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In 1989, manga artist Kentaro Miura started work on one of the most potent love stories of all time: Berserk; a dark fantasy set in the medieval-Europe-inspired world of sempiternal darkness and horror. In this story, there are two pivotal characters that typify all true friendships; these characters are Guts, the hero of the story, and Griffith, the (spoilers) villain of the story, among many other villains, but Griffith is – the – villain; “you were always the one.” Griffith wasn’t a villain at first; yet, the die had been cast and he was destined to become one, forevermore. Griffith and Guts were best-friends for the longest time; sharing the best of times and, absolutely, the worst of times. At an early age, Guts joined Griffith’s “Band of the Hawk,” what started out as a roaming mercenary group led by Griffith, who was, by all means, a gifted youth with an undying dream of creating his own kingdom of light within the dark; a genius both on and off the battlefield, and an expert swordsman, practically undefeated; Guts was all of these things as well, but less refined, a rabid beast with no purpose.

Griffith recruited those he believed had talent and identified Guts as one of those people immediately. Guts was a stubborn youth and, believing himself better than Griffith, immediately picked a fight with him. Guts was clearly outclassed but overconfident and, being like a rabid beast, had a level of unpredictability that gave him an upper hand. Guts was a street fighter compared to Griffith, who was elegant, outwardly honorable, and trained in classical combat (particularly fencing). During a pivotal moment when it appeared Griffith would win the duel, Guts threw sand into Griffith’s eyes as a distraction, then landed a critical blow that ended up with Griffith in the dirt, getting his stomach kicked in. This was the first time the Band of the Hawk had seen Griffith vulnerable, and Griffith knew this too, secretly embarrassed and forever changed by this little defeat, but never showing it; knowing he had to turn the tide of the duel in his favor or lose the respect of his mercenary band, and by extension: his dream of Arcadia, Griffith quickly turned this fear of rejection into strength, using his superior martial training he subdued Guts in an armlock and forced him to submit.

Guts, from that moment onward, believed in Griffith as a warrior and a leader, even though he didn’t immediately admit as much; Griffith, from that moment onward, believed in Guts as an equal and a friend, even though he didn’t immediately (ever) admit as much; both men were stoic in their own way. It would be a long time before Guts and Griffith would get into another fight, and with time, Guts became Griffith’s most trusted warrior, Griffith’s right hand. “You are mine,” Griffith would say with an air of authority, but what he really meant was, “I love you and cannot live without you.”

Griffith and Guts are both fiercely independent Ravens who bond due to mutual unrequited respect for each other. In simple terms, they are in love. Not romantic love, not even platonic, something more, something that transcends the word itself; yet neither can truly express how they feel due to their own mental hang-ups; the ego. Time passes, and Guts begins to feel more like a tool for Griffith’s dream of Arcadia, and Griffith goes on taking Guts for granted, oblivious to his concerns. One fateful day, Guts overhears Griffith talking to a Princess at night in a courtyard. Griffith expresses his idealism to her, grandstanding in an overt show of charisma, as Griffith had a penchant for. The Princess asks Griffith about his mercenaries, and Griffith responds:

“They are my able soldiers, it’s true. They are dedicated comrades who sacrifice themselves for my dream so that it might be real but that does not make them friends. In my mind, a true friend never relies on another’s dream. The man who would be my friend must have his own reason for living, beyond me; and he should put his heart and soul into protecting his dream; he should never hesitate to defend it, even against me. For me to call a man my “friend” he must be equal to me in all respects.”

— Griffith, Berserk (TV Series 1997–1998)

Guts is devastated. He has no dream of his own; it’s clear now he’s a pawn of Griffith’s Arcadia; of course, Guts only believes this because Griffith has never expressed his (very real) love for Guts; something that is shown only through actions and Griffith’s inner dialogues that Guts is not privy to. Griffith, in his idealism, outwardly says things he does not mean, his actions and feelings betraying his grand words. In many ways, Guts is Griffith’s only true friend. Guts is envious of Griffith’s dreams and resolve, but at the same time, Griffith is envious of Guts’ martial prowess and strength of will; both men see each other as a potential threat, someone to “watch out for because, if they wanted to, they could destroy me,” in other words: a friend, an equal.

