Reading Mockingjay as an adult is extra devastating because. Of course the plucky teenager and her ragtag friends aren't going to sneak into a government building to kill the president with a bow and arrow. That's absolutely ridiculous. It's the kind of thing that's only possible in the kind of propaganda that Coin developed. But she's so good at it that in some ways she tricks the reader into thinking that's the kind of story this is, too--even after 3 books reminding us that pretty much everything that Katniss does the second she volunteers is manipulated by adults pulling strings to make propaganda in some form or another.
A whole childhood spent drawing Percy Jackson and I never drew this. Feels like I missed a rite of passage somehow, luckily the pjo crowd is still going strongđ±
BTW this is a future problem but I donât want to see any of it-
No one better do to Percabeth what some people in the Flash fandom tried doing to Westallen. Percabeth is endgame. They always have been and they always will be both in the source material and they will be in the show. If I see anyone pulling some snowberry bullshit out of theyâre ass with Rachel or Calypso or whoever else the fandom decides to make some kind of de facto white female lead because theyâre racist Iâm gonna fucking scream.
Percabeth is the definition of a slowburn friends to lovers ship and if anyone even attempts to argue against it in light of the casting indisputably racist. I saw this happen in the Flash when it took a few seasons for Barry and Iris to get together and no matter how much those people claimed it wasnât about race it clearly was.
Weâre not doing that.
Leah and Walker are Annabeth and Percy. And Percabeth will be endgame.
you know what would have been a real power move? if rick had kept the whole âwords have meaningâ thing going. with the gods being all over the place in hoo, it would be even more important not to say their names in order not to attract their erratic energy
also the ânumbers have meaningâ thing. the âonly three people may go on a questâ rule. the only time it comes into play is when the group is too big in ttc, and sure enough, bianca and zoe die. iâm pretty sure they even say that the number five is weird at one point.
the prophecy of the seven being the prophecy of the seven should have been an indication that, from the beginning, it was a near impossible quest. a suicidal mission. it should have been an indication of how, even after the gods pledge to try to be better to their kids, they donât have any problems with a prophecy that should kill four out of seven demigods, if the number three were to be respected.Â
this tension builds throughout hoo. theyâre trying to pull off this intercontinental stunt with no help, feeling more abandoned than ever, and they canât even shit talk their unfairness in fear of retaliation for saying their name. this all culminates in the climax of the last book, when for the first time in heroes of olympus we hear demigods say a godâs name not in whispers, but at the top of their lungs: itâs when jason and percy march into battle together, having managed not to kill each other, mending the rivalry not only between jupiter and poseidon (if briefly) but also between camp jupiter and camp half blood. so they call out their parents because itâs finally safe. and thatâs how the battle against gaea is won - demigods and gods seeing eye to eye for once, fighting a battle bigger than their flaws
Because I have been talking about this for months and a lot of other people have too, but itâs disjointed. I want to compile it, since his mischaracterization breaks my heart and makes me want to scream with rage. Please add if you think of something I didnât! Iâm also starting the tag â#percy jackson defense squadâ, so feel free to start dumping your salt and rage and theories and ideas in there because I wanna hear them!
Trigger warnings for mentions of suicidal thoughts, sexual abuse, child abuse, and domestic violence.
Percy had a really, really rough childhood.
Percy was abused. A lot of people donât realize the gravity of this maybe âcause we were young when we read it and itâs written with sarcasm, and it has a Cinderella-story type vibe (not that Cinderella wasnât also abused, but my point is, childrenâs fiction commonly glosses over abuse). BUT LISTEN. Gabe is an alcoholic who regularly drinks in front of Percy (who is twelve), Gabe verbally demeans Percyâs mother right in front of him, Gabe bullies Percy into funding his gambling, dumps beer bottles and cigar ashes all over Percyâs room (HEâS FUCKING TWELVE), Gabe physically and probably sexually abused Sally for years, Percy literally says that he would rather live on the streets or join the military than live with Gabe, Gabe literally turned THE ENTIRE NATION against Percy and branded a completely innocent child as a fugitive just for fucking money and media attention.
Percy hates Gabe so much that he barely even sees him as a human being. He uses the three-fingered claw that is used TO WARD OFF IMMORTAL FORCES OF EVIL THAT COME FROM THE DEPTHS OF TARTARUS against Gabe (AND IT WORKS) because that is how much Gabe has traumatized him. Gabe makes him so angry and vengeful that at the age of twelve, Percy strategically plans to murder him (Percyâs never killed a human being before or since).
Percy was physically abused. He instinctively reaches for Riptide when he encounters Gabe at the end of the Lightning Thief, which is an instinct that he has when he feels physically threatened. And thereâs this line about the gambling money from the beginning, âHe called that our âguy secret.â Meaning, if I told my mom, he would punch my lights out.â This is written with heavy sarcasm, but I got news for you: itâs a kids series, and this is too disturbing to just write flat out, but he is speaking literally.
@lililibird wrote a gorgeous post about how Percy was abused here
Percy also comes from a relatively poor background:Â âWe were always struggling with money. Between my momâs night classes and my private school tuition, we could never afford to do special stuff like shop for a skateboard.â-Sea of Monsters. He hates kids who throw their money around:Â âThey were juvenile delinquents, like me, but they were rich juvenile delinquents.â-Lightning Thief. Heâs really insecure about it, too: âWhat I didnât tell them was that Iâd have to get a summer job walking dogs or selling magazine subscriptions, and spend my free time worrying about where Iâd go to school in the fall.â He feels like an outsider because of it: âMy heart sank. Grover had a summer home. Iâd never considered that his family might be as rich as the others at Yancy.â
Percy was an outcast growing up, and never had a lot of friends. The education system is stacked against him because of his learning disabilities, and he probably faced a lot of ableism growing up. He thinks his neurodiversity makes him stupid and expects teachers and students to think so as well. When Chiron (as Mr. Brunner) tries to tell him that heâs a special kid, he takes it as an insult because heâs used to being singled out for his disabilities, and tears up, saying, âThanks a lot, sir, for reminding me.â -Lightning Thief
Percy also grew up thinking his father didnât want him (which really isnât all that untrue). When he first meets Poseidon, his emotions are absolutely hearbreaking: âWrongdoing. A lump welled up in my throat. Was that all I was? A wrongdoing? The result of a godâs mistake?â
His authority issues and his heavy use of sarcasm are a direct result from his childhood. Sarcasm is a coping mechanism that he uses to avoid thinking of himself as a victim. Authority issues stem from growing up under this domineering stepfather, and also due to his birth father leaving him and his mother. This is why Percy hates Dionysus so intensely: Dionysus reminds him disturbingly of Gabe. Itâs why heâs so conflicted about helping the gods. It stays with him for all the books.
