Ironic, because when he WASN'T in control of himself she cared, but when he WAS, she was awful to him. That's human concern for an individual in crisis, yes, but is it enough to sustain a relationship? I don't think so.
Ironic, because when he WASN'T in control of himself she cared, but when he WAS, she was awful to him. That's human concern for an individual in crisis, yes, but is it enough to sustain a relationship? I don't think so.
Almost every time we saw them there was strife! Granted, we didn't see every moment of their lives and it could be argued that most of the time they were happy but that's not the way it looked to me.
Almost every time we saw them there was strife! Granted, we didn't see every moment of their lives and it could be argued that most of the time they were happy but that's not the way it looked to me.
Look, I don't mean to be rude, but I have to ask: how many relationships have you been in, and did any of them last longer than a year? Because the idea that relationships do not have strife in them is really naive, and anyone who has been in a long term relationship is almost bound to recognize the sort of fights Keiko and O'Brien had.
Almost every time we saw them there was strife! Granted, we didn't see every moment of their lives and it could be argued that most of the time they were happy but that's not the way it looked to me.
Look, I don't mean to be rude, but I have to ask: how many relationships have you been in, and did any of them last longer than a year? Because the idea that relationships do not have strife in them is really naive, and anyone who has been in a long term relationship is almost bound to recognize the sort of fights Keiko and O'Brien had.
I was married for ten years. I eventually decided that the autonomy I was giving up wasn't worth it. I never had a relationship go much over a year since then but I don't see that as a bad thing. I'm just not a relationship person.
I've been misunderstood here though. Of course I know there will be some degree of compromise and work needed in any relationship. I'm willing to accept less of it than the average person but it looked to me like Miles and Keiko were doing little besides working and compromising.
Look, I don't mean to be rude, but I have to ask: how many relationships have you been in, and did any of them last longer than a year? Because the idea that relationships do not have strife in them is really naive, and anyone who has been in a long term relationship is almost bound to recognize the sort of fights Keiko and O'Brien had.
I was married for ten years. I eventually decided that the autonomy I was giving up wasn't worth it. I never had a relationship go much over a year since then but I don't see that as a bad thing. I'm just not a relationship person.
I've been misunderstood here though. Of course I know there will be some degree of compromise and work needed in any relationship. I'm willing to accept less of it than the average person but it looked to me like Miles and Keiko were doing little besides working and compromising.
Exactly. It's not unlike what you see in John & Kate Plus 8 before the marriage--that woman behaved JUST like Keiko. Now, granted in that case the husband was a total git in his own way, but she wasn't innocent either.
For another fictional example, though--I can say that Ray and Debra's marriage on Everybody Loves Raymond was similarly unappealing to watch. Because yes, working and compromising is necessary, but total incompatibility and personal sniping all the time is NOT the basis of a relationship.
But even if you look as far back as TNG: "The Wounded," the red flags are ALL there. It may be more subtle, but it's glaringly obvious to me that they are not compatible. They never were, and DS9 just made a bad thing worse.
I'm not really a fan of Keiko, but I don't think any marriage is perfect...and apparently they were happy enough to make it work.
I just assume that we saw a lot of fighting because those were the incidents that generated the interesting drama - which is what conflict does in a show.
100% domestic bliss would not have been very interesting to watch at all, IMO.![]()
I'm not really a fan of Keiko, but I don't think any marriage is perfect...and apparently they were happy enough to make it work.
I just assume that we saw a lot of fighting because those were the incidents that generated the interesting drama - which is what conflict does in a show.
100% domestic bliss would not have been very interesting to watch at all, IMO.![]()
No, but a little bit of bliss would have been nice. I don't recall a single instance of them having fun together. Everything positive we saw involved family obligation.
So the fact that he isn't a perfect person justifies another person who is NOT his superior officer actually trying to CONTROL him? Unless he is mentally ill and cannot care for himself, that argument won't fly. I could've bought that during "Hard Time" and at NO other time. You're basically making a two-wrongs-make-a-right argument, and I'm not buying that one.
In my opinion, if you're constantly having to "work and compromise" to make a relationship work, it's a bad relationship. Life is too short to put up with that crap - even with the 120+ lifespans in the 24th century.
IMHO, the divorce rate could be cut in half if every man applying for a marriage license was required to watch all the Trek episodes with Keiko in it.
I'm not really a fan of Keiko, but I don't think any marriage is perfect...and apparently they were happy enough to make it work.
I just assume that we saw a lot of fighting because those were the incidents that generated the interesting drama - which is what conflict does in a show.
100% domestic bliss would not have been very interesting to watch at all, IMO.![]()
No, but a little bit of bliss would have been nice. I don't recall a single instance of them having fun together. Everything positive we saw involved family obligation.
Then blame the writers, not the O'Briens. I've never, not in all my awareness of DS9, thought of them as anything other than a normal couple. The only reason we never saw them happy was because the writers wanted to throw the happy bone at Sisko/Kasidy or Worf/Jadzia; Miles and Keiko were the "normal" couple who were raising a family and dealing with married life. I've certainly never thought of Keiko as manipulative or controlling. Honest about her reservations and perhaps finding her life more difficult than she expected or liked, but hey - she and Miles are only human.
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