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#and then they did it again in chimera ant arc.... where did killuas dad come from since when was he in on the plan
cerealmonster15 · 2 months
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my hxh experience is also very confusing bc i started watching it like 2+ years ago at my partners apartment, but then i think we stopped for a bit / we moved around a bit, and kinda just never got back to it. then a while after we moved in with each other wayyyy later we eventually picked it back up and then this time in dub form bc it's easier for me to focus if i dont have to try and read everything quick enough and also see whats happening jfkldshg so it was like
sub version watched up through like halfway through york new auction arc or whatever
[2+ YEAR LONG GAP???]
picking right back up exactly in the midway spot where we left off, now in dub, i cannot remember Jack Shit and have to keep asking my partner [who has seen/read it before] what's going on and who everyone is every 5 seconds. there are so many characters and i remembered like 6 of them at best fdhjvlksjldhg. killua's grandpa and dad showed up like an episode or 2 after we picked it back up and i was like who are these guys. where did they come from. tbh being told who they were didnt help bc i still didnt understand why or how they were there dfshjfghjgf
#and then they did it again in chimera ant arc.... where did killuas dad come from since when was he in on the plan#AND WHERED THEY GO. I HAVENT SEEN THEM COME BACK SINCE THEN.... did they actually leave this time... i dont know#also dude i miss netero :[ we r like a couple episodes after the big mega heart attack explosion thing#i love a cool old man#i still struggle to remember peoples names bc god there are SO many characters#but chimera ant arc is so long that you at least spend a lot of time with them so theres some names ive eventually learned#but im still me so i cant tell you how many times i called meleoron 'lemeleon'#it's like pokemon with him i cant. remember it very clearly and i mix it up hardcore#other people i just cant remember at all so im like uhhh. ponytail guy <- which barely narrows it down they keep finding ponytail guys....#nobunaga.... shoot.... some other guy i think. actually maybe not that many idr LOL#dont even get me started on the spiders. it took me forever just to get nobunaga lol#there are soooo many of them and i had forgotten the first chunk we'd watched after the irl timeskip#so i was in realtime trying to recall who eveyrone was while they were doing shit and it was REALLY CONFUSING#i really need to restart from the beginning but im gonna wait til we finish the anime lol#oh also i like. completley forgot illumi or w/e was doing the hunter exam with hisoka in that first arc#bc literally theres like ONE or two brief moments in. idk if it was greed island or right before it#where hisokas like yeah i calld a friend. and illumis there like 🧍#and i was like he knows killuas brother??? theyre friends???#bc i just had no memory of them interacting before fdlkhgjkf#i like kinda forgot illumi existed til then i think jdkslf or maybe when he was haunting killua idr#actually we went back and watched part of an episode when killua was w/his family#bc i couldnt remember ANYTHING i was like. why was he there again. dont they suck or something. what happened.#and tbh. i still dont get what their vibe is hwhwhfhehg#things to revisit once i get out of the ant pit
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imagineanime2022 · 4 months
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Protect Each Other
Kite X Reader
Word Count: 1214
Warning: Spoilers past this point for the Chimera ant arc, Cannon divergent
Requested: Anon
Request: Hello, I hope you're doing well. Recently I just got past the part in HxH where Kite died (bullshit imo), so I was wondering if you could write a oneshot of Kite having a s/o whose a werewolf and more powerful than the chimera ants so she saves him (and maybe heals his arm somehow?) but he didn't know until she shows him?
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You and Kite had been together for a long while when Gon and Killua found him. You had met him when he first started out, you guys clicked immediately and saved each other's life on many different occasions. You made surveying a little easier because you were able to blend in with most predator creatures given your nen energy, even if you didn’t look like an animal, you nen gave them the impression that you were one.
You were back at the base with the others when Kite called “Hello?” You asked holding the phone between your shoulder and ear as you continued to type up the findings from the last expedition. “(Y/N) are you able to pick me up?” He asked. “You're done already?” You asked. “Mmm.” He hummed. “There’s been a new development.” “Are you okay?” You asked. “Yes, I’m fine.” He answered. “Alright, we’ll come get you.” You answered as you stood from where you were sitting gesturing to a few of the others to follow you as you headed towards the door.