@jason-gracefully wrote a post here about how this abuse has a lasting impact on Percy that is really insightful
Percy thinks so badly of himself.
Percy literally hates himself. He doesnât believe heâs a half-blood because he thinks heâs such a failure. He compares himself to Gabe because he feels so guilty, âbetween the two of us, we make my momâs life pretty hard.â Heâs constantly thinking stuff like, âWhat was so great about me? A dyslexic, hyperactive boy with a D+ report card, kicked out of school for the sixth time in six years.â -Lightning Thief
This self-hatred never fucking goes away, either, not even as Percy starts to pull of some pretty impressive shit?
âBut Percy didnât feel powerful. The more heroic stuff he did, the more he realized how limited he was. He felt like a fraud. Iâm not as great as you think, he wanted to warn his friends. His failures, like tonight, seemed to prove it. Maybe thatâs why heâd started to fear suffocation. It wasnât so much drowning in the earth or the sea, but the feeling that he was sinking in too many expectations, literally getting in over his head.â -Mark of Athena
He never thinks of himself as a hero and he hates the spotlight and gets embarrassed being the center of attention and is bad at taking compliments.
Most of his internal monologue is really pessimistic and heâs constantly remarking that he said or did something stupid (literally too many examples to cite, but you canât get very far without seeing it if you pick up a pjo book).
All Percy ever wanted was to be normal.
Thatâs it. Thatâs all.
Heâs miserable after Poseidon claims him because heâs finally found a place to fit in and no, of course not, heâs the first son of Poseidon to be born in 70 years, Zeus is trying to kill him and thereâs a prophecy about how heâs going to decide the fate of the world.
He keeps going back into the mortal world even though itâs dangerous, because he just wants to be normal.
He starts spending time with Rachel between Battle of the Labyrinth and Last Olympian because he mentions that he needs to remind himself the mortal world is still out there, and he just needs a break.
He turns down godhood, because he just wants to grow up. (people make this about Annabeth, and sheâs part of it, but far from the only reason. The significance of this as far as percabeth goes is that he decided that he wanted her to be a part of his future, but there was literally no way that Percy would have accepted godhood, Annabeth or no Annabeth.)
He literally starts crying when he gets to Camp Jupiter and realizes that, yet again, heâll be an outcast, despite not even remembering his past. Like, this need to be accepted and find a home runs so deep that it transcends memory.
So OF COURSE he starts crying again when he sees New Rome, because heâs been searching for a safe home his entire life? Itâs everything heâs ever wanted?
NOBODY WILL JUST LET HIM BE NORMAL. JUST LET HIM LIVE.
Percy. Cannot. Forgive himself. For. Anything.
âNot forgiving himself for his mistakes was one of Percyâs biggest talents.â -Mark of Athena.
He feels guilty about the sacrifices his mom made for him, and is unable to accept that she did it because she loved him.
He blames himself for Biancaâs death and actually says, âIt shouldâve been me.â Every time he looks at Nico he thinks of how he failed both of them and he spends the entire next book trying to make up for that.
He wiped Bobâs memory because Bob was trying to kill him, and he was weak and injured and desperate to get away, so he acted in self-defense, but still feels ashamed and furious at himself for doing it: âHeâd never felt so low and dishonorable, so unworthy of having a friend.â And then heâs choking on poison in the heart of Tartarus, thinking itâs his own fault forâŠ. for not visiting a Titan who tried to kill him? (would you go visit someone who attempted to murder you? i wouldnât.)
BOB TRIED TO KILL HIM. HE WAS TRYING TO RUN PERCY THROUGH. WITH A SPEAR. AND ITâS HIS OWN GODDAMN FAULT THAT HE GOT TOSSED INTO THE LETHE. Not to mention that Percy was already dying from a really bad shoulder wound, and acted in self defense the only way he had available to him, since he was too injured to fight. Percy barely escaped with his life. Percyâs not a bad person at all for not visiting Bob, but he thinks he is, and you can hell bet heâs never going to get over that, especially after Bobâs sacrifice at the end of the book.
He blames himself for leaving Calypso as well? As though there was anything wrong with the way he treated her? As though they didnât only know each other for two weeks? As though he wasnât fourteen and should not have been expected to spend the rest of his life pining for her? As though youâre a bad person if you donât fall in love with someone whoâs in love with you? As though he didnât offer to come back and Calyspo told him not to try? As though he didnât speak her name in the throne room of Olympus, as though he didnât look Zeus in the eye and remember the name of Calypso, the poor girl cursed to solitude by the Fates who saved his life? As though Calypso wasnât his biggest, What if?
I pray that Leo and Calypso arenât endgame because otherwise heâs going to have to put up with that guilt for the rest of his life and itâs completely unwarranted.
ââYou wouldâve done the same for me.â It was true. I guess we both knew it. Still, I felt like somebody was poking my heart with a cold metal rod.â -Last Olympian. Like listen, he straight up admits that he also would have taken a knife for her, but he still canât accept that Annabeth took one for him.
whatever you do donât think about percy mourning all the campers he couldnât save whatever you do donât think about himself shaking himself awake in the middle of the night crying because he canât stop seeing the faces of all the kids who died in the war, whatever you do donât think about him starting his life and thinking every time he does something new that there are kids who will never get this chance because he couldnât save them, donât think about him watching their shrouds burn and wishing it was him
Percy is suicidal and it goes completely unresolved.
