She merely did what thousands of couples do on their wedding day, she got cold feet. That doesn't mean she didn't love Miles, just that the life changing event in front of her overwhelmed her for a little while. Why would she marry a man she didn't love? This is supposed to be the 24th century, so there's no need to marry someone for food or shelter, nor class or status. Keiko was a beautiful, intelligent woman, who could have gone anywhere, and fallen in love with anyone. She fell in love with Miles. The reason Miles didn't snark so much at Keiko is because Miles was more laid back than she was. Clearly, Keiko's personality tend to be more assertive. In this case, that's the type of person Miles clearly likes. There's nothing wrong with their relationship.I tend to disagree with how healthy their relationship was. It always seemed like she was finding a reason to snark at him. He never did such a thing. Maybe it's the old "wives will be wives" but he definitely got the short end of the relationship stick on several occasions (maybe it's the disparity of acting chops). Think back to the TNG when they were married. She got "cold feet" when in reality it really seemed like she didn't love him like he loved her. Data goes off and has an exercise in humanity and it magically works out. If it were me, I would've left her at the nearest transporter pad.
"A manly thing"?
Wrong.Since a majority of us would acknowledge the O'Brien's relationship didn't exactly work out well
Lol...Probably meaning a 90's manly thing.
Exactly.Wrong.
Did you expect Keiko to be a total doormat, with no needs of her own, being the perfect Stepford wife?I tend to disagree with how healthy their relationship was. It always seemed like she was finding a reason to snark at him. He never did such a thing. Maybe it's the old "wives will be wives" but he definitely got the short end of the relationship stick on several occasions (maybe it's the disparity of acting chops). Think back to the TNG when they were married. She got "cold feet" when in reality it really seemed like she didn't love him like he loved her. Data goes off and has an exercise in humanity and it magically works out. If it were me, I would've left her at the nearest transporter pad.
My criticism is more about how O'Brien got pigeonholed into playign the always-suffering guy in most of his stories. The writers are on record as being fans of how Colm Meaney plays that sort of story, so they kept writing them.
Yeah, everyone just seemed to love making Miles suffer one way or another.
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