When you got to the agreed location to pick him up you were lounging in the back of the large car, you watched as he directed 2 kids to climb into the seats in front of you, one of them glancing back at you quickly as if sensing that you were different, his blue eyes scanned over you for a second before the door closing behind him caused him to turn back around, the door opened by your feet as Kite ducked down tapping your ankle prompting you to lift them before he settled in the seat where you rested to legs again. “So who are your new friends?” You asked. “I’m Gon Freecss.” One of them turned to look at you, his smile bright and brown eyes reminding you of a man that quite frankly got on your nerves. “Freecss?” You asked. “Like Ging?” “You know my Dad?” Gon asked. “I really wish I didn’t.” You shrugged. “Who’s your friend?” “Killua Zoldyck.” The other kid answered. “That makes sense, that’s why you noticed my nen.” You smirked. “It felt like an animal.” He mumbled. “Thank you.” You winked as Monta started the van and headed back.
You should have known the moment that the kids insisted on coming with you that there was going to be some kind of problem, not because of them but because of the enemies that you were fighting but as you stared down the Chimera Ant in front of you, you knew the only way to get out of the situation was to get the kids out first. “Kite, get them out of here.” You ordered, your body moving into a low defensive position, much like a wolf as you let your nen ability activate, teeth and nails elongating creating sharp dangerous weapons. “I’m not leaving you here.” He answered as the creature laughed and dove forward heading straight for Kite, you blocked the attack and dragged your claws across it’s chest, the skin was tougher than you had thought and the wound was barely there. “You need to go, I can hold it off for at least 15 minutes, you can get out of range in that time, then I can pull back.” You explained, the creature pressed it’s hand to it’s chest before pulling away. “You cut me.” It said. “You didn’t think I could do that did you?” You asked. “I want to play with you.” It cheered as it moved forward again. “Go, send me a signal when you are safe!” You ordered as you dove forward to meet it, you easily wrestled it to the ground and pulled your arm back landing a punch square in her chest. The creature lashed out scratching you across your check and neck as you pulled back to dodge, it would have one straight across your neck, it was attempting to kill you. “You are dangerous.” “Thank you.” It gave what you assumed was a smile as it’s tail moved behind it. “You ants are really a problem.” You mumbled as it shot forward again you crossed your arms in order to block before side stepping and hitting it in the back of the neck hoping that you used enough strength to keep it’s attention on you. “I heard about this thing called Nen, is that what you’re using?” It asked as it looked at you. “How did you find out about that?” You asked. “There was a human that we caught, I played around with his brain and he told me everything. I think you humans call it a Lobotomy.” It explained. “Who did you take?” You asked. “I don’t know his name, I never asked, he was supposed to be food for the Queen but he ran and I was the one that found him.” It answered. “You know one day someone will kill you, it probably won’t be me but I hope that they torment you as deeply as you did that poor soul.” You growled, it seemed to stop for as a second, almost reassessing its plan of attack but before either of you could move there was a loud unmistakable sound, your signal, they were safe. “That’s your signal.” It smirked, it moved so quickly that you almost couldn’t track it dodging at the last second and earning a gash across the side, you wouldn’t have been able to keep this up for much longer, you channeled most of your nen into your legs using it to propel yourself away from your attacker and into the forest where you attempted to lose it. Your legs taking most of the hits as it tried to slow you down, when nothing seemed to work it started to fall back, you assumed you’d finally reached the end of it’s own safe zone, slowing slightly as you headed back towards the edge of the forest, running into a few of the weaker ants and dispatching them on the way.
As you broke out of the forest and into the bright sun you breathed a sigh of relief outside of the forest. You knew that you were safe at least for now, given their ability to fight it won’t be long before they venture out and a plan was needed immediately “(Y/N)!” Kite yelled, meeting you as you stumbled out “your hurt.” He observed easily lifting you, his eyes casting over your legs and body. “They’ll heal.” You said as your eyes searched around the clearing before falling on Gon and Killua who were both safe and unharmed. “Come on, let's get back to the other side of the border. We need to start contacting people.” Kite answered “and get you treated.” “They know about Nen.” You explained “when we get to the border we have to ask them what other hunters were here, they took one of them, maybe more, but they tortured one of them and got all the information that they needed, they know a lot we have to stop them now.” “Come on you two, we have work to do.” Kite said as he looked at the two kids before leading them back to the border where you’d be able to contact someone for help.
Request Here!!
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telehxhtrash · 4 years
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GON FREECSS IS NOT INSANE (and the next person who says he is is getting their shins broken)
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Hi ! Welcome to another one of my brainrot analysis, and this one is entirely fueled by my hatred of people who mischaracterize Gon. I keep on seeing people say that Gon is crazy, unhinged, a psychopathic monster who only plays a role of the innocent kid. 
He’s not.
Gon is a 12 year old with severe trauma due to his dad’s abandonment and unhealthy standards and with a chaotic moral compass forged by his childhood spent on an isolated island.
He’s not a sociopath, not a psychopath, not a monster, not unhinged. He’s just a 12yo thrown in a ruthless world where he has to constantly prove his worth to feel like he can live up to his dad’s expectations. 
