I would really like to skip Extreme Risk but unfortunately we can't skip the introduction of the Delta Flyer.
What's wrong with Extreme Risk?
For one thing even though I like the character I'm not a big fan of B'Elanna's episodes. They are almost like Seven and her individuality. Torres must deal with self acceptance or inner conflict. I would just as soon skip most of them.
There are things I like about it. I like the Delta Flyer and I'm glad they touch on the issues of self harm and depression but the episode just felt unfinished to me. I always leave it feeling there should have been more to the resolution than just her smiling at her pancakes. It's not that I 'hate' it or think its completely bad but I just feel frustrated every time I watch it so when it's just me I tend to skip it.
I'm glad they touch on the issues of self harm and depression but the episode just felt unfinished to me. I always leave it feeling there should have been more to the resolution than just her smiling at her pancakes. It's not that I 'hate' it or think its completely bad but I just feel frustrated every time I watch it so when it's just me I tend to skip it.
But it's
Voyager. Single episodes only!

A depressed B'Ellanna for a whole season (or longer) would get annoying real fast. In my mind, I see the smiling at her pancakes more of a sign she's slowly recovering.
Also, it's rare that Voyager acknowledges Trek continuity with the death of the Maquis. I thought B'Elanna was the perfect character for that. True, she's always the go-to person for inner conflict but that's what Trek has always done with the different 'stereotype' personalities.
I remember watching
"Night" the first time. It ticked me off SO MUCH because of many things, but paramount among them was this conversation between Tom and B'Elanna.
TORRES: Predictable. The Novokavich gambit. You always use that opening move.
PARIS: That's because you always fall for it.
TORRES: I feel like we've played this match a hundred times.
PARIS: Derada is a
game of subtlety.
TORRES: Too
subtle for me.
PARIS: Hmm. I'll bet.
TORRES: What's that supposed to mean?
PARIS: Well, if it doesn't involve
Klingon pain sticks...
I hated that because B'elanna doesn't get into anything
Klingon of her own volition. DON'T THESE WRITERS
READ OTHER EPISODES
BEFORE THEY'RE HIRED! I screamed at the TV derisively.
But 2 episodes later those damn writers
explained what was going on.
B'elanna, like her Star Fleet captain & mentor, had become depressed. Unlike her mentor, leaving the Void and getting "busy" with the next problem du jour
didn't cure B'Elanna. And while she may have smiled at her pancakes, her depression wasn't magically cured at the end of
"Extreme Risk" , it was just controlled enough to keep her off the disability roster and in the Engineering game.
I loved that while it may have been
Janeway that confronted her in sickbay...
JANEWAY: No. It's not okay. And until you decide to be more forthcoming you'll remain under the Doctor's supervision. Which means you're
off the shuttle project.
I'm sorry.
TORRES: (She drops her head and sighs)
I'm not.
JANEWAY: (Reaches out to pull B'Elanna's head up to look her in the eye) Now I
know there's something wrong.
... it was
Chakotay, her old
Maquis Commander & friend who looked into her heart and confronted her until she voiced her
real fears.
TORRES: You don't understand. It's not
just the pain. I
don't feel anything. Not about my dead friends, not about Tom, you, my job.
CHAKOTAY: Maybe you're afraid if you let yourself start to feel something, you might not be able to stop. You can't just shut off your emotions, B'Elanna. Sooner or later you're going to have to let yourself grieve.
Season 5 was a really good example of Trek
NOT "fixing" B'Elanna's problem completely by the end of the ep.
The beauty of season 5, for B'Elanna, is nothing was easy. Her "progress" goes 1 step back for every 2 steps forward, all year long.
In
"Nothing Human" she looks fine, is working "normally", then she is confronted with a program that represents all she as a Maquis hates and more importantly in the process of surviving the ordeal
she loses the connection to that Star Fleet mentor we've been talking about.
(
Torres is reading and burning incense.)
TORRES: Come in.
JANEWAY: At ease. Interesting fragrance. I'm surprised it hasn't set off the environmental alarms.
TORRES: It's a combination of mental relaxant and expeller of demons. It's an ancient Klingon remedy.
JANEWAY: Feeling any better?
TORRES: I'm
alive.
JANEWAY: I hope you can understand why I went against your wishes, B'Elanna. Losing you was unacceptable. I know you're angry, but we need to put this behind us.
Understood?
TORRES: Is that an order?
JANEWAY: Yes.
TORRES: You can't order someone to get rid of an emotion,
Captain.
JANEWAY: And what emotion is that?