âI felt like drowning myself. The only problem: I was immune to drowning.â -The Lightning Thief
âThe last thing I remembered was sinking in a burning sea⊠and wishing I were able to drown.â -The Sea of Monsters
âHe couldnât blame anyone else for his troubles. Not the gods. Not Bob. Not even Calypso, the girl heâd left alone on that island.â -The House of Hades. Listen to me. Heâs dying in Tartarus alone after sacrificing years of his life to trying to save the world and being a good person, and he thinks he deserves it. HE THINKS HE DESERVES IT.
âThing is, as I was choking just now, I kept thinking: this is payback for Akhlys. The Fates are letting me die the same way I tried to kill that goddess. And⊠honestly, a part of me felt I deserved it.â A PART OF ME FELT I DESERVED IT. Like. Percy. You need help. You canât just⊠thatâs so unhealthy.
Percy is afraid of himself.
âI hadnât been in control of myself in that mountain. Iâd released so much energy Iâd almost vaporized myself, drained all the life out of me. Now I found out Iâd nearly destroyed the Northwest U.S. and almost woken the most horrible monster ever imprisoned by the gods. Maybe I was too dangerous. Maybe it was safer for my friends to think I was dead.â -Battle of the Labyrinth. MAYBE I WAS TOO DANGEROUS. MAYBE IT WAS SAFER FOR MY FRIENDS TO THINK I WAS DEAD.
This also goes hand in hand with being suicidal, because thinking âmaybe everything would be better if I was deadâ is definitely going to get you to the point where you say âmaybe Iâll just do it myself.â
âMy expression in the picture was fierceâdisturbing, evenâso it was hard to tell if I was the good guy or the bad guy, but Rachel said Iâd looked just like that after the battle.â -Last Olympian
âI might have even laughed once or twiceâa crazy laugh that scared me as much as it did my enemies.â -Last Olympian
And like, of course thereâs the part with Akhlys, and Iâm sure I donât have to explain how he spends the entirety of the next book trying to apologize for losing control just that one time because 1. he scared himself, 2. heâll never forgive himself for scaring Annabeth and hurting Akhlys that much, 3. and he also thinks this means he deserves to die, and that is just such a loaded character arc that Iâm not even sure which heading to put it under, but Iâm putting it under here because I think the linchpin in that scene is that Percy (and Annabeth) really didnât realize that he was capable of something like that. Itâs a really dark scene, and he disturbed himself (and Annabeth, which also puts a wedge in their relationship), and it causes really serious repercussions. Dude, that needs to be resolved.
Percy also like, really has a dark side and a serious temper, which is where a lot of this fear of himself comes from, but @ofswordsandpens already covered that beautifully here.
Other people are afraid of Percy.
âSomething changed in Phobosâs expression. He looked surprised, maybe even nervous. âThe son of Poseidon? The one who made Dad angry?ââ -Demigod Files (Percy Jackson and the Stolen Chariot)
âI couldnât kill him. He was immortal. But you wouldnât have known that from his expression. The fear god looked afraid.â -Demigod Files (Percy Jackson and the Stolen Chariot)
âBelieve me, revenge is coming. One of these days, heâs going to be sorry. Why am I waiting? Just strategy. Biding my time and waiting for the right moment to strike. I am not scared, okay? Anybody says different, Iâll rearrange their dental work.â -Demigod Files (Interview with Clarisse LaRue, Daughter of Ares)
âLeoâs legs trembled. The way Percy looked at him made him feel the same as when Jason summoned lightning. Leoâs skin tingled, and every instinct in his body screamed, Duck!â -Mark of Athena.This description is so Extra itâs almost funny like I canât believe this is actually a canon line sdkfasdjk;sadf
âPiper guessed that Percy hadnât meant to cause so much damage, but his glowering expression made her want to leave the ship as soon as possible.â -Blood of Olympus.
âSince sheâd come back from Tartarus, Annabeth had told Piper about a lot of scary things that had happened down there. At the top of her list: Percy controlling a tide of poison and suffocating the goddess Akhlys.â -Blood of Olympus. AT THE TOP OF HER LIST. AT THE TOP OF HER LIST.
Annabeth then goes on to cry about how she canât get his expression out of her head, and says sheâs angry at him for frightening her.
âWhat would Percy be like if he wanted to act scary?â -Blood of Olympus. (we are still talking about the poison here. yes, still.)
ââShe died too easily, considering how much torture she put you through. She deserved worse.â Annabeth couldnât argue with that, but the hard edge in Percyâs voice made her unsettled. Sheâd never seen someone get so angry or vengeful on her behalf. It almost made her glad Arachne had died quickly.â -House of Hades. I mean, I also thought Arachneâs death was stupid so I donât blame him, but.
âEverybody was looking at meâwith concern, or pity, or maybe a little fear.â -Last Olympian
âSuddenly I realized that despite her angry attitude, she was afraid of me. She probably thought I was going to fight her for control of the river, and she was worried she would lose.â -Battle of the Labyrinth
ââLuke feared you,â the Titanâs voice said. âHis jealously and hatred have been powerful tools. It has kept him obedient. For that I thank you.ââ -Battle of the Labyrinth
â I grabbed him by the shirt, which seriously wasnât like me, but the stupid old goat was making me mad.â -Last Olympian. This is when he literally frightens Leneus so bad that he runs away into the woods.
âHades swallowed. âNow, Jackson, listen hereâŠâ He was immortal. There was no way I could kill him, but gods can be wounded.â -Last Olympian
âHow was he keeping his cool? The way he talked to Bob left Annabeth awestruck⊠and maybe a little uneasy, too. If Percy had been serious about leaving the choice to Bob, then she didnât like how much he trusted the Titan. If heâd been manipulating Bob into making that choice⊠well, then, Annabeth was stunned that Percy could be so calculating.â -House of Hades. Is she seriously kidding me with this though because how could she be stunned by that⊠which brings me to the next pointâŠ.