We’re so used to seeing shounen protagonists be happy, go-lucky characters who never suffer any real mental consequences from their past or adventures that some people have a hard time realizing that it’s just not realistic. 
Gon is a realistic portrayal of what happens to an abandoned child tossed in a merciless world where he constantly has to prove his worth. And of course, it’s not pretty. It’s terrifying to see Gon’s evolution, and it’s scary to see him slowly lose it. But it doesn’t make him a monster. It makes him feel human. 
Gon is introduced as this happy, cheery, stubborn kid who never backs down from a fight and likes the thrill of putting his life in danger. Which is…. normal in the shonen world, I’d say. But it’s really not normal for a 12yo, and when you take all the following events into account, it’s clear that Gon is not a normal shonen protagonist.
Gon is a very, very stubborn kid, and we get to see that very early in the manga. The one event that strikes me the most is during his face-off with Hanzo. 
Gon gets absolutely destroyed. He’s pretty much getting tortured, with Hanzo breaking his left arm and threatening to cut off the rest of his limbs if he doesn’t surrender. But Gon doesn’t back down. And it’s terrifying. 
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No matter how much pain he’s in, no matter the consequences, he refuses to give up. 
Because he hates being seen as weak.
Gon refuses to show any hint of weakness, and gets extremely mad whenever people perceive him as such. It doesn’t matter what the consequences are, he will NEVER back down. He’ll never be weak, even if it kills him.
And we’ve seen this a lot throughout the manga. Right after he shows his Ren to Tsezguerra during the Greed Island interview, Gon is pissed because he felt like he was being treated like trash. Same thing during early Chimera Ant Arc, when Kite tells Gon and Killua to fight Rammott, Gon gets really, really mad when Kite implies that if they can’t defeat him, that means they’re weak. 
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Gon really, really struggles with being perceived as weak. It’s the one thing he hates the most. That’s why he’s stubborn about this and never backs down even if it costs him his life : he wants to prove his worth. He feels that need to prove he’s not weak, to prove he’s not trash. 
Weakness is not an option. He has to get stronger and stronger and stronger, because at the end of the road lies his goal : Ging.
And to me, Ging explains Gon’s most prominent character traits. Because Ging not only created those traits, but he also enabled them.
In shonen anime, oftentimes, the main protagonist’s dad is out of the picture, but it never truly has any impact on the character’s mental state or behavior. This is not the case in Hunter x Hunter.
Ging leaving left Gon with deep, deep trauma, and an extremely distorted view on his self-worth that leads him to overcompensate with physical strength. 
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When a child gets abandoned, they usually blame themselves. It creates that feeling of guilt, that maybe their parent left because of them, and that they weren’t and AREN’T important for them to just walk out like this.
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This feeling of guilt and shame creates a twisted self esteem in that child, making them believe that they aren’t important, that they aren’t of value. That they aren’t worth anything. Because their parents left them, it surely had to do with them, right ?
Gon has that distorted self-esteem that a child experiences after being abandoned. He has absolutely 0 value over his own body, constantly breaking it, pushing it past its limit to reach his goals, and this lack of self-worth and need to prove his worth is oftentimes represented physically by Gon hurting/losing his arm. 
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Everytime Gon loses/hurts his arm, it’s always after doing something out of need for validation. In Hunter Exam Arc, it’s right after refusing to let Hanzo win. In Heaven’s Arena Arc, it’s after he uses zetsu to win, no matter the consequences. In Yorknew Arc, Gon gets his hand destroyed by Nobunaga/his arm almost broken off by Feitan after he stood up to them. In Greed Island, Gon loses his hand for the sole purpose of training. And lastly, in Chimera Ant Arc, he loses his arm entirely after destroying Pitou in an attempt to ease his guilt.
Gon really struggles with his self-worth, and it’s also illustrated during the time they’re held hostage by Nobunaga, when Killua insists that he’ll stop his blade so that Gon can escape, even if it costs him his life. To which Gon replies with a sentence that is extremely crucial to be able to understand Gon’s character.
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”I can say I’ll die, but you can’t !”
Gon values Killua’s life more than his own. He gets to talk about death, he gets to be hurt, he gets to put his life in danger, because it’s fine if he does it, but Killua is absolutely not allowed to. Gon has absolutely no value over his own life, and doesn’t care if he dies. He doesn’t care if he gets hurt. Because at the end of the day, his body is not of value, and I truly believe that Ging’s abandonment left him with a feeling that he wasn’t of value as a whole.