Guts decides to leave the Band of the Hawk shortly after these events, but to do so, he must defeat Griffith in battle; their love still unrequited. On a snowy field under a dead tree, the two warriors duel, and in the blink of an eye, one move, it’s over. Guts brings his massive Dragon Slayer down, breaking Griffith’s blade in the process, but stops just short of crushing Griffith’s shoulder. Griffith knows it’s over; he falls to his knees, bested by his only true friend. Guts walks away in silence, shedding his obligations to Griffith to pursue his own purpose, becoming a free Raven once again.

This destroys Griffith, who goes on to make mistake after mistake, wallowing in the selfish despair of having lost his only true love. Sinking lower and lower into sempiternal darkness, with no hope of recovery, Griffith, seeing no other path to achieve Arcadia, trades his humanity for power in a demonic ritual that would forever be known as the Eclipse; sacrificing every member of the Band of the Hawk, his trusted warriors, in a demonic bloodbath of tentacles going into holes that they shouldn’t, headcrabs that crawl up the nose and expand until the eyes pop out and the brains blow up and the skin bursts like a popped balloon, and everything-evil. In the culminating moments of the ritual, Griffith slowly rapes Gut’s romantic partner, Casca, right before his eyes; a final act of humiliation to seal Griffith’s transformation into everything-evil. Casca, now comatose from the torment, and Guts, now incensed with an undying thirst for revenge, are the only members of the Band of the Hawk left alive; doomed to travel the world, branded and hunted by demons of the night forevermore.

All pretense of elegance and grace dropped; jealousy, despair, and lust for revenge helped Griffith take that final step into sempiternal darkness, and the world was never the same. Griffith achieved something akin to Godhood that day: power unimaginable, transformed into his darkest self; an indifference to the perceptions of others in favor of pure giving-in; the type of ego-death that Buddhists are afraid of.


(Originally published 10/7/2024)

#anime

cowboy bebop no disc


Shakedown 2005. I’m real young. I’m a recluse. I’m a wreck. My parents split five years earlier; Mom remarried and moved to a Posh Island Community in Coastal Georgia; Dad remarried but stayed in Atlanta, my hometown. I was given the great honor of choosing which parent’s heart to rip out of their chest and, naturally, I picked Dad because Mom let me do whatever I wanted with no supervision. Years prior, in September 2001, Cowboy Bebop aired on Adult Swim’s programming block, three years after its Japanese airing on TV Tokyo; I watched the whole series in the dim light of way-past-bedtime with one hand on the TV-remote in case the parents wanted to check on me. Two years later, in October 2003, Final Fantasy XI, a massive multiplayer online game, was released on PC and I was on the bleeding edge, consuming it all in real-time; ‘island time,’ as the very-elderly-beach-bum-elite of the Posh Island Community would call it.

Blessed with a rich step-dad, a Dell Dimension 4550, and nowhere to go but down; I had all the bells and whistles a 2000s-kid could possibly want: computer games, big TVs, every modern game console, friends in fantasy worlds, an office to lose myself in, and two girlfriends who didn’t know about each other.

I also had three LiveJournal accounts, two of which were for my roleplaying-character-profiles. None of them exist anymore (I checked). I enjoyed writing; it’s the only artistic thing I’m remotely good at. So, of course, I spent a lot of time in Yahoo! Messenger chatrooms typing up ‘paragraph-style-roleplaying’ with random strangers online.

