât primed to earn Valentine a warm response from her, and she decided she would rather hang with the smaller crowd that didnât mesh with Valentine rather than follow in his wake.
âValentine was close with Lukeâ
This is an interesting one, but one I find telling all the same. I do think Jocelyn was jealous of how close Valentine was with Luke. In WtWL Luke talks a lot about how he held back the depth of his romantic feelings for Jocelyn, to the point where she (allegedly) didnât know they existed, but the way he describes how Jocelyn interacted with him back then seems like he was equally oblivious to how she felt for him. I agree with him that it wasnât overtly romantic, but her actions seem like she certainly valued him as more than a friend. I will probably make a more focused post about this later, but it was screaming parabatai vibes to me- at least that Jocelyn wouldâve wanted to ask Luke to be her parabatai if Valentine hadnât been a factor. And if that was the case, then how could she fully vibe with Valentine when he is occupying the spot in her best friendâs life that she wishes she had? If Luke had been dating Jocelyn, would Valentine have been chill with it or would he have been passive aggressive and jealous? I think we all know the answer. In fact, Luke wasnât even dating Jocelyn and we still get to see Valentineâs manipulative attempts to dissuade him from pursuing her further.
-Better in Black, pg 135
Jocelyn did a similar thing in her reaction to the whole Circle when she first met them. Luke first went to her to apologize for their year of distance, and during this meeting she managed to radiate so much disinterest towards his new friendship with Valentine that it was apparently palpable to Luke- I mean, that level of âI donât careâ takes effort to project.
-Better in Black, pg 130
He then took her to lunch, excited to introduce her to his new friends, and he described it thusly:
-Better in Black, pg 130
He interpreted this in hindsight as some moral superiority on Jocelynâs part- that she was unwilling to stoop to their level and somehow saw them all for the thing they hadnât even become yet. And Iâm sure they did have some mean-spirited humor as a group, but the fact that Luke wasnât aware of it until facing Jocelynâs disapproval makes me think it wasnât an unusual level of gossip or prank based levity for a group of teenagers. I mean, we all love the TMI gang and their humor often follows along this same track. Jocelynâs condemnation of Lukeâs new group of friends seems less about her sensing something actually wrong with them and more about being displeased that he had a group of friends with no obvious place for her (that she would be willing to occupy.) After all, she seemed able to mesh with all these same people easily enough once she started dating Valentine, so maybe thatâs enough proof that it was never really about them at all.
But all of this cognitive dissonance about Valentine essentially occupying her spot (both socially and with Luke) melted away after Valentine became Lukeâs parabatai and his father died. This finally connects to the beginning of my post claiming that they are the same person but different flavors- because for all their similarities, Valentine and Jocelyn are still unique individuals with some key differences between them.
Once Valentine actually becomes Lukeâs parabatai, Jocelyn backs down and sort of accepts that sheâs lost. She lets go of some of the tension and switches to an âIâm happy if Lukeâs happyâ mindset, much like how Luke later insists that he is happy with Valentine and Jocelynâs marriage, because he doesnât have much of a choice if he still wants a relationship with them both. This is something Valentine would never have done.
As for Valentine losing his father, he turns to her for solace, citing that she can understand his pain since she recently lost her brother. Many characters talk about Jocelynâs kindness and compassion, and it shows through here. She wasnât going to turn Valentine away when he was vulnerable (especially when deep down, she did like him.) Now heâs more human, more down-to-earth, more attainable⊠and whatâs more, heâs showing that heâs interested in her. Thereâs no risk of her competency need being thwarted anymore- if she wants him, she has him. As the Queen to his King, she is able to sit beside him in the group as an equal, not a follower, and remain close and connected to all the people she wants to be close and connected with. I donât think it was manipulative or calculated on her part, it was just part of who Jocelyn was as a person- someone who was willing to rewrite the story in her own head when she had a chance to end up in a situation that made her happier. To Luke it may have seemed like the change up of the century, but as he states in WtWL: âit made a terrible sort of senseâŠâ because of course it did.
-Better in Black, pg 138
This was Jocelynâs fairytale ending in a lot of ways. Sometimes I think people get a little lost in the Lucelyn endgame and forget that. I think Jocelyn herself wants to forget that too, and pretends to herself that she always truly loved Luke over Valentine but was just too young and blind to see it. But at her core, Jocelyn was a person who was always going to fall for Valentine as he was back then- a Valentine she has forced herself to forget, but a Valentine Luke still remembers. A Valentine she doesnât want to believe ever existed, because that Valentine looks a little too similar to her own reflection for comfort. A Valentine Luke staunchly defends the existence of, since he loves Jocelyn because of those traits, not in spite of them- thatâs why he loved Valentine too, and he doesnât let time erase that.
And now weâve come full circle (ha!) to the beginning of this post. Jocelynâs choices are ultimately what makes her so different from Valentine. Valentines choices are what made him so evil. Itâs a powerful lesson: personality traits, whether or not they are socially desirable, whether or not they are perceived as strengths or flaws, are not tied to the moral fiber of an individual. And even though Jocelyn still feels the need to run from the parts of herself that remind her of the monster she fell in love with, I do hope one day she can stop, look in the mirror, and think: âI built this life, and that makes me good. I loved him for what he was, and I couldâve kept loving him if he had chosen better things, but he didnât. I made better choices and learned from my mistakes, and chose to be more than he ever could become.â Because yes girl. You really did. And I love that for my complicated, messy, selfish, prideful, artistic, compassionate, determined, fierce, beautiful, intelligent, and courageous queen.