Percy is incredibly manipulative, extremely clever, and very resourceful.
Canon doesnât even represent this well, because it says stuff like âtrickery and evasion were Annabethâs tactics,â but Percy uses them constantly.
Most of the time when Percy does something âstupidâ or âimpulsiveâ itâs actually neither of those things, itâs just that he doesnât take the time to explain things to everyone else. He has multilayered plans for how heâs going to get out of a situation, but other characters (and fandom) seem to attribute this to luck.
If Percyâs plans were genuinely stupid and impulsive there is no way he would still be alive. Just think about this realistically, okay. He doesnât get lucky, he just knows what heâs doing.
Percy has a functioning knowledge of Greek mythology that he uses to his advantage constantly, and actually, he directly explains most myths to the reader. For some reason (?) most of fandom thinks heâs clueless. (just kidding, I know why, and @ehlihr explains it here)
Possibly the best example is Procrustes, who, at the age of twelve, Percy successfully swindled into laying down on his own torture device.
Gets into the Underworld on pure manipulation. Bribes Charon with Italian suits and a pay raise. Bribes Cerberus with a toy. Remember that scene where he dramatically stacks drachmas on top of each other right under Charonâs nose? Yeah. This kid could talk his way out of a paper bag, mark my words.
Lies on national television convincingly enough that the reporters take up a collection to buy them plane tickets to New York at the end of the Lightning Thief. And also gives the phone number to Gabeâs store and tells everyone to ask for free appliances.
Figures out Kronosâ plot entirely by himself, which is quite complicated, then breaks it down for the reader, Annabeth, and Grover. I bet you didnât even realize that the reason the plot of the Lightning Thief wasnât hopelessly confusing was because Percy explained it to you.
Percy is the first person to realize that Kronos is waking (aside from Kronosâ forces, of course). He predicts that heâs going to gain a solid form again. He and Annabeth simultaneously reach this conclusion around the same time without discussing it with each other, but Annabeth doesnât anticipate the gravity of the war the way Percy does (and the gods wonât listen to him until literally the end of Titanâs Curse).
In the Sea of Monsters, he guides one of the cannibals into breaking down the locker room door by standing in front of it and dodging out of the way at the last minute, because he needs to get his sword from the locker room.
Withholds the Gray Sisterâs eye until they explain âthe location he seeksâ and even rolls down the window and threatens to throw it into traffic.
That glorious scene where he manipulates Luke into giving himself away by IMâing Mr. D behind Lukeâs back. Possibly my favorite Luke and Percy moment ever.
He also challenges Luke to a fight at the end of Sea of Monsters because he needs a way to buy time so that Clarisse can get the Fleece to Camp Half-Blood, and it works, because he backs Luke into a corner where heâll look weak if he turns down the fight.
Literally sneaks onto a quest. A quest which Zoe Nightshade, a Hunter and tracker, was on, and she didnât even realize he was there until he literally ran up to her and showed himself.
Kills the Nemean Lion by throwing astronaut food from the gift shop in its mouth.
Percy is the one who figures out that Talos has a maintenance hatch that a person could fit inside. Otherwise they would have literally all died.
Convinces Nereus to jump into the water by feigning that heâs afraid of going in water, and then uses his increased strength to tackle him.
Cleans Geryonâs stables with a petrified sea shell.
Figures out how to navigate the Labyrinth.
And one of the greatest fight scenes in all the books (I think so, any way): jumps off Antaeusâ face and grabs the chains of skulls hanging from the arena ceiling, ties them in a knot, hooks Antaeus by his loincloth and suspends him above the ground by a chain of skulls, and then kills him. Can you imagine him crawling through the chains, âlike some kind of deranged monkey.â Like thatâs dark, but itâs also insanely resourceful and clever holy shit.
Percy made a bargain with Gaea using his own place in her creepy ass plan and in the prophecy to manipulate her into saving his life.
Gets the gryphons to stop attacking in Son of Neptune by threatening to stab their eggs.
Herds Polybotes over the boundary line so that Terminus will get angry and attack.
And, of course, the entire scene with Chrysaor is brilliant (and like the most in character moment for percy in all of hoo lmao).
Percy tries so hard to be a good person and he has such a good heart.
Remember after he saves Clarisseâs butt in Sea of Monsters, and once they make it back to land, he feels bad about stealing her quest and making her look bad, and doesnât want her to get into trouble with Ares, so he sends her home with the Fleece alone? Tyson even says: âPercy is niceâ and Annabeth says âPercy is too nice.â And then he never tells anybody about how she totally would have died if not for him and Annabeth because he doesnât want to humiliate her?
And in the Demigod Files, when he encounters Phobos and Deimos with Clarisse and agrees again to keep quiet about it because he doesnât want to humiliate her?
Percy searches for Nico all throughout Battle of The Labyrinth and never stops looking out for him, even when Nico curses him and wishes he was dead and repeatedly screws him over.
He forgives people? Like I know heâs vengeful and I know itâs hard to regain his trust, but he does forgive. He doesnât even think twice about forgiving any of the demigods who fought with Kronos because he understands where theyâre coming from and recognizes that theyâre just kids. He honors Luke and Ethanâs dying requests despite the fact that they both tried to kill him about seven hundred times. He mourns them: ââThey were brainwashed!â I said. âNow theyâre dead and Kronos is still alive. Thatâs supposed to make me feel better?ââ -The Last Olympian. And he completely and immediately backs Clarisse up in saying that Silena was a hero, and refuses to tell anyone that she was a spy. He also forgives Nico who, letâs be honest, is such a little shit in Battle of the Labyrinth.
Every time he realizes that heâs done something wrong he immediately pulls back and modifies his behavior.
Remember the confrontation with the river nymph before cleaning the stables? âShe probably thought I was going to fight her for control of the river, and she was worried she would lose. The thought made me sad. I felt like a bully, a son of Poseidon throwing his weight around.â -Battle of the Labyrinth.