And to me, this broken sense of self-worth is what created Gon’s hatred of being seen as weak. Because if he shows weakness, then Ging was right to abandon him. If he’s weak, then that means he’s trash, and worth nothing. If he doesn’t live up to his dad’s expectation, then what’s the point ? He’d mean nothing. He’d be no one. Just a small island boy whose dad left because his job was more interesting. That’s why he has to prove his worth no matter what.
Finding Ging is like this Holy Grail to Gon. It’s the ultimate goal. Like Kite said the first time he met him, it’s the ultimate hunt. It’s something that proves you’re worthy. So of course, Gon has to do everything in his power to find him. Because he wants to prove his worth. He wants to find his dad and prove that he’s not weak.
And to me, that’s why Gon is so stubborn and self-destructive.
I mentioned that Hanzo fight earlier, and there’s something interesting that happens during that fight that can be used to illustrate this. 
Hanzo asks why Gon is so stubborn, why he refuses to back down when he could just lose this match and face someone else. It’s true, Gon could have easily given up and fought someone else, he could’ve won then. But he refused to even consider the possibility. He had to win THIS fight. But why ? Is it out of pride ? Is it out of pure stubbornness ? 
Well, as Gon says himself :
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It has nothing to do with pride or being stubborn for the sake of being stubborn. It’s easy. If he shows weakness once, he’s not worthy. He’s not worthy of finding Ging, and he’s worth less than trash. Because if he’s weak, he doesn’t deserve to find him.
And this is so, so important. Because this is the reason Gon never backs down from anything, even at the cost of his limbs. Because like he said, if he loses, he thinks that he won’t be able to meet Ging. So he has to do ANYTHING, anything at all, no matter the cost, to be able to find him.
That’s why he’s not backing down from the Hanzo fight at the cost of his arm. That’s why he’s using zetsu during his fight against Gido, even if it’s dangerous, because that’s what he has to do to get stronger. That’s why he purposefully blasts off his own hand during his fight with Genthru. Because he has to get stronger, no matter the cost. 
And Ging enables him. By making him feel like Gon has to “earn” the right to see him, Ging is fueling Gon’s self-destructive behavior. 
Ging enables him when he tells him that he has to hunt him to find him, that he doesn’t want to see him and that he’ll run away when he senses him coming. That cat and mouse game is putting extreme pressure on Gon’s shoulders. His dad expects great things of him. He expects strength, and he expects him to find him. It’s a challenge. And an unhealthy one.
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Greed Island is another example of that unhealthy challenge and the pressure of Ging’s expectations. Greed Island was created for Gon. It was created to train him, and as Bisky says herself :
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If Gon wants to see Ging, he has to be strong. He has to always be stronger and stronger so he can earn the right to see him.
Quoting one of my references here, but this is also a form of abandonment that fuels Gon’s self destructive behavior.
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All of these expectations put extreme pressure on Gon’s shoulders. Because he has to keep on pushing further and further, always improving, always getting stronger, and he’s not allowed to show weakness because it’d mean losing his goal.
But showing weakness wouldn’t only mean he’d lose his goal. Being weak would also mean he’d lose Killua.
I mentioned that when a child gets abandoned, they fear it’s their fault and develop a broken sense of self-worth. But that’s not all. After having been hurt, it’s normal to try and minimize the risk of being hurt again. You’d do anything to not be walked out on again. And that’s what Gon is doing. His fear of vulnerability and weakness is a fear of rejection and abandonment.
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That’s also why Gon hates being seen as weak. Because if he’s weak, not only is he not living up to his dad’s expectations, but he’s also running the risk of Killua walking out on him. Because he’s scared that if he shows weakness, Killua will leave him, just like Ging did. Because he’s not strong enough to keep him, or anyone by his side.
And to make up for that overwhelming feeling of insecurity and his guilt over being weak, Gon overcompensates with physical strength and stubbornness. We’ve seen it multiple times throughout the manga. Gon purposefully gets hurt when facing a dangerous situation, just so he can prove his worth. Just so he can get stronger. 
Gon overcompensates and takes everything onto his shoulders for this sole purpose of proving he’s worthy of staying.
Take the dodgeball match during Greed Island arc. There’s an interesting thing happening during the match that says a lot about Gon.
When Killua almost gets killed by Razor, it makes Gon’s blood boil. He’s furious and enraged that Razor dared try to hurt Killua. Because Killua has NOTHING to do with this. He’s only here because of Gon, and here he is, risking his life for him. Razor is putting Killua’s life in danger because of Gon. And that makes Gon go feral. 
But the most interesting line happens here :
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“I have to crush him completely”
Gon completely shuts off Killua at this point. He says HE has to be the one to crush him completely. He’s taking this responsibility onto himself, he has to be the one to defeat Razor, it’s his role. His and no one else’s.
