God, Beverly! Shut the hell up!
Seriously, this woman is so over protective of Wesley it's almost a caricature of motherhood.
Let us first consider that it's the 24th Century. We've seen evidence -Jake Sisko aside- that children int he 24th Century are not analagous to their 20th (or 21st, rather) century counterparts. We've seen children young enough to still be in primary/"grade" school doing calculus -a form of math that makes 20 year old college students throw things across the room-, it's also been shown that those in their mid teens can go into the academy. Hell, Wesley was exceptional enough that he was driving the Federation flagship at the age of 16!!!
So, obviously, a teenager living in 2364 is a lot different than a teenager living in 2009.
So why was Beverly so goddam over protective of Wesley?! I offer the following evidence:
1. Early TNG Season One episode. Wesley does something that warrants his respect in Picard's eyes making Wesley "Acting Ensign." Wes is invited to sit on the bridge to view operations. Picard wonders if Wesley wants to inform his mother -this implies that even Picard knows how protective Beverly is and knows that she may freak out over Wesley sitting on the bridge and having the position of Acting Ensign.
2. Season 2's "The Child." Wesley pisses his pants all episode on whether or not his mom will freak out over him deciding to stay on the ship to continue his duties/training rather than following her to Starfleet Medical -at this age Wesley is old enough to be in the academy and out on his own by the societal standards.
3. Season 3's "Evolution." This is the big one. Beverly is back on the ship and making her stomach lining consume itself because Wesley *gasp* has responsibilites and duties as Acting Ensign on the ship. She frets over him studying and working too much to the point of pestering him over the com when he's out working. Then at the end of the episode she flips out because "GASP!" a girl is showing great interest in her eighteen-year-old son!!!
4. "The Offspring." Beverly pages Crusher to remind him to get goddamn haircut!
*MY* mom stopped pestering me to get a haircut once I got my DL and could drive myself there.
5. "Journey's End." Sigh. I hate this episode so much because it rapes Wesley who I think grew to a fine character starting with Season 2 as he was treated as less "gee-whiz wonder kid" and more like "exceptional fast-track-training potential Starfleet officer." This episode makes Wesley a mopey, angsty, pissy little bastard who shirks his ambitions and desires to go have ride on rainbows in cloud cars with the creepy "Traveler" in other planes of exsistance. However, before he sets off his mom brings her twenty-something old son a friggin' coat to wear as he goes off on these other planes.
6. Talking with her mentor in "Remember Me" gets her all weapy and worry-y and she goes to pester her son while he is at work. -Doing this gets almost forever lost in a static warp bubble.
These are five that come off from memory but I'm sure there are other examples of Beverly acting over-reactive as mother of a teenaged son in the 2360s.
(There are two times where she acts extreme but in cases where it may be forgivable considering circumstances. In both "Justice" and "First Duty" she's a little over-reactive but both were in dire circumstances where one dealt with the possible execution of her son and the other his near-death in a training exercise.)
Seriously, this woman is so over protective of Wesley it's almost a caricature of motherhood.
Let us first consider that it's the 24th Century. We've seen evidence -Jake Sisko aside- that children int he 24th Century are not analagous to their 20th (or 21st, rather) century counterparts. We've seen children young enough to still be in primary/"grade" school doing calculus -a form of math that makes 20 year old college students throw things across the room-, it's also been shown that those in their mid teens can go into the academy. Hell, Wesley was exceptional enough that he was driving the Federation flagship at the age of 16!!!
So, obviously, a teenager living in 2364 is a lot different than a teenager living in 2009.
So why was Beverly so goddam over protective of Wesley?! I offer the following evidence:
1. Early TNG Season One episode. Wesley does something that warrants his respect in Picard's eyes making Wesley "Acting Ensign." Wes is invited to sit on the bridge to view operations. Picard wonders if Wesley wants to inform his mother -this implies that even Picard knows how protective Beverly is and knows that she may freak out over Wesley sitting on the bridge and having the position of Acting Ensign.
2. Season 2's "The Child." Wesley pisses his pants all episode on whether or not his mom will freak out over him deciding to stay on the ship to continue his duties/training rather than following her to Starfleet Medical -at this age Wesley is old enough to be in the academy and out on his own by the societal standards.
3. Season 3's "Evolution." This is the big one. Beverly is back on the ship and making her stomach lining consume itself because Wesley *gasp* has responsibilites and duties as Acting Ensign on the ship. She frets over him studying and working too much to the point of pestering him over the com when he's out working. Then at the end of the episode she flips out because "GASP!" a girl is showing great interest in her eighteen-year-old son!!!

4. "The Offspring." Beverly pages Crusher to remind him to get goddamn haircut!

5. "Journey's End." Sigh. I hate this episode so much because it rapes Wesley who I think grew to a fine character starting with Season 2 as he was treated as less "gee-whiz wonder kid" and more like "exceptional fast-track-training potential Starfleet officer." This episode makes Wesley a mopey, angsty, pissy little bastard who shirks his ambitions and desires to go have ride on rainbows in cloud cars with the creepy "Traveler" in other planes of exsistance. However, before he sets off his mom brings her twenty-something old son a friggin' coat to wear as he goes off on these other planes.

6. Talking with her mentor in "Remember Me" gets her all weapy and worry-y and she goes to pester her son while he is at work. -Doing this gets almost forever lost in a static warp bubble.
These are five that come off from memory but I'm sure there are other examples of Beverly acting over-reactive as mother of a teenaged son in the 2360s.
(There are two times where she acts extreme but in cases where it may be forgivable considering circumstances. In both "Justice" and "First Duty" she's a little over-reactive but both were in dire circumstances where one dealt with the possible execution of her son and the other his near-death in a training exercise.)
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