Percy befriends Grover, who is scrawny and gets bullied, and spends all year trying to defend him from the bullies? He even says that heâs lost sleep thinking about how Grover will survive school without him when he gets expelled from Yancy? Literally the reason the confrontation with Ms. Dodds even happens is because Percy was defending Grover.
Percy befriends Tyson, who, as far as he knows, is a homeless teenager with special needs who lives in a cardboard box and smells funny and cries a lot. He meets Tyson at the subway every morning so that Tyson wonât get overwhelmed being by himself. He stands guard outside Tysonâs stall so that Tyson can change in privacy. Like, Percy is so good to Tyson it breaks my heart? And he had no angle at all, he just genuinely likes Tyson and sees him as a friend. And he literally makes himself a social outcast by association; Matt Sloan even tells him, âYou might have friends if you werenât always sticking up for that freak.â And Percy says, âI was pretty much his only friend, which meant he was pretty much my only friend.â
Heâs captain of the other dodgeball team against Matt Sloan because all the other kids who get picked on look to him for protection.
His life is terrible and nothing ever works out the way he wants it to, but instead of being a whiny pissbaby about it he just fuckingâŠ. he just fucking keeps saving the world? He just keeps putting himself back in mortal danger despite hating it more and more each time because⊠because itâs what he has to do? He doesnât take it out on anyone? He just fucking keeps accepting it? And he gets bitter and jaded, but he never stops saving the world.
He literally finds out in Last Olympian that the entire prophecy, this whole time, they were all waiting for his death? Like he was a ticking timebomb, raising him to be slaughtered and lying about it? AND HE NEVER EVEN GETS BITTER? HE DOESNâT TRY TO RUN AWAY OR BLAME ANYONE? hE JUST FUCKING? DOES WHAT HE HAS TO DO?
(wouldnât you be angry about that? even annabeth lied about it to his face for years? wouldnât that feel like a slap to the face? because iâm pretty sure if the girl i loved did that to me i wouldnât be able to accept it and would never look at her the same way? but maybe thatâs just me?)
He snaps into Leader Mode in Last Olympian so quickly itâs amazing. That character development is just⊠gah, itâs so good. People start depending on him without question and nobody even blinks when Chiron addresses him as the leader of the group, because itâs just natural for them to follow him.
This piece by @llttledipper is gorgeous and covers a lot so Iâm not even sure which heading to stick it under, but itâs worth the read.
Percy is really compassionate and a caretaker.
Running with everything mentioned above, of course.
Checks in on Annabeth and makes sure sheâs sleeping and eating.
Comforts Annabeth a lot during the pjo series because like⊠for the brunt of it, heâs really all she has left, especially in Sea of Monsters.
Heâs always very cautious about discussing Luke with her because he doesnât want to upset her (but letâs be honest: he was right and she was wrong about Luke. She was pretty delusional for most of the series and it actually got worse as she got older).
Percy only really yells at Annabeth once. Which is pretty big of him, considering she yells at him practically once a chapter.
Apologizes to Reyna for something he doesnât even remember. His exact words are, âIf I hurt you, Iâm sorry.â
He wants to help Reyna so badly in Son of Neptune because he feels for her. Once, he even opts to leave her alone, because he recognizes that sheâs having a hard time projecting the image of a leader and needs some time to herself.
He goes on the quest in Son of Neptune because he knows Frank is scared and needs help, even though he wants to stay put.
The way he treats Hazel and Frank all throughout Son of Neptune is so sweet and brotherly. Especially the scene when he and Hazel are talking alone in her old house is so sweet, when he tells her that sheâs definitely going to make it out alive, and the scene when he encourages Frank after killing the basilisks.
Heâs constantly encouraging people to chase their dreams, like his motherâs dream to be a writer and Annabethâs dream to be an architect and Groverâs dream to find Pan.
He wants to help Nico so badly, and heâs a total mother hen.
He even takes care of the readers by editing scary and disturbing stuff out! I mean, I know itâs because itâs a kid series and itâs convenient to water it down by having Percy edit stuff out, but narration is important to pay attention to, because Percy is talking directly to the reader, which is the easiest and most obvious way to develop a character. The warning in the beginning has a very âplease save yourselfâ kind of vibe. He admits more than once that heâs not describing something because itâs disturbing: the fresh skulls in Antaeusâ arena, the tortures in the Fields of Punishment, etc.
And, like I said before, really has empathy for Kronosâ kids and genuinely wants to save them from themselves.
Annabethâs quote in Mark of Athena, âPercy has a knack for making good friendsâ is so unbelievably accurate (like 10/10 on that one Annabeth because you definitely get some other stuff pretty wrong lol.)
Percy is actually quite intuitive.
His dreams are the most prophetic of all the demigods that weâve seen.
Knows Luke is bad news right of the bat, but fights it, because he doesnât understand why. (the foreshadowing is so BLATANT itâs embarrassing to reread)
Immediately mistrustful of the gods, for good reason.
Immediately trustful of a lot of good people, like Grover and Chiron and Hazel and Frank and Tyson, even if he canât always explain why.
If Percy doesnât realize people like him, itâs because he canât imagine why, not because heâs unable to pick up on the signs.
I donât know where the idea came from that Percy was clueless that Annabeh liked him? Because he absolutely was not? He knew all through the end of Battle of the Labyrinth and all through Last Olympian, itâs just that it wasnât that simple. They had a lot to work through before they could throw romance into the mix (and I do mean a lot).
Heâs also not oblivious that Annabeth is jealous of Rachel, itâs just that heâs mad about it because he thinks that she doesnât have any right to be.
Heâs not oblivious that Rachel likes him, either, itâs just that heâs not sure how he feels about it so consciously tries to avoid talking about it.
And as far as Nico goes, I mean, the majority of fandom was also oblivious about Nicoâs crush and called it âTHE SICKEST PLOT TWIST EVERâ so what makes yâall think youâve got any room to talk
As for Calypso, when she admits that she loves him, he literally says, âButâŠIâm justâŠI mean, Iâm just me,â so I think that about proves my point.