And to me, that’s another sign of overcompensation fueled by abandonment issues. Gon feels guilt at what just happened. Killua shouldn’t have to risk his life to hang out with Gon. He has nothing to do with this, he’s only here because he wants to, and it drives Gon mad that Razor is trying to hurt him when it has nothing to do with him.
So because he feels guilt, because him not being able to protect Killua fully is a sort of weakness, he overcompensates with strength and by wanting to handle everything alone.
He affirms that he will take the responsibility of winning against Razor. It’s his fault Killua almost got hurt, so he has to bear the consequences alone. He has to make things right, no matter the cost. He has to show strength. He has to prove his worth.
Because what if Killua left him because he wasn’t strong enough?
I think this situation illustrates pretty well Gon’s trauma-fueled thought process :
• “It’s my fault this is happening because I’m too weak” (sparked by his twisted self-worth due to his abandonment issues)
• “So I have to bear the consequences alone” (to prove his worth as to not be abandoned again)
• “I won’t back down under any circumstance because my life has no value” (because of his lack of self-worth once again)
And this pattern is found in any situation in the manga. When Gon lets Kon scratch his arm until he bleeds to keep Kite from killing him, he’s doing it because it’s his fault Kon’s mom had to die. When Gon refuses to back down from Hanzo’s fight as he keeps breaking multiple parts of his body, he’s doing it because he believes that if he’s weak and backs down he won’t be worth seeing Ging. When Razor almost kills Killua, Gon flips out and emphasizes that he has to crush Razor because it’s his fault Killua is here and he won’t back down on kicking Razor’s ass.  And that’s why when Kite dies and Gon sees his mangled body, he tells Killua “I’m taking on that one (Pitou) alone” : because Kite got hurt because of his weakness, Gon has to make amends in any way possible.
That’s why Gon hurts himself, that’s why he’s constantly putting everything on his shoulders : he has no value over his own life. He’s focused on proving he’s worth something at any cost.
And those escalating feelings of insecurity and this behavioral pattern are exactly why Gon broke down during Chimera Ant Arc. Because everything that was piling up went crumbling down when he saw Kite’s arm being cut off. Because he was weak for an instant.
It was his fault. It was his fault, because he was weak, because he couldn’t defend Kite, because even though Kite had just lost a limb, he was still stronger than both Gon and Killua combined. If he had just trained harder, if he had put his life on the line more, if he pushed himself past his limit, maybe this wouldn’t have happened. It was his fault. 
At that precise moment when Kite’s arm got severed, every single insecurity that Gon had from the beginning of this manga is flooding in. Gon feels weak, he feels guilt, he feels like all of this is his fault. He feels like he wasn’t enough.
And because it’s his fault, he has to take everything on his shoulders. He has to be the one to bear the weight of his mistake alone. He has to be the one to carry the burden. Just like that dodgeball match.
Because he just lost everything. He showed weakness once, and everything crumbled. He had just gotten his dad’s student hurt, and that weakness meant that he also just lost his goal of finding Ging. Because now that he showed a hint of weakness, Ging would never want to see him. Gon had just lost everything. His mentor, his goal, and his weakness might drive Killua away too. 
That’s why he put everything on his shoulder and vowed to make things right. Because he wanted to prove to himself, to Ging, to Kite, and more importantly to Killua that he could do this alone. That he wasn’t a failure. That he wasn’t weak. That he was worthy of staying. 
That’s why when he sees Kite’s mangled body, he tells Killua that he’s taking onto Pitou alone. Because it’s his responsibility. He has to make things right. It was his fault for being weak. It’s his fault Kite got hurt.
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And at that moment, Gon probably already knew that he wouldn’t stop at any cost. Because it was a quest to assuage his guilt. It was a quest to make things right and prove that he wasn’t weak, that he could fix things, that he was still worthy of Kite and Ging and Killua. That he wasn’t a failure. So he pushed past his limit. Took everything onto his shoulders. Pushed Killua away, because it has nothing to do with him. It’s his own mistake, not Killua’s. 
Him going after Pitou is his attempt at redemption, a plea for help. A plea for someone to realize his worth. A plea to not be abandoned again.
And that’s why Gon is not a monster. He’s just a terrified child. 
During Chimera Ant Arc, he’s bottling up his feelings of inadequacy and guilt just so he could attempt to fix the mess he created, attempting to carry everything on his shoulders alone, because he can’t afford to drag anyone else into his mess, especially not Killua.
