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Harriet wrote:
Zatoichi wrote:
SusiGo wrote:
Just one thing, Liberty:
"Spanking and humiliation are often part of loving relationships."
I really cannot agree with that one.I think what Liberty meant was within BDSM-context..
Still there is no need to agree with it
No, of course not, there is no obligation to agree with anything.. won´t make it less of a fact though.
Last edited by Zatoichi (September 15, 2014 8:01 am)
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nakahara wrote:
So Sherlock´s pining looks at John´s chair and John himself at his wedding, Sherlock´s lovely wedding speech where he confessed his feelings to John in more certain terms than he ever did when he spoke with Irene, Sherlock´s obvious jealousy at Major Sholto, Sherlock´s care about John´s attractiveness (he mocks his moustache thrice), his willingness to pull John out of the fire and to come from the dead for his sake - that all doesn´t count as the proof of love. But a slight dilation of pupils in a dark room is a definite proof of sexual attraction...
Well, not in my eyes. For me, Sherlock´s actions clearly indicate John´s importance to him and his dedication to John. I fail to see anything that would signify the same depth of feelings of Sherlock to Irene. In my opinion, if Sherlock ever was attracted to Irene, that´s all that it was - a slight attraction. While the thing that connects him to John is a deep, selfless love.
But no one ever doubted the love and the commitment between John and Sherlock, all that is ever doubted in this thread is the physical attraction. And while all you mentioned above are clear proofs for their love, they are no proof for physical desires. No one ever says that what Irene and Sherlock shared was more deep or meaningful than what John and Sherlock share, on the contrary. Just that their relationship included much more elements of actual physical attraction than the men´s (We don´t have to discuss Irene´s display of attraction, she is quite aggressive about it, but even Sherlock gets quite unambiguously touchy with her when he grabs her wrist and whispers in her ear about how her body gave her away - for whatever reason, I don´t mean to say he loves her but it´s much more explicitly sensual than anything the men ever did. Drunk knee grabs, hugs at weddings and deep looks to shut someone up without using words are just not the same category in my books).
My final words on that matter are that it´s clear we have a charged situation between those two guys and their respective personalities. What happens between them is sexy to look at, no one will ever deny that (a whole wing in my mind-palace is named after them ^^). We just have to remain aware that what we make of it, our assumptions about their respective feelings can be biased by the feelings we would have in their situation. Of course there´s the possibility John´s bi and feels the same way towards Sherlock we would, or that John´s basically straight but still feels for Sherlock like we would just because he is so damn special. But there´s also the possibility that John is a human being with some aspects of his personality (namely his sexuality) not focussing on Sherlock, and his continued intimate relationships with women seem to suggest that. To assume someone from the outside knows better what´s going on in a person´s head and heart than themselves is dangerous ground, a ground I myself wish to stay away from. I´m happy to accept their relationship includes physical expressions of affection as soon as I´m unambiguously told or shown (and it goes without saying that I don´t mean it in the "but how are we supposed to know he´s gay if he doesn´t have hot sex on screen"-way. A kiss or them holding hands, heck even a smile and nod to a half-sentence from anyone about them being together now would be enough). But as long as I´m not I refrain from ascribing hidden motivations or even psychological assessments like "in denial" to a character that speaks his mind quite clearly and never makes the slightest distinct move in that direction.
Last edited by Zatoichi (September 15, 2014 8:43 am)
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nakahara wrote:
She definitely sleeps with women - with the young royal mentioned in the story (allegedly some racy photos of her and that girl exist, in very promising situations) and certainly with her maid or secretary, Kate (Irene herself mentions that Kate often ends up unconscious after that). She probably just spanks men - even when she speaks with Sherlock, she only mentions how gladly she would slap him, beat him until he shouted for mercy and the like. I don´t think she is shamming up when she mentions that she´s gay and I have a feeling she likes her position as a dominatrix.
But I have no problem admitting that she is attracted to Sherlock. I just don´t see Sherlock reciprociating her feelings.
I don't disagree, but I don't think anything is entirely clear because of the way Irene uses people. The royal is a client, after all. And I'd thought that the compromising photos were BDSM-related ones (we see her walking towards the royal with a riding crop). After all, that's a bit racier than vanilla sex. I think we get small bits of dialogue that are Irene being herself - the rest is a "disguise".