Percy is angry.
Heâs meant to directly parallel Luke, and thatâs made pretty damn obvious by the end of pjo. And if it wasnât, Percy directly compares himself to Luke later on:
âPercy remembered what Luke Castellan had told him years ago, when Percy had come back from his very first quest: Didnât you realize how useless it all is? All the heroicsâbeing pawns of the Olympians? Percy was almost the same age now as Luke had been then. He could understand how Luke became so spiteful. In the past five years, Percy had been used as a pawn too many times. The Olympians seemed to take turns using him for their schemes. Maybe the gods were better than the Titans, or Gaea, but that didnât make them good or wise. It didnât make Percy like this stupid battle arena.â -Mark of Athena
His anger motivates him most of the time. Percyâs knee jerk response to all of the trauma that heâs been through is to get angry (probably because it keeps him going).
Percy constantly talks about feeling angry, far more often than feeling sad or scared. This is so common that I couldnât even cite one example, because itâs just a theme through all the books. When he gets angry, he kills stuff (like the Minotaur, twice).
It really comes to a head in the scene with Akhlys, but again, goes totally unresolved because that kind of anger doesnât just fucking evaporate (it also gets partially replaced with guilt, which is just. so unhealthy).
@lililibird, @ofswordsandpens and @accioangelo wrote something really cool about that here
Percy is definitely mentally ill.
Like yeah, heâs neurodiverse, but heâs also canonically mentally ill. Iâm not sure what type of mental illness it would best fit, or maybe more than one, but thereâs absolutely no way this kid is mentally healthy.
Heâs suicidal.
He has insurmountable guilt.
Heâs afraid of himself.
He hates himself.
Heâs angry.
He develops a phobia of his own element and never⊠never resolves it? He talks about feeling âuncleanâ after Phorcys aquarium and Annabeth notes how shaken up he looks, even the next day. He almost drowns two more times since itâs brought up (Nyphaeum-whatever-itâs-called and the Cocytus-however-you-spell-it) which means it probably got worse so Iâm just gonna assume that he has a paralyzing fear of his own element? he also joined the swimteam which is literally like WHAT HOW WHY but iâm trying not to turn this into a wankfest
And in that same vein, this fear of suffocation, like youâre a fraud and donât deserve the people who love you or the recognition you get? Thatâs super unhealthy. Itâs important to accept peopleâs love, but he hates himself so much that he canât see that.
He has frequent nightmares. Like, not the weird voodoo demigod nightmares, like night terrors. Nightmares that donât have dream messages attached to them, just straight up nightmares. Heâs constantly saying stuff like âI still had nightmares about it.â He mentions losing sleep because of it. The night when Bianca sends him the IM of Nico in the graveyard, he sits on the floor staring at the remains of the shattered water fountain all night and doesnât move until Tyson gets him in the morning. Like, heâs really affected by the things that heâs seen. Also heâs been having nightmares about Tartarus since the Lightning Thief so I can only imagine how hard itâs going to be for him to recover from actually being there (theyâre actually quite vivid: one time, he has a conversation with Kronos on the edge of the pit of Chaos).
âHe glared at the poison flood encroaching from all sides. He concentrated so hard that something inside him cracked â as if a crystal ball had shattered in his stomach.â -House of Hades. He actually shattered a part of himself to be able to unlock that kind of power. And after Akhlys leaves he mentions it kinda starts to subside, but listen: broken glass doesnât get fixed. He literally is admitting that heâs broken inside. Not to mention that this kind of misery doesnât just come from no where; this is the combined effort of all the terrible things heâs been feeling his whole life. Thatâs pretty horrifying, and someone should help him through that instead of making him feel like a monster for doing it. itâs actually almost identical to nicoâs dilemma except that people actually try to help nico.
Suicidal thoughts, pervasive guilt, self-hatred, self-blame, self-distrust, frequent nightmares, developing a phobia, using anger as a coping mechanism. This sounds like depression to me (how I experience it, at any rate), possibly with symptoms of PTSD, although Iâm not a psychiatrist. Even if it doesnât fit a specific mental illness itâs still a deeply unhealthy mental state to be in.Â
Like listen: Percy needs help.
Percyâs fatal flaw is so not a big deal.
Leaves his mother in the Underworld at the age of twelve. His mom. His mom, guys. Is there anyone he loves more on this earth, besides Annabeth? Heâs twelve years old, and he comes to the understanding that he needs to let her go, leave her in mortal danger, because the fate of the world depends on him getting the bolt to Zeus, and, furthermore, that his mother would never accept his life in exchange for her own.
I mean, thatâs really case closed right there, but thereâs quite a bit more.
âI was leaving her in good hands after all. Her own.â -Lightning Thief. This is right after his mother tells him âyou need to let me take care of myself.â And he respects that so much that he actually leaves her with her abuser, which is really hard for him because he canât bear to leave her in danger, but then he realizes that sheâs capable of dealing with it and, more importantly, he lets her.
Encourages Grover to go off on an extremely dangerous solo quest to find Pan which no satyr has ever returned alive from, because he realizes that itâs really important to Grover and doesnât want to hold him back due to his own fears.
Encourages Tyson to go join Poseidonâs forges because he recognizes that while he would like Tyson to stay, this is really important to Tyson.
Even in Titanâs Curse he wants to immediately throw himself off the cliff searching for Annabeth and he doesnât because thatâs dumb and he understands that. And then he goes on the quest but itâs like⊠everyone on that quest was looking for someone they loved so itâs really not a good example of Percyâs fatal flaw in action. Additionally, when Percy captures Nereus, his first instinct is to ask about Annabeth, but he doesnât, because again: itâs not the best choice, and he understands that, so he asks about the monster Artemis was tracking instead.
Splits up with Grover and Tyson in the Labyrinth because he knows that Grover needs to find Pan and itâs really important to him. Annabeth is the one who keeps saying that splitting up is a bad idea because itâs not safe.