Gon is not a monster for pushing Killua away. It is not a sign of him being unhinged or manipulative. It’s an act of protection. An act of love, his way of saying “This is my mess and I have to fix this, I can’t let you get hurt for my sake.”. It’s the desperate attempt of a broken 12 year old to try and make things right.
Gon is not a monster because he threatened Komugi. It was a desperate attempt at regaining a sense of control on the situation. 
Because Gon’s morality has always been weird, it broke him to see Pitou heal Komugi. He couldn’t comprehend why something he categorized as evil was doing something as pure as healing. Just like that time during York New Arc ! Gon couldn’t understand why Chrollo was mourning the death of one of his members when he showed no remorse relentlessly killing innocent people. This inability to understand that bad people can do good things already broke Gon during YN arc, and it happened again during Chimera Ant Arc. 
He had nowhere to put his anger. All this time, he created this mental picture of Pitou in his head, this one where they’re an evil, evil villain who could never do anything good, he classified them as bad and that was that. But faced with them performing a pure act of healing, it broke Gon. He had no outlet for his anger.
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So he did what a 12 year old with a broken sense of worth and a need for validation would do : he overcompensated with even more anger.
In a desperate attempt at regaining a bit of control on the situation, his last resort was to threaten an innocent life. To take her hostage. 
Because if he couldn’t make things right, he’d just lost everything. No matter the cost. No matter what happens. He had to do this. He had to ease his guilt.
Gon is not a monster because he sacrificed his life. He’s not a monster because he turned into an adult version of himself. He’s not a monster because he bashed Pitou’s skull in until it was mush. It was the actions of a broken boy who had nothing left. Who had just lost everything. Because Kite wasn’t hurt, he was DEAD. He was dead by his fault, it was his fault. He had nothing else to live for, because he was weak and lost everything. 
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So he decided to kill himself to take down Pitou. Because he didn’t deserve to live. And this “fight” with Pitou wasn’t even to avenge Kite’s death. It was an attempt to ease his guilt. To feel a little better, because he might’ve lost everything, but at least he took down Pitou with him. 
I’m not condemning Gon’s actions or excusing them. At all. He made mistakes, and committed actions that are hard to excuse. But it was out of despair. It came out of years of pent up trauma and insecurities. His actions were a cry for help.
Gon didn’t “snap” out of nowhere. He always felt weak and insecure, he always had a broken sense of self-worth that led him to be self-destructive and overcompensate by taking everything onto his shoulders.
Chimera Ant Arc just pushed him past his limit. But this darkness, this plea for help, this trauma was always there in Gon’s heart. But it doesn’t mean he’s crazy. He’s just a child with abandonment issues and deep trauma.
To summarize, Ging’s physical and emotional abandonment left Gon with deep wounds that reflected in his behavior. Gon feels weak and insecure, he has no self-worth and a deep need to prove his value which leads him to constantly exhibit self-destructive behavior for the sole purpose of living up to his dad’s expectations and proving his worth. 
Gon feels the need to prove his worth and handle everything alone in an attempt to appear strong, and this unhealthy standards he puts onto himself and that Ging’s behavior enables are what ultimately led to his breakdown.
Because when Kite’s arm flew off, so did Gon’s entire reason to exist. 
He blamed himself for it, cursed his weakness and desperately attempted to make things right no matter the cost. Even if it meant death. Because death is better than being weak. Death is better than the guilt of having let his mentor down. Death is better than being rejected by his dad for his mistake. Death is better than being abandoned by his best friend.
And this deep, suffocating agony is what led Gon to act the way he did during Chimera Ant Arc.
It wasn’t the acts of a crazy, psychopathic monster. It was the act of a kid, desperately pleading for help.
But this breakdown was a good thing. No, really, it was. It was necessary.
Chimera Ant Arc was written to break down Gon to his core, to break his character in the worst possible way to annihilate the toxic traits he had.
His stubbornness, fear of weakness and self-destructive behavior were always going to break him in the end. But now that he knows what happens when you let all of this take over, it won’t happen again.
Gon is back to square one. Clean start, new beginning. Back to Whale Island with no nen, no goal, and with his best friend gone. 
And while some people might see this as depressing, or a sign that Gon didn’t change at all during the manga, it’s actually the exact opposite. It represents a second chance.
It’s the purest form of second chance he can get. He’s back to zero, and he has a blank canvas to be able to fix every wrong he made in the past.
With no nen, he now has the opportunity to learn it the proper way, taking his time to enjoy the process, learning it for pure purposes and not rushing to get stronger for the sole purpose of proving his worth.
With no goal, he’s free to find something that he wants to do for himself, not live in Ging’s shadow. He gets to be who he wants to be, with no unhealthy expectations.