Her superpower is knowing what men like, so I see her kinky talk as being about what she thinks Sherlock likes, rather than what she likes herself. (Either she guesses that he's into that, or she's testing the water to see the reaction. Because she persists with it, and because she's so good at guessing, I'd say it's more likely to be the former). I agree that she does come across as having that orientation herself, but in the scene where she propositions him, where he knows for sure that she's aroused, she's talking about vanilla sex (I think). So it's left a little ambiguous (deliberately, I think).
Exactly. Sherlock´s fascination with Moriarty does not neccessarily mean he feels sexual attraction to him. I see the same thing when I look at Sherlock - Irene interactions: fascination with an intelligent enemy, surprise at the audacity and provocativeness of the woman, shyness from the highly unusual, sexually laden encounter that´s out of the area of Sherlock´s experience... but not the sexual attraction and the willingness to start a relationship.
Oh, I don't think he is ever looking at starting a relationship. Those things he says about love and chemistry are things that he's persuaded himself. He chooses not to go down that route. If anything ASIB proves to him that it does affect his work. (It actually enhances his deduction speed, but it adversely affects his judgment, in a dangerous way). But I don't think that sticking to his principles is easy. There's a internal battle going on which he mostly keeps hidden but definitely shows through in the Sherlocked scene.
So Sherlock´s pining looks at John´s chair and John himself at his wedding, Sherlock´s lovely wedding speech where he confessed his feelings to John in more certain terms than he ever did when he spoke with Irene, Sherlock´s obvious jealousy at Major Sholto, Sherlock´s care about John´s attractiveness (he mocks his moustache thrice), his willingness to pull John out of the fire and to come from the dead for his sake - that all doesn´t count as the proof of love. But a slight dilation of pupils in a dark room is a definite proof of sexual attraction...
Well, not in my eyes. For me, Sherlock´s actions clearly indicate John´s importance to him and his dedication to John. I fail to see anything that would signify the same depth of feelings of Sherlock to Irene. In my opinion, if Sherlock ever was attracted to Irene, that´s all that it was - a slight attraction. While the thing that connects him to John is a deep, selfless love.
But that's just it - what we see between Sherlock and John shows love, love in a long-standing, mutually rather dependent relationship. I can't see anything that tells me it's sexual attraction. In some cases, it confirms that it isn't. (Sherlock is jealous when it comes to Sholto, John's old, good friend, in a way that he is never jealous around John's lovers. I think he'd be happy for the lovers not to exist and not get in the way of what he wants to do with John, but it's not sexual jealousy).
I did say that Sherlock's dilated pupils might not be admissable evidence. . It may have been an accident. However, that scene is beautifully filmed, and it seems careless to have his pupils dilated at the very point when he says that dilated pupils signify arousal, unless we're meant to think that it's two-way. There are better indicators that Sherlock is attracted to Irene, though. I just particularly like that one .
I can't really compare Sherlock's feelings to Irene to his feelings for John, because I think they are so different. He hardly has any time with Irene, and obviously doesn't love her in the way he loves a dear friend whom he lives with. But he has a meeting of minds with her and a sexual attraction (I think) that he doesn't have with John - not love, but infatuation - still a very powerful feeling.
But note that they speak about sexual relationship in their entire conversation: John claiming that he is not gay, she countering tha she is "and look at us both"... and suddenly her next sentence does not concern sexual relationship, but only friendship? No, I don´t think so - I think that her claim that they are a couple was just a continuation of their conversation and that yes, she insinuated the sexual attraction between them.
But sexual attraction doesn't make a couple. Sex could, I suppose. Being together, doing things together, could. As I said, they are in a long-standing, loving relationship (as friends) - they are a couple.
This is a little OT, but I think she engineers that situation anyway. Why does she want to speak to John? She has no connection with him, but she knows Sherlock would follow him. (To complicate things further, I think that Sherlock knows she's alive, and that she knows that he knows - but I know not everybody agrees with that). I don't think it's a surprise to her that Sherlock is listening.
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SusiGo wrote:
Just one thing, Liberty:
"Spanking and humiliation are often part of loving relationships."
I really cannot agree with that one.
Zatoichi wrote:
Harriet wrote:
Zatoichi wrote:
I think what Liberty meant was within BDSM-context..
