Seriously. Death is, in a sense, always an escape. From life, from responsability, from having to actually deal with real life and make decisions and mistakes every day, and occasionally fail badly, and not be the Perfect Self-Sacrificing Hero Who Saves the Day.I wouldn't want "The Gift" as a series finale, either. That would mean that the show would end on Buffy basically taking an easy way out and escaping the pressures of adult life by choosing a death as a martyr.
Huh?
Sacrificing her life when she wanted to keep living was the "easy way out"???? Seriously?
Sorry, but that doesn't even make sense. It's not as if Buffy was afraid to grow up or was just done living or didn't want to be there for Dawn.....she just didn't see another way that didn't involve losing her sister. She gave her life for another......"there is no greater love that a person can have than to sacrifice one's self for another".
While I enjoyed Seasons 6 and to a lesser degree 7, I seriously don't see how the series can end on a better note than how they went out in Season 5.
I didn't say that Buffy was afraid to grow up... But if she had died and remained dead there, she never would have had to really grow up, and deal with the world without her mom, without parent figures to watch over her, a world where she has to be a parent and have a mundane job and still continue to fight.
And as to the fact that Buffy's character growth was nowhere near maturity at that point, I present her words about Dawn:
“She's more than that. She's me. The monks made her out of me. I hold her ... and I feel closer to her than ... It's not just the memories they built. It's physical. Dawn ... is a part of me. The only part that I-”
The only part that I what?
Love?
Respect?
Trust?
Accept?
Buffy sees herself in Dawn, or rather, a very specific part of herself: her childlike innocence. And innocence is the only part of herself that she loves (or whatever she meant to say) at that point. She only likes that innocent teenage girl she once was, the one who has to be protected from the monsters, and the responsability, and the sexuality, and the violence, and the darkness, and the world of adults. (Buffy will only change her mind on the way she should treat Dawn in season 6 finale) She doesn't know how to deal with those other parts of herself, especially all that darkness that's connected to her role as a Slayer (her violent/sexual impulses, loneliness, ruthlessness) which is growing more powerful by the day - which very much comes into focus into the next 2 seasons. Take a guess who, to her, represents that part of herself.