TORRES: You had
no right to make that decision for me!
JANEWAY: I'm the Captain. You're my crewman. I did what I thought best. I get the feeling there are still a few demons in the air. Let's hope this (the incense) does the trick, huh?
Even in eps where her depression isn't front and center, B'elanna gets a ring side seat in how Janeway pushes the envelope to save other crew members. Like in
"Latent Image"...
JANEWAY: Doctor.
EMH: Doctor? Hardly! A doctor retains his objectivity. I didn't do that, did I? Two patients, equal chances of survival and I chose the one I was closer to? I chose my friend? That's not in my programming! That's not what I was designed to do!
Go ahead! Reprogram me! I'll lend you a hand! Let's start with this very day, this hour, this second!
JANEWAY: Computer, deactivate the
EMH.
TORRES: Here we go again.
Captain?
JANEWAY: It's as though there's a battle being fought inside him, between his original programming and what he's become. Our solution was to end that battle. What if we were wrong?
TORRES: We've seen what happens to him. In fact, we've seen it
twice.
JANEWAY: Still, we allowed him to evolve, and at the first sign of trouble? We gave him a soul, B'Elanna. Do we have the right to take it away now?
She also sees how far Janeway's willing to go to forgive transgressors like in "
Dark Frontier".
JANEWAY: And B'Elanna?
Don't access personal databases without my authorization.
TORRES:
Captain?
JANEWAY: There are protocols for observing privacy on this ship.
TORRES: No offense, but Seven of Nine is not on this ship anymore.
JANEWAY: I realize the two of you weren't exactly close. Regardless, we've just lost
one of our own.
TORRES: She was
never one of our own, Captain. Didn't she just prove that?
JANEWAY: I don't know what happened on that sphere and
neither do you, Lieutenant. Carry on.
Of course, there are still eps to come that let her depression come back to the fore... in the form of anger management, or lack thereof. Like in
"Juggernaut".
TUVOK: The flame, like emotion, is a primitive force. Left unchecked, it's chaotic, destructive. But if controlled it can be a powerful tool. The lamp controls the flame, as you must learn to control your emotions.
TORRES: I
lost my temper.
No big deal.
TUVOK: You destroyed the Doctor's holographic camera.
TORRES: I told him
three times to leave Engineering, but he kept buzzing around snapping pictures for some photo essay.
TUVOK: A day in the life of the warp core.
TORRES: I apologized,
and I replicated him a new camera.
TUVOK: You have a long history of emotional volatility. The point of this exercise is not to atone for past transgressions, but to prevent future ones.
TORRES: You can't order someone to meditate!
TUVOK: Commander Chakotay thinks otherwise.
So we did in fact get a
season long look at her depression, and B'Elanna's "2 steps forward,
1 step back" course of treatment.
TORRES: Oh!
Not another lecture about my emotions.
CHAKOTAY: No, a lecture about how to treat guests aboard this ship.
TORRES: Guests? Chakotay, these people are the scourge of the quadrant.
CHAKOTAY: Agreed, but right now they're our only hope of repairing thatfreighter, so I suggest you make friends
.
TORRES: Diplomacy. Janeway's answer to
everything.
CHAKOTAY: This isn't the Captain talking,
it's me, and I'm giving you an order. Keep your temper in check.
Understood? Understood?
TORRES: Yeah.
CHAKOTAY: I didn't hear you.
TORRES: Yes.
CHAKOTAY: B'Elanna, I need your expertise on this mission, not your bad mood.
TORRES: I'll see what I can do.
A season long look at one character's depression and how many of the other characters were not only affected by it but also managed to effect it in turn. A condition that kept B'Elanna and Janeway at arms length until episode 3 of the next season,
"Barge of the Dead".
TORRES: It doesn't matter if you think it was real. It was real to me. Whatever it was, it changed me. I can't ignore that. I need to confront what's happened.
JANEWAY: I'm sorry.
TORRES: You know, you're
just like her.
JANEWAY: Lieutenant?
TORRES: My mother. You're as dedicated to Starfleet principles as she was to Klingon honor. I know that we haven't always seen eye to eye, but despite our differences you helped me become a good officer. And I'd like to think that you're proud of me for it.
JANEWAY: I am.
TORRES: My mother
never had the chance to be proud of me. I'd like her to know me the way you do. I don't want her to die thinking of me as a disgrace. You
have to
let me do this.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2TZrjuSUuW8
Demons
officially expelled... and progress
finally going consistently forward.
[yt]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2TZrjuSUuW8[/yt]