Still there is no need to agree with it
No, of course not, there is no obligation to agree with anything.. won´t make it less of a fact though.
There's no agreeing or disagreeing with people's sexual orientation. It just is . And it's fine.
To be absolutely clear, yes, I did mean BDSM (thank you, Zatoichi) - it was in response to Nakahara's point about Irene, that she appeared to like spanking and humiliation, rather than a loving relationship. Obviously, many people in loving relationships do have that kind of sex. The desire doesn't go just because you fall in love. If anything, it's intensified. (I don't think Irene is looking for a loving relationship. But I do think she falls for Sherlock, rather than just wanting to do things to him, and her sexual inclinations certainly don't stop that happening at all).
I think it's clear that Irene's talking about consensual activity, because she's so reluctant to hit Sherlock to get the phone from him (she only does it because she has to). I think the riding crop is more a metaphor than anything, because it's almost an iconic sexual "weapon", and because we're introduced to Sherlock using a riding crop himself. Sherlock and Irene mirror each other a lot - clothes, hair, etc. White sheet/white dress. Naked/disguise (dog collar)removed. Irene wearing Sherlock's coat. Irene wearing Sherlock's dressing gown. I do think there is supposed to be a connection between them.
I've got to ask, leaving aside who's attracted to whom, don't you feel a certain something when you watch the Sherlocked scene? Don't you think Sherlock is particularly sexy there? What about when he takes Irene's wrist and leans into the darkness? Or does it leave you cold? I'm curious about this. I mean, I was floored by that episode - it's probably the one that really got me obsessed with Sherlock as a an object of desire.
Last edited by Liberty (September 15, 2014 10:39 am)
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Yes, he is sexy here (as he is for example when making John get the phone out of his pocket or strutting around in his purple shirt, but this is just an aside). No, it does not leave me cold. There are indeed quite a lot of parallels between Sherlock and Irene - just think of the six months ultimatum mentioned here that is taken up again with regard to Sherlock himself in HLV.
And yet - where does this leave us within the frame of the show? For me it is a deliberate play on sexual and intellectual attraction which is brilliantly done. For one episode, not more. It is no proof of Sherlock being heterosexual. Because in the fireplace scene where the whole setting is overly romantic John is on his mind. He refuses Irene's equation of having dinner and having sex. And when Irene makes her advance and covers his hand he turns his around for the sake of taking her pulse, turning a sexual gesture into something scientific.
I do not deny that there is a lot of sexual innuendo between them but this is one episode out of nine so far. In all the others he shows no attraction to any woman whereas his relationship with John is a constant.
And one last thing - we should not forget that it is the thought of John that calls him back to life in HLV although he thinks of his parents and Mrs Hudson and Irene as well. Irene simply does not have the same emotional power over him that has John. Nobody else has.
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SusiGo wrote:
Yes, he is sexy here (as he is for example when making John get the phone out of his pocket or strutting around in his purple shirt, but this is just an aside). No, it does not leave me cold. There are indeed quite a lot of parallels between Sherlock and Irene - just think of the six months ultimatum mentioned here that is taken up again with regard to Sherlock himself in HLV.
And yet - where does this leave us within the frame of the show? For me it is a deliberate play on sexual and intellectual attraction which is brilliantly done. For one episode, not more. It is no proof of Sherlock being heterosexual. Because in the fireplace scene where the whole setting is overly romantic John is on his mind. He refuses Irene's equation of having dinner and having sex. And when Irene makes her advance and covers his hand he turns his around for the sake of taking her pulse, turning a sexual gesture into something scientific.
I do not deny that there is a lot of sexual innuendo between them but this is one episode out of nine so far. In all the others he shows no attraction to any woman whereas his relationship with John is a constant.
And one last thing - we should not forget that it is the thought of John that calls him back to life in HLV although he thinks of his parents and Mrs Hudson and Irene as well. Irene simply does not have the same emotional power over him that has John. Nobody else has.
This exactly.
I agree, he is very sexy in the Sherlocked scene. And yes, the way he approaches Irene and is standing very close to her is sexy. But he's playing the game there, that's all this means to me. Without a doubt the two of them can look hot and sexy together, but that doesn't mean that Sherlock is in any way sexually attracted to her. He's attracted to her intellect and to the challenge she provides.