His first instinct is always to take care of people but he never infringes on their rights to make their own choices, even when he doesnât agree with them. He never holds anyone back from reaching their full potential and usually encourages them to go for it, even if it means they have to leave him behind.
It was really fucking hard for him to let Annabeth go searching for the Mark of Athena but he did it. He even recognizes that sheâs terrified and doesnât want to do it and she needs him to believe in her and so he fucking sends her off because he never wants to hold her back from doing all the amazing things that she can do. Iâm crying.
@greenconverses explains this a little more in depth here
Percyâs never jeopardized⊠anything? because of his fatal flaw? And itâs just kind of like⊠for something that is discussed so often itâs really kind of⊠not important?
Most important of all: he lets Beckendorf die. He looks into his eyes, Beckendorf tells him to go, he protests, but Beckendorf doesnât waver. And Percy lets it happen, because it needs to happen.
I mean. Like. COME ON.
Now, I mean, if he understands that Beckendorfâs death is inevitable (mind you, Beckendorf was one of Percyâs closest friends), and he understands that itâs illogical to rescue his mother from the Underworld, then I think itâs safe to say that Percy understands and controls his fatal flaw. You could make the argument that maybe he wouldnât if it was Annabeth. In which case, I say to you, thatâs really not about fatal flaw, itâs just about human beings.
Annabeth takes a knife for Percy, which makes it pretty damn obvious that sheâs willing to die for him? Beckendorf, Silena, Thalia, and Leo actually do die for their friends? Like, a willingness to die in place of their friends is something we see in every single main character in this series, and most of the minor characters too.
The only moment you really see it get him in danger is Tartarus and Mt. St. Helens, but listen, is there any other member of the Seven that would have let go of Annabethâs hand like be serious. Can you honestly believe any of them would have let her fall alone and pulled themselves out of the pit like thereâs just no fucking way that would have happened. Frankly, how much would you have to hate someone to let them get dragged to hell to die alone.
As for Mt. St. Helens, I mean, honestly? This scene could have gone the other way around just as easily. In fact, Percy actually stood a chance and Annabeth didnât, so it makes a lot of fucking sense that he should be the one to stay behind.
It doesnât take away from anything Percyâs done for his friends. In fact, it kinda makes it better because itâs not overshadowed by the lurking threat of the Elusive Fatal Flaw.
Iâm not saying itâs not actually his fatal flaw, except thatâŠ.. well, itâs not, really, is it? Heâs got a good handle on it, which pretty much tells me that itâs not going to kill him any time soon, and more than that, itâs not unique to Percy. Who doesnât struggle with wanting to protect the people they love?
Maybe letâs talk about Percyâs rage instead because that is something that actually comes up very often and usually gets the better of him.
Percy is incredibly capable and really powerful.
and all yâall are definitely going âlol like we didnât know thatâ but listen: no, iâm not sure that you did. and if you did then imma talk about it anyway because we donât talk about it enough.
Percy spends just as much time saving Annabethâs ass as she does his. Itâs mutual. Their relationship is very balanced and I think itâs cheap and stupid to try and make her look better by belittling him. Oddly, this tactic is used by a lot of characters in the series? âI doubt Percy could find his way out of a paper bag without Annabethâ like okay how about the part where she would have dove straight off a cliff in the house of night like lmao where the fuck does this argument come from.
Firstly, I must say that WE DO NOT TALK ABOUT THE CURSE OF ACHILLES ENOUGH but I could rant about it for literal hours, so Iâll just link you to where I did that already.
KILLS THE MINOTAUR AT THE AGE OF TWELVE BY RIPPING ITS OWN HORN OUT OF ITS SKULL AND STABBING HIM WITH IT. like. The Minotaur. THE MINOTAUR. Dâyou know that in the myths, the Minotaur just fucking ripped up entire towns and cities and killed hundreds of people and nobody could stop it, until finally they built the fucking Labyrinth to lock it up because nobody knew what to do with it, and then it was still alive for years because nobody could kill it, and like, the culmination of Theseusâ entire hero career was killing this thing because thatâs how fucking intense the Minotaur was. AND THEN PERCY JACKSON. TWELVE YEARS OLD. NOT A DAY OF TRAINING. NO WEAPON. JUST FUCKING. TAKES HIM DOWN. WHAT THE FUCK.
Kronos tells him that Luke is afraid of him.
Kronos also tells him that he wishes Percy had supplied his host body. Kronos is surveying bodies to possess and is like, âI want that one.â THE FUCK.
Jumps like, 120 yards off the House of Night and over the river Acheron????? With a person on his back?????? HOw????????? SINCE WHEN CAN HE FUCKING DO THAT???? (i will become FILLED WITH RAGE if anyone answers this with âheâs got skillzâ)
Remember when he tells the Roman Senate that he fought Kronos himself and Reyna stumbles back in shock and is like???? how????
Kills a giant alone. Like, completely alone, except for Terminus who really doesnât do anything, itâs just about the logistical need to have a god kill a giant.
Blows up a volcano and wakes Typhon. Like, wakes Typhon. And it wasnât even on purpose! He was just being tortured and needed a way to escape like it was on pure instinct. And then when Hephaestus tells him so, heâs literally like, âIâm not that powerful.â And Hephaestus just kinda laughs like UM YEAH YOU KIND OF ARE, LOOK AT WHAT YOU FUCKING DID, SON OF THE EARTHSHAKER INDEED.
Wipes out Hades entire army like, basically without even realizing it.
Literally holds back Kronosâ entire army by himself. LIke, ALONE. A WHOLE ARMY.
âPart of their problem was Percy. He fought like a demon, whirling through the defendersâ ranks in a completely unorthodox style, rolling under their feet, slashing with his sword instead of stabbing like a Roman would, whacking campers with the flat of his blade, and generally causing mass panic.â -Son of Neptune. I love to think about this scene (these are the scenes that we need movies for, okay, think of how great this could be)
Kills the Clazmonian sow alone.