I was on Adderall (Amphetamines, pretty much ‘speed for children’) from the young age of ten, being diagnosed with Attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder; the medication helped with the writing process. To help get me in the zone, I would listen to the Cowboy Bebop soundtrack, specifically – “No Disc,” the third soundtrack released in 1998 by Yoko Kanno’s band SEATBELTS, which was initially created specifically to compose the music for Cowboy Bebop. I enjoyed the song ‘Elm.’ A track consisting of only gentle guitar ringing and a vocal melody of simple, melodious ‘la la la’s’ performed by Pierre Bensusan, French-Algerian acoustic guitarist. This song, best described as both deeply somber and beautifully transcendent, put me in a zen-like state of non-stop writing (and still does, evidenced by this article) and, of course, I would write garbage like:

Edge walks into the tavern with a mean look on his face. He swipes his long blue and red hair out of his eyes before casting a glance over to the bar. The tavern’s lantern light glints off the huge sword on his back. Edge surveyed the room for a moment before he walked to the bar and sat near the pretty girl at the far end. He signals to the bartender, who approaches quickly out of pure fear due to Edge’s coolly intimidating presence. Edge smirks at the girl then at the bartender, “one glass of milk, and another for the lady, on me.” Edge pauses, “actually, make that strawberry milk for the lady.”

Naturally, most of these role-playing sessions would lead to private messaging and in-character textual-love-making between myself and the random stranger, who was most likely much older than I assumed; but I never asked their age, I didn’t care: we were playing characters; It was artistic; It was cool; It was cyber-sexing in abstraction. And to the best of my – rather poor – memory: this was how I learned about the nuances of sex.

Video: SEATBELTS – Elm

SEATBELTS, as Yoko Kanno’s band, is actually a collective of musicians. Yoko Kanno herself functions largely as a writer, producer, and conductor on most tracks, playing only piano and keyboard melodies on records that encompass far more than pianos and keyboards. Occasionally, she sings under the credited pseudonym of ‘Gabriela Robin.’ The collective’s name is derived from the ‘seatbelts the band members have to wear during their hardcore jam sessions.’ Their music transcends consistent labeling; jazz, world music, top-10-pops, metal, rock, lounge, and bluegrass; sometimes within the course of a single song. Often, it feels like a completely different band from track to track, and at times it might as well be due to the sheer number of musicians involved with creating the music. Yoko Kanno’s SEATBELTS are the very definition of eclectic.

yoko piano *Yoko Kanno, her face very close to a piano.

Anyway, the girlfriends.

The two girlfriends. One was an artist named after a Bob Dylan song; she lived in my old hometown of Atlanta. We liked all the same stuff. She was sad when I moved; and I was too. The other was a girl named after a flower who lived in the Posh Island Community; she was more akin to a venus flytrap than a rose, and I was the fly. I would travel back and forth from Mom and Dad’s house every other month, visiting my Dad for a weekend or so before returning to Mom’s to live – what I felt was – My Real Life. It was multiversal; a quick one-hour plane ride to the other dimension. When I visited Dad, I would focus every ounce of my being on being around the Artist. We would go to a gigantic store called Media Play – which sold anime, manga, DVDs, games, CDs, everything – and just walk around shyly holding hands, barely talking to each other, like young teenagers do. Sometimes, if her parents were present, we would go to her house and watch TV in her roomy basement; usually anime, often Cowboy Bebop. We were inseparable and I was stupid.

Flower Girl was just there, on the Island. She was interested in me, largely because we both liked those terrible early-2000s hardcore bands – Underoath or Alexisonfire or Whatever – and when I would get bored of playing Final Fantasy XI, I would occasionally venture out to see her. My Mom gave me far too much freedom. I would go to her family’s apartment, alone, with no adults around except her incapacitated great aunt who had a gaping hole in her throat; “yes mom, an adult is here with us.” The house smelled of quintessence – cigarette smoke quintessence – which I didn’t recognize until many years later after I started smoking myself. I barely liked the Flower Girl, but with freedom, access to a bed, and utter boredom came fun. A lot of fun. And, of course, Teenagers Having Fun is Very Complicated, especially when you’re Seeing Other People.