Last edited by SolarSystem (September 15, 2014 10:25 am)
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SusiGo wrote:
And yet - where does this leave us within the frame of the show? For me it is a deliberate play on sexual and intellectual attraction which is brilliantly done. For one episode, not more. It is no proof of Sherlock being heterosexual.
It´s not a proof of him being heterosexual, but it is the only deliberate play on sexual attraction we ever get in the maintext of the show. I won´t deny there´s a lot of subtext that can be read as playing on sexual attraction between him and John in the nine episodes, and of course their relationship was and always will be the central one. I just don´t think it will amount to them having a physical relationship in the maintext in the future. (But I´m almost sure there will be background songs or special lighting or camera angles that will "prove" the case for everyone who wants it to be that way, because they love us ;P)
Last edited by Zatoichi (September 15, 2014 10:51 am)
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Thanks for your comments about the scene. I wasn't claiming that because it's sexy for us, there's sexual attraction there (I too find him sexy in completely non-sexual scenes). I was just struggling to see how that scene could not have an effect, and was curious. So I see now that it does have an effect .
Anyway, yes, it's just one episode. He presents himself as possibly asexual in S1. I could have gone along with that. But ASIB shows something completely different - a decision to suppress desire, a mistrust of it and a view of it as a weakness. And how is that information revealed? Through a woman. It almost doesn't make sense for him not to fall for Irene, because why else would his attitude to desire be an issue? Why would we need to know? He doesn't care what other people do with their feelings. It's his own feelings that he thinks he should repress. He tells Irene that she's lost because she gave in to her feelings for him, but ends up thanking her for the final proof. The proof that he's right to suppress his own feelings. It doesn't make sense if he doesn't have those feelings and hasn't had to fight against them.
So the only episode that really explores Sherlock's sexuality, explores it with a woman. It doesn't mean he has to be straight, but still, the only person who raised those issues for him is female.
When he takes Irene's pulse he's not planning to use that information against her, as part of the game. (If he had been, he'd have guessed the phone code at that point, I think, or shortly after). So he's taking it for his own purposes. I think he realised earlier that he'd misread Molly and wanted to be sure with Irene - but the only reason for him wanting to be sure is that he cares whether she's attracted to him or not. It just happens to turn out to be useful information later. In that context, it's a little less clinical and a little more sexy. And it makes sense for him to do that, because Irene is a manipulator. She acts a part to get men to do what she wants. Sherlock just checks that her desire is genuine. He can't trust what she says, but he can trust her physical reactions.
I do agree that Irene doesn't have the same emotional power. But they have different places in his life. Irene is the focus of the "sex" episode (or "love", as they call it, but I think that gets too confusing), the episode where he completely shuts John out. John is constant and central throughout the series.
Last edited by Liberty (September 15, 2014 12:10 pm)
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Liberty wrote:
So the only episode that really explores Sherlock's sexuality, explores it with a woman. It doesn't mean he has to be straight, but still, the only person who raised those issues for him is female.
Just wishing to add that a man gripping Sherlock's knee and saying "I don't mind" and Sherlock answering "any time" and next sitting with his arm around the sofa backrest just above the man's shoulders might be interpreted at least by some viewers as intimate and non-platonic.
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Liberty wrote:
I think it's clear that Irene's talking about consensual activity, because she's so reluctant to hit Sherlock to get the phone from him (she only does it because she has to).
This does not seem very reluctant to me - she warned him once, then immediatelly beat him like a dog:
Reminds me of the other person who was "reluctant" to hurt Sherlock:
Liberty wrote:
I've got to ask, leaving aside who's attracted to whom, don't you feel a certain something when you watch the Sherlocked scene? Don't you think Sherlock is particularly sexy there? What about when he takes Irene's wrist and leans into the darkness? Or does it leave you cold? I'm curious about this. I mean, I was floored by that episode - it's probably the one that really got me obsessed with Sherlock as a an object of desire.
Not only is Sherlock sexy as hell there, he deliberately flounts the raw power of his sexuality - his voice deepens and is rich like a cofee, he invades Irene´s personal space and seizes her by the arm, firmly but gently, whispers words to her ear to make her realise how dangerously close he really is... so no wonder that her heart starts beating like a bell in her chest.