With Killua gone, he gets to reflect on their relationship. He gets to realize the wrongs he’s made, the what-ifs and lost opportunities, he gets to realize how much Killua means to him. 
This second chance is not a curse, it’s a blessing. Because it’s exactly what Gon needed to be able to heal. 
And I’m willing to bet that this will be Gon’s final character arc : healing. We’ll get to see Gon act in ways that highlight how much he’s changed, showcasing his growth. When he was stubborn, hot-headed and impulsive, he’ll have learned to be more calm and composed. When he was always looking to prove his worth and look for strength, he’ll have learned that his true value lies in who he is and in the little detours of his travels. 
He’ll be more calm, won’t put himself in danger for the sake of being stronger, he won’t drag Killua in impossible situations where he has to clean up the mess. He won’t hurt his arm, which was the physical representation of his trauma. He’ll have grown.
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Because that’s what HxH is ultimately about. Togashi is all about deconstructing and reconstructing his characters to show growth and healing from trauma. To show that tragedy happens, but at the end of the day, you can overcome your worst traits. At the end of the day, you can become a better person, no matter what.
EDIT : I actually wrote a post on how I believe Gon’s next character arc was foreshadowed here.
Thank you for reading this ! I hope it was all clear and that I expressed my thoughts correctly, without mischaracterizing Gon.
Full disclaimer that I am NOT a psychologist and I’m not attempting to diagnose Gon, I’m just linking the signs of emotional trauma due to abandonment issues to his character in an attempt to explain his actions.
Please feel free to give me your thoughts or criticism ! 
References : 
• “Understanding the pain of abandonment” 
• “How to overcome abandonment issues from childhood”
Those two articles are the foundation of my meta. They’re extremely interesting articles that show all the signs of abandonment on a child’s behavior, and it showcases the consequences of both emotional and physical abandonment on their self-worth. 
• “Fear of vulnerability and learning to trust again”
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hamliet · 6 years
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I never thought Gon had abandonment and self-worth issues. In fact I thought he was strangely okay with his dad leaving him. Considering that he didnt care about people dying during the exam, Zepile's thoughts on him and often said idea about his twisted morality I decided that he is just a weird kid. Maybe that's because I only watched 2011 anime but now I am really confused about him. Is he less of a "monster " than generally accepted in the fandom?
Oh, I don’t think Gon is a monster at all! I didn’t know the fandom really thought that--if they do they can fight me :P I think he’s a sweet child who has serious flaws and you can directly trace a lot of those flaws back to his father’s abandonment. Throughout each and every arc, you can see how Gon’s trauma over being abandoned is building and building and building until it eventually explodes in the Chimera Ant Arc, which is where his coping mechanisms fail him completely. 
In the Hunter Exam Arc, we are introduced to Gon as a 12 year old kid who abandons his aunt, the one he considers his mother, to run off and take a deadly exam to find his dad. 
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Repeatedly Gon is noted to be reminiscent of Ging in this arc, and we’re supposed to see that not just in terms of “what a great hunter you’ll be!” like it appears to be on the surface, but also... uh oh Gon, be careful that this tendency of yours doesn’t turn into your father’s path, or Hisoka’s. 
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Because he’s copying his father’s actions by leaving a loved one for adventure, and following his father’s path is exactly what Gon veers on the edge of throughout HxH. 
However, of course, there are major differences: Gon is a kid. Ging is an adult. Leaving a parent is fundamentally different from leaving a child. If you make the choice to bring a child into this world, you are responsible for them. A child isn’t responsible for their parent; that being said, Gon doesn’t think a whole lot about Mito’s feelings, or give anyone who dies in the Hunter Exam much thought. 
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And why would he? He knows people leave. All the time. He sees Ging as sort of this infallible controller of his world, as an idol who set up this hunt for Gon’s own good, and rationalizes that if he left him, it’s okay. 
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He’s idolizing the father he doesn’t know, trusting him that no matter what happens, what horrors befall contestants in the Hunter Exam, it’s all worth it because his father’s worth it, because he himself is worth it and if his father abandoned him because he just didn’t care enough then that sense of worth would collapse (Gon has very little sense of self-worth thanks to being abandoned, btw.)  
In the Heaven’s Arena Arc, Gon rushes into facing Hisoka before he is truly ready, something that Hisoka notes and Wing as well. 
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And so he loses his fight with Hisoka. But Gon is desperate to achieve all he can so he can find his father, and that’s why he rushes into facing Hisoka. He’s been waiting like what, twelve, thirteen years to meet his dad, of course he doesn’t want to be patient about learning nen. 