I didn’t like the Flower Girl; she was just there. I was using her and hiding it from the person I really liked. I knew what I was doing was wrong; I was lying and I was stupid. So, I broke it off with the Flower Girl, and things got really weird, really fast.

Flower Girl was obsessed and upset. She called me on my Nokia cell phone late one night while I was partying in Final Fantasy XI; I was ‘puller,’ which meant I had to claim the monster and pull it back to camp for the party to kill; Cowboy Bebop was playing on Adult Swim in the background, the episode where the guy with the afro – Hakim – tries to kidnap Ein, the corgi data-dog, while ‘Want It All Back,’ an infectious pop song with bright horns and a ripping guitar melody plays loudly during the exciting mid-episode chase scene.

Video: Cowboy Bebop EP2 “Stray Dog Strut,” scene in which Spike chases Hakim while “Want It All Back” plays.

Then it happens.

Mid-pull, the Flower Girl tells me that she’s pregnant. She says that I should come to her house ‘right now so we can talk about this.’ I stop what I’m doing; the monster never makes it back to camp and attacks my character to death while I stare mindlessly at absolutely nothing.

I turn off the computer manually with the button.

I am fourteen years old.

There was a gaping pit in my belly and a million questions running through my head. What would my parents think? How am I going to take care of this kid? Will I have enough time to keep writing and playing computer games? Is my life ruined? Should I end it all? All I could think about was myself. The Nokia started beeping softly; someone was trying to come through on the other line. It was the Artist; the other girlfriend; we talked every night before bed. I didn’t know what to do. My mind was fried. The Flower Girl kept repeating ‘hello?’ while I was staring at a blank monitor in catatonia.

Quickly and out of pure selfishness, I bluff and tell Flower Girl, ‘I don’t believe you,’ and then hang up on her. Then I turn off my cell phone and lay down on the floor with my face in the carpet. I can hear Cowboy Bebop’s ending theme playing in the background, ‘The Real Folk Blues.’

I deserved this.

I eventually fell asleep and woke up the next day in something resembling a sober hangover. I turned my phone on and text messages started flowing in from both the Flower Girl and the Artist. I ignored them and turned my phone off again. I returned to my office, retrieved my Cowboy Bebop DVD box set, and began watching the series from the beginning while I logged into Yahoo! Messenger and started roleplaying as some new character or other, escaping into virtual insanity.

Cowboy Bebop became my mood and my life. I lived as a complete recluse, hiding from the world; constantly in a state of paranoia, believing that any call or SMS would bring terrible, life-shattering news. I feared that someone, particularly the Flower Girl’s parents, would contact mine about the pregnancy. I tiptoed around the house like a shadow in the corner of an eye, avoiding everyone and everything. I abused Adderall and rarely ate, passing out briefly one time as I swapped out a Cowboy Bebop DVD when Mom was in the room, she was concerned but I talked my way out of it – “I just didn’t eat much today, Mom, I’m fine.”

I convinced myself that if I simply ignored the problem, it would go away. If I wasn’t present to witness it, like a tree falling in the forest, it wouldn’t happen; the Flower Girl’s parents wouldn’t contact my family, and no one would show up at my house with any parental announcements whatsoever. My only comfort was speed, writing, computer games, and SEATBELTS; often all happening at once. It was Teenage Quantum Physics and Vices On Repeat.

yoko piano *the cast of Cowboy Bebop

In another time, the defining moment of someone’s childhood might have been parents dying in a war, working in a coal mine, or facing some other cosmic horror; mine was pathetic and modern, ‘I got a girl pregnant.’

Or so I thought.

Months of ignoring the problem, attending school as if nothing was wrong – luckily, the Flower Girl went to a different school – and going through all the motions of being a privileged fourteen-year-old kid; eventually, I turned my phone back on and went through all the missed messages. That’s when I saw it, the final message from the Flower Girl.

“I’m sorry, I made it all up. I’m not pregnant.”