But does that mean Sherlock is sexually attracted to Irene? If we look at the bigger picture, we must realise that:
A. - He is retaliating for his humiliation at her hands - calling him a Virgin and ganging up with Moriarty against him made him see red and he is viciously avenging himself by revealing her secret desires publicly, thus humiliating her as well and then crushing her completely under his heel when he takes her camera-phone from her and opens it with the "Sherlocked" code.
B. - He is playing her. Such acting is not beneath him when he wants to reach some goals that are only reachible through women, as we could already see in numerous examples:
It also helps that he is really good actor, able to see people´s weak sides and exploiting them when he sees it fit.
C. - Just as he is not demonstrative with his wounds, Sherlock is not demonstrative with his feelings either. When he starts to project his emotions outwardly in a very obvious manner, we can be sure that he is just acting in 99 cases out from 100. (That´s exactly why I am not overly concerned about Sherlock´s apparent lack of physical desire around John - I think that´s normal for his character + he has yet not came out to John and is therefore careful around him, hiding the proofs of his desire out of sight).
That´s why Sherlock´s and Irene´s story is ultimately tragic - because we see incredible, bitter-sweet desire there irreversibly buried among ruins of betrayal and pride, without the slightest chance to ever be fullfilled. That´s why I love ASiB and I admire those scenes - I just doesn´t see this as a proof of Sherlock´s affinity towards women.
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But they were drunk, Susi.
Oh, but wait a second: In Germany there is a saying that goes "Kinder und Betrunkene sagen die Wahrheit" - "Children and drunk speak the truth."
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Liberty wrote:
I did say that Sherlock's dilated pupils might not be admissable evidence. . It may have been an accident. However, that scene is beautifully filmed, and it seems careless to have his pupils dilated at the very point when he says that dilated pupils signify arousal, unless we're meant to think that it's two-way. There are better indicators that Sherlock is attracted to Irene, though. I just particularly like that one .
Irene´s pupils dilated when she was facing fire and her face fully bathed itself in the light of the flames. Sherlock´s pupils dilated when he came closer to Irene, bend to her and his face was suddenly hidden in the shadow. His reaction matches the normal physical reaction of the eyes being suddenly cast into the darkness - her reaction was not normal in those circumstances and thus revealed itself as a sign of her desire.
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Agree@naka
Cannon Sherlocks admiration of Irene is only interesting when compared to Sherlocks usual misogyny...
MGT Sherlocks admiration of Irenes cleverness..is only interesting when compared to his usual everyones an idiot..
I really doubt Sherlock was fooled by the fake death...the bashed in face and someone elses body...obvious.....which makes the violin lamentations and the taking the ciggy...classic Sherlock misdirection and taking advantage of situations..
She was there to do a job for Moriarty...and on his advice used her sexuality against him..it only worked temporarily...in the end he quite expertly and cruely used his sexuality against her.
Irene@Moriarty were wrong...sex wasn't his weak point..
Ultimately I think in S03 they seem to be kinda friends with benefits..Sherlock , unlike Mycroft , wasn't quite sociopathic enough to leave her to murdered...and she wasn't quite a goldfish...so they occasionally make use of each others brains....
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Well, like I said about the dilated pupils, it's just something I like rather than something I think of as proof. I thought it was a mistake at first, but I'm not so sure as the scene seems to be so carefully filmed. It would have been easy enough to change the lighting to show something different. I don't think either of them are supposed to actually be aroused in the scene, however sexy it is, but it's nice to see that mirroring again (and the inadvertent confession that it implies). There is much better evidence, particularly the speed of the deduction, but also the very fact that Irene persists in using sex with him, when she knows what men like.
And yes, he's acting in that scene, but trying to act as if he doesn't care when he desparately does. Some of it's for Irene's benefit (winning the game), but I think it's mainly for Mycroft's. He has to convince Mycroft he wants her sent to her death, when he's actually going to rescue her.
In the riding crop scene, she really has to get that phone back because she'll die without it. It's self-defence in advance. She explains that to him, then when she drugs him she repeatedly asks for it and only hits him with the nearest handy implement when he won't give it up*.
That´s why Sherlock´s and Irene´s story is ultimately tragic - because we see incredible, bitter-sweet desire there irreversibly buried among ruins of betrayal and pride, without the slightest chance to ever be fullfilled. That´s why I love ASiB and I admire those scenes - I just doesn´t see this as a proof of Sherlock´s affinity towards women.
