omg what does sealioning mean??
Category: Uncategorized
This question is completely out of curiosity and I don’t want you to think I’m being disrespectful, but why do you want Cersei to die with dignity? It just seems odd when so many characters have died horrible, violently deaths (like Elia, Robb, Catelyn, and Oberyn) or undignified, unjust death (like Ned, Lyanna, and Jon). Why do you want her to have a noble death? Why should she be treated better than them? I’m sorry if seems like I’m being rude. I’m just perplexed.
Because I don’t see the point in continuing the pattern of violent crimes against the women in this series. There are entirely innocent women and girls who have violent acts done to them, just as there are women who have done bad things and have violent acts done to them. I don’t believe that the severity of the punishment should match the severity of the crimes. Cersei has done really awful things, but why should she be murdered by a former lover and a man she trusted while other men who had committed crimes get cleaner deaths or a judicial process?
Look at Gregor, for example. His “death” is the result of a duel, and thought it was long and slow, it was certainly an easier death than what he had given his victims, especially his female victims with whom he practiced a pattern of indiscriminate rape, abuse, and murder.
Even Tywin, who sanctioned rape and torture and murder, got off pretty easy. It’s really not practical to demand that Tywin’s death also be torturous and cruel and long; sometimes their death is enough (though in Tywin’s case, I’d argue that he at least deserved a public trial to drag his name through the dirt, but that was never going to happen under Baratheon rule anyways).
So yes, Cersei has done terrible things, much worse than many other victims of violent crime, but that doesn’t mean she deserves to be killed via a violent and intimate crime, especially when she has already had so much violence, sexual assault and humiliation done to her already. In a perfect world, she would be put on trial, and given a public and dignified death. I know that’s likely not going to happen, which is what makes me unhappy.
Strangling in particular is such a creepily sexualized form of death, especially for women. Cersei had the walk of shame already you’ve made your point grrm.
@lyannas do you have any comments on Tyrion strangling Shae?
I have nothing novel to add to the conversation at large, but as far as my views go, Shae’s death is one of the most distressing deaths in the series for me. She was young, foreign to King’s Landing, had her life and jobs managed by Tyrion, and then was forced to a make a decision to save herself over saving Tyrion. It was Cersei who approached her for her testimony after all, and if we know Cersei at all we know that there is an easy way and a hard way for her to get what she wants. Cersei gave her the easy way, which was a reward in exchange for her testimony. Had Shae refused, I don’t think she would have found a forgiving enemy in Cersei. The fact that she is later found in Tywin’s bed just drives it home that Shae did not want to make enemies with either of them when they approached her, and since Tyrion was figuratively a sinking ship, she made the smart choice of saving herself. This still cost her her life, unfortunately, at the hands of her employer and lover.
I should note that the reason strangulation is especially abhorrent for me when its done by a man to a woman is because victims of strangulation, especially in a domestic violence setting, are overwhelmingly female. It starts as a way of exercising control over a partner, but has an extremely high risk of becoming fatal. It’s a sad reality that I don’t enjoy seeing translated onto the page.
i cant believe so many j*nsas have me blocked rn when i’m destigmatizing first cousin marriage on my blog
This question is completely out of curiosity and I don’t want you to think I’m being disrespectful, but why do you want Cersei to die with dignity? It just seems odd when so many characters have died horrible, violently deaths (like Elia, Robb, Catelyn, and Oberyn) or undignified, unjust death (like Ned, Lyanna, and Jon). Why do you want her to have a noble death? Why should she be treated better than them? I’m sorry if seems like I’m being rude. I’m just perplexed.
Because I don’t see the point in continuing the pattern of violent crimes against the women in this series. There are entirely innocent women and girls who have violent acts done to them, just as there are women who have done bad things and have violent acts done to them. I don’t believe that the severity of the punishment should match the severity of the crimes. Cersei has done really awful things, but why should she be murdered by a former lover and a man she trusted while other men who had committed crimes get cleaner deaths or a judicial process?
Look at Gregor, for example. His “death” is the result of a duel, and though it was long and slow, it was certainly an easier death than what he had given his victims, especially his female victims with whom he practiced a pattern of indiscriminate rape, abuse, and murder.
Even Tywin, who sanctioned rape and torture and murder, got off pretty easy. It’s really not practical to demand that Tywin’s death also be torturous and cruel and long; sometimes their death is enough (though in Tywin’s case, I’d argue that he at least deserved a public trial to drag his name through the dirt, but that was never going to happen under Baratheon rule anyways).
So yes, Cersei has done terrible things, much worse than many other victims of violent crime, but that doesn’t mean she deserves to be killed via a violent and intimate crime, especially when she has already had so much violence, sexual assault and humiliation done to her. In a perfect world, she would be put on trial, and given a public and dignified death. I know that’s likely not going to happen, which is what makes me unhappy.
Please don’t feel like you need to send me messages that include the phrases:
-“Sorry for bothering you…”
-“I know I’m stupid, but…”
-“Sorry for wasting your time…”
-“Just ignore me…”
You are not bothering me. You are not stupid. You are not wasting my time. I refuse to ignore you.
Your existence is not an inconvenience.

my career coach said she would facetime me tonight but it’s 7 PM now and im still wearing my school clothes and i haven’t gotten a call yet sooOOooo i guess we’ll see!
Kassandra is just going around Ancient Greece seducing women and having dudes pay her to sleep with their wives.
Game of the year
i mean, i cannot explain how many times i’ve seen anti-lyanna/anti-elia/pro-rhaegar folks place rhaegar’s wants at the center. there is so much assumption that lyanna was in love from beginning to end, or that she was content to be in that tower, there are attempts to brush aside elia’s feelings by insisting that “she’s dornish, so it’s okay” or reminding us that rhaegar’s want to have three children or be in love is more valid than elia’s humiliation. rhaegar is the human whose emotions matter, whose story matters, and these women are accessories not only to his story, but to their own stories.
over and over, i see people make it all about rhaegar. lyanna and elia’s thoughts, desires, wants, and needs are ignored in favor of a man who victimized them both.
Yep. You can also see that thought process in the adamant argument that Elia and/or Lyanna believed in the prophecy that I’ve seen creep up too many times. It relies on a casual assumption that these two women must have shared Rhaegar’s convictions for no discernible reason other than that he had them. That’s literally it. Rhaegar believed the prophecy ergo Elia and Lyanna must have too. Because it’s Rhaegar’s opinions that matter apparently. They are what’s important which undoubtedly makes the two ladies beholden to his views. The primacy given to Rhaegar’s everything above the two ladies is so prevalent that his opinions are put above their literal wellbeing and basic rights. For whatever the hell reason.