I stared at the little Nokia pixels that made up the letters for what must have been thirty-minutes. Speechless. Textless. All the mental anguish, the paranoia, the sneaking around – it was all pointless? She was never pregnant? She made it all up? A great weight had been lifted, but I was never truly the same. During this period of my life, I became reclusive, cynical, gaunt after having lost thirty pounds, and simply wrote and listened to music all day and night on child-approved-speed. And it was all because I turned my phone off and ignored the problem?

I deserved this.

About a week after the initial catatonia, I had been communicating with the Artist through AOL Instant Messenger weekly. I told her my phone was broken, and she believed it. However, after I resumed using my phone and learned ‘the truth,’ I confessed to her about what had happened. She was shattered but said, ‘I forgive you, and we’ll work through it; just promise me I’m the only one now.’ And I promised. I learned my lesson the hard way. It was over now.

Video: SEATBELTS – Cats on Mars

Months later, while listening to ‘Cats on Mars,’ a keyboard-driven piece of bubblegum pop sung in Japanese by ‘Gabriela Robin,’ I received a random message on AOL Instant Messenger from an unrecognizable username. The instant-message was simply a link to an image hosted on Imageshack (a popular image hosting site during the early 2000s, similar to Imgur now). I clicked the link, and it was a picture of a baby with the caption ‘lol.’

The fear, the pit, the paranoia; it all returned in an instant with one instant-message. My mind, fucked. Incensed, I called the Flower Girl, and she plainly told me that she had actually been pregnant but had ‘given the kid up for adoption,’ then scolded me for ignoring her for so long. I asked her why she had told me that she made up the pregnancy, and she said ‘it was easier that way.’ Finally I asked her, ‘then who sent the picture?’ and she said ‘oh, my friend, she got drunk and sent it, I told her not to.’

This wasn’t the truth either. Months later, she told me – again – that she was never pregnant, apologizing and telling me that ‘both my friend and I were drinking and thought it would be funny to send you a random baby picture we found online.’ She made everything up because ‘I wanted to get back at you for leaving me.’

Mindfucked and totally mental; I didn’t know what to believe. My teenage years, from fourteen to sixteen, were filled with this anxious dread, this paranoia of not knowing. Was she ever pregnant? If so, did she actually give the baby up for adoption? Did she really make it up, or did she say that to make me feel better? Was it all really a big prank to get back at me?

She got back at me, alright.

Much later, in my twenties, I spoke with Flower Girl again, and she strongly insisted that she made up the whole thing because she was angry that I dumped her. She claimed that the instances where it circled back, the ‘here’s a picture of your baby, lol,’ were just her ‘being cruel’ with her friends while on a bender – but was this just another lie?

For so long, I felt like Spike Spiegel falling from the church’s stained glass window after his serendipitous battle with Vicious – “You should see yourself. Do you have any idea what you look like right at this moment?” And instead of looking like a ravenous beast, I looked like a scared, lost child. The gorgeous ‘Green Bird,’ a piano driven hymn that sounds like cherubs taunting from on high, plays as I fall endlessly, wishing the ground would hurry up and catch up with me.

Video: Scene from Cowboy Bebop in which Spike and Vicious duel; the song “Green Bird” by SEATBELTS plays as Spike falls out of a stained-glass window.

I looked it up. I checked the family trees. I checked the local birth records. There’s nothing there. It never happened.

I laugh about it now but, at the time, it was terrible.

But it wasn’t all terrible. Surely, I would not be the same person I am now without the Flower Girl and the SEATBELTS. Yoko Kanno was there for me; comforting me in a darkness of my own making; my guide and my only friend. The eclecticism of the music found throughout Cowboy Bebop, a show that, without the SEATBELTS, would have been far worse than it lucked-out to be, eventually inspired me to explore jazz and other genres of music I never would have considered otherwise.

As of writing this, I am 30-something-years-old, married to the love of my life, and have two children. I’m doing well. But I will never forget the time when Yoko Kanno and her SEATBELTS were my everything.

seatblets no disc back

#music #autobiographical #anime #SEATBELTS