It is one thing to want something for so long and then to realize
that you will never reach it. It is another thing to come to the
understanding that you will still keep trying despite knowing that you
will never reach it. And it is still yet another thing to realize that
what you believed in was a lie all along. When I first learned the
story of Sayaka Miki I think it was difficult for me to resonate with
her struggle keenly. I understood the tragedy of her story, but I saw
her as brash, naive, and stubborn. However, I wrote in 2013
in that I realized some things that made me feel like I started to
understand her struggle a bit more. I think I had begun to understand
the idea of believing in something flawed, and had a greater
appreciation of that "stubbornness". And I also realize now the feeling
of being betrayed by an ideal. You could argue that Sayaka's naivety
makes her story more "human". That this is a flaw in her character, one
that makes it resonant. I think that's true to some extent, but humans
are not the only species that are naive. Perhaps what makes her
struggle truly human is her struggle to maintain her beliefs despite
being proven wrong. In a way you could say this is an attachment to the
past -- a sort of sunk-cost fallacy, if you will. But I think it's
more than that, too. The idea of choosing to spend effort on something
that is known to ultimately be futile, I think is something that feels
to me to be uniquely human. Like most good stories, Sayaka's portrayal
to me doesn't have a defined single message or "moral" -- indeed, her
story resolves in different ways depending on the universe. I think
this is by nature, as you can't simply "fix" this struggle by finding an
answer. It is simply something to be experienced and to learn your way
through. --September 7, 2021
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