Very nicely put! I agree, but I don't think it can be ignored that Irene is a woman. If it had been a man, then I think we would be convinced that Sherlock was attracted to men, whether or not he was 100% gay.
(*From Arianne De Vere:
IRENE: Give it to me. Now. Give it to me.
(Sherlock’s vision is going fuzzy. Grunting, he tries to get back to his feet.)
SHERLOCK: No.
IRENE: Give it to me.
(Starting to lose control of his muscles, Sherlock slumps to his hands and knees, still holding onto the phone.)
SHERLOCK: No.
IRENE: Oh, for goodness’ sake.
(She picks up her riding crop from the dressing table and wields it at him.)
IRENE: Drop it.)
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@ Lil, I agree that Sherlock wasn't fooled by the fake death. How could he be? But I think Irene knows that. With the minimum of communication, they set that up together - Irene needs Sherlock of all people to confirm it's her, and Sherlock plays along and becomes her protection, right through until the end.
@everyone else, I think the drunk scenes are funny, warm and affectionate, but not really sexy ... it's as if Sherlock gets reduced to being a normal person, a goldfish, with his feelings for John intact. They act like a couple of close mates getting drunk together. It feels comfortable, and I don't get the feeling Sherlock is desparately repressing sexual desire there.
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I did not say he was desperately repressing anything, quite the contrary. The alcohol allows him to relax and express feelings he may have suppressed before. Although this applies even more to John who in a way seems to me far more repressed than Sherlock (especially where series 3 is concerned).
Last edited by SusiGo (September 15, 2014 2:40 pm)
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SusiGo wrote:
I did not say he was desperately repressing anything, quite the contrary. The alcohol allows him to relax and express feelings he may have suppressed before. Although this applies even more to John who in a way seems to me far more repressed than Sherlock (especially where series 3 is concerned).
Their faces in the 221b portion of stag night just kill me. Suddenly nothing is being repressed! Well, maybe repressed just a tiny bit. But they still practically glow looking at each otherl.
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@ SusiGo No, I was just extrapolating - if he's sexually repressed, and he's repressing desire for John, and the alcohol lowers his inhibitions, then you'd expect some idea of him making an effort to keep his desires under control ... but he seems quite relaxed. (Yes, in some ways John is more repressed. But I think it's a little different - Sherlock has made a conscious decision that to repress his sexuality - it's control that I might expect to see either slipping a little when drunk, or being more obviously and consciously repressed, if there was a real sexual attraction there). It was a golden opportunity for something that crossed the line and made desire explicit, but it didn't happen.
And as I've said, I may well be proved wrong later in the series, or the writers might change direction . But up until now - there's nothing obvious.
@Tonnaree Where you (and others) are seeing sexual desire, I see love and affection. They do love each other, after all.
Last edited by Liberty (September 15, 2014 3:00 pm)
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It's always a take on the cannon Holmes..to have Sherlock desperately care...about anyone but John...seems very non cannon and Ooc...
At this stage of the game../Scandal/..Sherlocks still three parts sociopath.and doesn't do sentiment....in the very next episode he says...he doesn't have friends...just John...and then he fakes his own death@everyone....
It's years later when we get to series three that Sherlock even starts to consider his emotions and consider others...thats why he attempts to make nice with Molly..call Greg...something....and misses so much with Mary....he is trying sentiment and getting it all wrong..
Sherlocks character going from sociopathic monster...to learning to be a good man or whatever..through his relationship with John....thats kinda a main theme....
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Liberty wrote:
@Tonnaree Where you (and others) are seeing sexual desire, I see love and affection. They do love each other, after all.
And this is exactly what always upets me in this discussion - people forcing us Johnlockers in a certain corner - let me call it the sex corner. Strangely, most of the time it the non-Johnlockers bringing up sex and sexual desire (here on the board, not in general).
We do see love and affection between them. And we do not exclude a future relationship encompassing physical and emotional love and desire and thereby also sex. But the starting point - and I am speaking for all of us Johnlockers - is always love and affection. But of course it is much easier to refute our arguments by saying it is mainly about sex.
Last edited by SusiGo (September 15, 2014 3:41 pm)