For 35 years, Picard has been written as the model human being, the ideal man. A role model others are expected to emulate.
No, he's not. And it's kind of disturbing you would think so.
Even though we know he's not asexual or aromantic, and even though we know he longs for a family, and even though we know plenty of Starfleet captains maintain successful relationships -- when we meet him in "Encounter at Farpoint," Jean-Luc Picard is a 59-year-old bachelor. Throughout TNG, he displays a chronic fear of intimacy -- he gives mixed signals to Beverly for twenty years, he mostly starts only casual relationships, he cuts serious relationships off when he's forced to confront the consequences of commitment.
Jean-Luc Picard is, from the moment we meet him, a messed-up dude. I've thought so for years. PIC S2 is the first time the canon is explaining
why he's always been so messed up.
To suddenly load him down with these issues
The fear of intimacy was already present in TNG.
TNG also saw him being: Mind-melded with a Vulcan suffering a degenerative neurological disease; be tortured for weeks by the Cardassians; lose his brother and nephew; find out he has a clone whom he's forced to kill; being forced to watch his ersatz son Data die in front of him that same day; and, of course, be assimilated by the Borg Collective and struggle with PTSD afterwards.
Why? Even here people extol the stereotypical stiff upper lip for Picard, championing a stoic attitude. Picard is pretty normal here.
Sadly, yes. But stoicism is actually a deeply harmful, toxic way of living.
It isn't an insult. It also isn't necessary. It feels like lazy writing to take a character who is more reserved in his way and insist that the only way he could be so is via emotional trauma.
He's not just "reserved." Miles O'Brien is reserved, but he was able to enter and maintain a successful relationship and raise children. Jean-Luc Picard is a messed-up dude and always has been.
True, but at least that was well signposted. And largely assumed to be resolved in First Contact,
Trauma does not just "get resolved" and go away. That's not an honest depiction of how human psychology works.
until yet again he had to be portrayed as a "man in constant agony"
He was never depicted as "a man in constant agony" either. He was, for instance, clearly not in "constant agony" in INS, and he was not in "constant agony" in "The Star Gazer." He
was, however, someone with unresolved intimacy issues stemming from his childhood that he has spent a lifetime avoiding dealing with. He wasn't in agony, but he wasn't totally self-actualized either.
It's an odd part now. For better or worse, in 1987 the writer's bible for TNG created a world in which humans were more evolved: they didn't ordinarily have interpersonal conflict, or suffer everyday disease, or succumb to baser emotions, or suffer mental health issues without resolution.
Which was always bullshit, a dishonest form of writing that did a disservice both to the characters and to the audience. I'm glad they don't do that crap anymore. You can have an optimistic, progressive future without that level of dishonesty.
That's the world the character inhabits, and it seems the modern production team want to cash in on the brand and star value, but rewrite the rules, and it just makes it wildly inconsistent.
ST writers have been rebelling against the false utopianism of early TNG since DS9. Throwing out the false utopianism while keeping the positive progressivism is a good creative decision.
Not to mention that people-suffering-trauma is one of the oldest tropes in fiction,
It is the
foundation of fiction.
"The Cage" opens with Pike considering leaving Starfleet because officers under his command were killed during a mission that happened before the episode began.
The very first captain in the very first episode of the very first series has trauma.
Where's the representation of folk who just fancy keeping themselves to themselves more as a sensibility? Why the need to grant, even 35 years in, ever character a hitherto-unseen trauma, as though the only plausible reason for them not being a raving extrovert would be pain?
Hate to tell you this, but everyone has trauma of some sort or other. A
realistic depiction of a brighter, more optimistic future is one in which people acknowledge this and take action to work on their issues and receive support for doing so -- not the ridiculous lie that there's a such thing as living without trauma.
Exactly. He's been wearing mysterious scars ever since he first told another crewman he was uncomfortable around children. Picard S2 has finally dragged them into the light to be addressed. He was afraid of passing schizophrenia on to his kids.
I didn't even take it as, he was afraid of passing schizophrenia to his children -- I took it as, he has an attachment disorder and is just afraid of losing people he loves.
The only reason he was forced to move on in tng is because the writers didn’t have the freedom at the time to carry his trauma since everything had to be resolved neatly by the end of the episode. Even “family” almost didn’t get made as is because the executives wanted some kind of alien threat instead of Picard dealing with his assimilation.
Yep. In addition to the false utopianism of Gene Roddenberry at his creative nadir, TNG was also handicapped by the arbitrary creative limits imposed upon the writers by the conceits of U.S. broadcast television at the time. TNG accomplished a lot in spite of its artistic limitations, but it was a deeply compromised, deeply flawed show that was never able to reach the level of artistic sophistication that DS9 reached, or which modern Trek has reached.