Holds off a drakon alone, although Clarisse is the one that kills it.
At the age of thirteen, he totally beats up Polyphemus, who is at least two times his size, just because he gets angry.
The first time he summons a hurricane he doesnât even do it on purpose it just fucking happens instinctively. Groverâs like âbro what are you doingâ and heâs like âwhat.â LIKE PERCY. SERIOUSLY.
He blows stuff up when he gets angry??? Like the plumbing incident in boo? Thatâs fucking intense okay like wow just one more reason for him to be afraid of himself
I saved this for last because this is my favorite: CONTROLS POISON. AND ALSO BODILY FLUIDS. I think we talk about the poison scene a lot but do you remember the part when Akhlys starts crying and heâs like âOh, good, more water.â âOH GOOD MORE WATERâ LIKE JESUS PERCY. And then he imagines her nose and throat filling with her own tears like HOLY SHIT. thatâs some bloodbending level shit right there.
Please tell me I was not the only person cheering during that scene okay because I was like THIS IS IT, HEâS FINALLY SNAPPED, LETâS GO MOTHERFUCKERS, like I have been waiting and waiting and hoping and hoping for a scene like that for years. but annabeth ruined it because she clearly underestimated him like the signs were all there she should not have been surprised
Percy is not a lovable idiot.
Like, I mean, heâs just not. Heâs a hugely complex character with a lot of conflicting traits. Heâs vengeful but caring, loyal but resentful, capable but insecure, a natural leader but intimidating and sometimes even scary.
Like yeah, heâs got a sense of humor, but like???? That doesnât cancel out any of the things I mentioned above.
Percy is also not an asshole.
In an attempt to get away from the âlovable idiotâ fanon characterization, I think the pendulum swung too far the other way.
Percy is very compassionate, and very caring. He apologizes for his mistakes. Heâs not cocky or arrogant in the slightest.
Yes, he can be intimidating and vengeful and once you break his trust you better look out, but that doesnât cancel out his instinct to take care of people and his efforts to help people and his desire to be a good person.
Looking for more + References made in this post:
This post by @ofswordsandpens, with additions by @lililibird and @accioangelo (I have a special place in my heart for this post because it showed up miraculously on my dash from my main blog one day, and this is what convinced me to get back in this fandom because OTHER PEOPLE GET IT I COULD CRY)
And the (updated) original by @ofswordsandpens
This post by @lililibird
This post by @jason-gracefully
This post by @ehlihr
This post by @llttledipper
This post by @greenconverses
My own post
My other post
I think the Hunger Games series sits in a similar literary position to The Lord of the Rings, as a piece of literature (by a Catholic author) that sparked a whole new subgenre and then gets blamed for flaws that exist in the copycat books and arenât actually part of the original.
Like, despite what parodies might say, Katniss is nowhere near the stereotypical âunqualified teenager chosen to lead a rebellion for no good reasonâ. The entire point is that sheâs not leading the rebellion. Sheâs a traumatized teenager who has emotional reactions to the horrors in her society, and is constantly being reined in by more experienced adults who have to tell her, âNo, this is not how you fight the government, you are going to get people killed.â Sheâs not the upstart teenager showing the brainless adults what to doâsheâs a teenager being manipulated by smarter and more experienced adults. She has no power in the rebellion except as a useful piece of propaganda, and the entire trilogy is her straining against that role. Itâs much more realistic and far more nuanced than anyone who dismisses it as âstereotypical YA dystopianâ gives it credit for.
And the misconceptions donât end there. The Hunger Games has no âstereotypical YA love triangleââyes, there are two potential love interests, but the romance is so not the point. Thereâs a war going on! Katniss has more important things to worry about than boys! The romance was never about her choosing between two hot boysâitâs about choosing between two diametrically opposed worldviews. Will she choose anger and war, or compassion and peace? Of course a trilogy filled with the horrors of war ends with her marriage to the peace-loving Peeta. Unlike some of the YA dystopian copycats, the romance here is part of the message, not just something to pacify readers who expect âhot love trianglesâ in their YA.Â
The worldbuilding in the Hunger Games trilogy is simplistic and not realistic, but unlike some of her imitators, Collins does this because she has something to say, not because sheâs cobbling together a grim and gritty dystopia thatâs âsimilar to the Hunger Gamesâ. The worldbuilding has an allegorical function, kept simple so we can see beyond it to what Collins is really sayingâand itâs nothing so comforting as âwe need to fight the evil people who are ruining societyâ. The Capitolâs not just the powerful, greedy bad guysâthe Capitol is us, First World America, living in luxury while we ignore the problems of the rest of the world, and thinking of other nations largely in terms of what resources we can get from them. This simplistic world is a sparsely set stage that lets us explore the larger themes about exploitation and war and the horrors people will commit for the sake of their bread and circuses, meant to make us think deeper about what separates a hero from a villain.
Thereâs a reason these books became a literary phenomenon. Thereâs a reason that dozens upon dozens of authors attempted to imitate them. But these imitators canât capture that same genius, largely because theyâre trying to imitate the trappings of another book, and failing to capture the larger and more meaningful message underneath. Make a copy of a copy of a copy, and youâll wind up with something far removed from the original masterpiece. But we shouldnât make the mistake of blaming those flaws on the original work.
Rhinos are assault unicorns
Something that is confusing me is how many people are defending the changes Rick made and defending Rick himself in regards to the show.
He lied to us.
He got the entire fandom to hype up the show, got the show made on the basis of getting a book accurate adaption. This was supposed to be something accurate to the books, including the book characters, the book scenes, the book stakes- we were supposed to get to see our favorite moments in the books on screen.
And then he went and rewrote the book.
This adaption isn't the book we read. The characters aren't the characters we read. Grover's personality was wholesale replaced. This is something entirely new-
And whether you like it for itself is a different matter entirely, but the point is that... this isn't The Lightning Thief that we read years ago.
He lied to us.
Ironic that here you can know more about me than anywhere else. (English isn't my first language, sorry for any mistakes.)
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