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In Yorknew, Gon famously asks the Phantom Troupe how they can kill people who have no ties to them, who never did anything to them. 
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And like... Gon, your best friend literally has been doing that in front of you even if he’s quit the assassin business. But again. Gon is a child. It all ties into Gon’s desperate need to see a purpose in everything (if he lost this and never grew up, he’d be Hisoka), meaning with a purpose because he sees everything that happens to him post exam as something Ging had orchestrated, and this is the first time the narrative directly forces Gon to see that not everything has a deeper personal meaning to it. Sometimes people hurt people for no reason, or for superficial reasons. 
Greed Island, while it’s by far my least favorite arc, sets up this desperate belief of Gon’s really, really, really well. 
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He believes he needs to beat the game honorably, as Ging would want him to. He won’t take the easy way out even when it means breaking his body and Killua’s while facing Razor in the dodgeball game. 
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Because he is dependent on Ging’s approval and because he thinks everything has meaning when it comes to Ging. Except Ging actually just doesn’t give a shit. 
But Ging literally sends him to Kite instead of to himself based on a whim, on which card Ging picks, on whether he’s traveling alone or not. It’s literally pointless of Ging to do this, but he does. And because of this Gon winds up attaching himself to Kite as a father figure and sinking deeper into his desperate beliefs that everything has meaning and will be okay because Kite (whom he sees as an extension of Ging) is in control. “Kite wouldn’t let that thing beat him!” he tells Killua of Pitou. 
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And during his confrontation with Pitou, Gon’s screaming at them that he “can’t wait anymore!” 
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Gon is not talking about just fighting Pitou/getting Kite back. He’s talking about Ging. 
And he loses himself, literally growing up way too fast and almost dying because of it. 
It’s therefore fitting that he finally meets Ging after Killua gets Nanika to save him, right as Ging’s about to explore the Dark Continent. The world is opening up--it’s not contained anymore. And Gon’s world is opening up. It’s not limited to Ging’s orchestrations anymore, but rather Gon is now free to explore his own path.
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Text
This is pretty long
Part 1: The Steven Universe side
In execution, Steven is definitely boring, nice boys who are kinda quirky can only take you so far from a narrative stand point. By definition, he’s a catalyst hero, what that means is while a character acts heroically they don’t change themselves, they help change others and while that’s a good role for a mentor figure that’s not for your main character. From episode 1 to 101, all the biggest, most important choices he’s made have always been to help others (more often than not going against the gem’s wishes) or in the name of what he believes what’s right on his own beliefs, and that most likely is in helping a gem. Steven sparks a change in characters such as Lapis, Peridot, Connie, Pearl, Amethyst, Lars, etc…And yet he never changes for himself. Well scratch that, he changes from showing realistic human emotion in s1 then says “nah” to that after s1.
Part 2: The Hunter x Hunter side
I’d like to introduce another character very similar to Steven who is a catalyst hero, but also a very willing hero (willing hero is someone excited and active for adventure). And that character is the main character from the manga/anime “Hunter x Hunter” Throughout the story, Gon is consistently characterized as a happy go lucky kid who loves making friends, going on adventures, doing risky things for the sake of his own goal, and never misses a chance to help people. A typical shounen hero no doubt. Along the way, he makes friends with Kurapika, Leorio and Killua (there are others but I won’t spoil) who all change in some way, shape, or form because of him. Sometimes that change is for the better others for the worse. The change is especially evident with Killua, which speaking of, keep him in mind because I’m going to talk about him in a second.
Anyways, back to Gon, one of the traits I like the most in him, is his relative pacifism and his ability to forgive easily. Characters will break his fucking arm or beat him until he’s bloody and he forgives them anyways. The main villain of the greed island arc killed a lot of people and when he was given a chance to kill him, he didn’t do it and let him live. Things like that which built his character up to be a nice kid on the moral high ground certainly made a huge impact on Killua, but I think one of them most smartest and surprising things the creator, Yoshishiro Togashi, did for Gon was for him to deconstruct his own personality and make him an anti-hero in the Chimera ant arc.
Part 2.5: Me fangirling over the chimera ant arc and HxH in general (mild spoilers, but nothing big)
I’ll try not to spoil much, but the Chimera ant arc is absolutely a gorgeous arc and although a slog to get through sometimes, when the pacing is on track, it’s some of the most emotional, thought provoking stuff I’ve seen in a long time. It’s basically a big zombie movie, but the zombies have emotions and memories from when they were humans (like nobodies) and that’s where the conflict comes from. It’s about the worst of humanity and the sacrifices we as people make for ourselves, to others, and as a society. Do the lives of one very important person outweigh the lives of a group of regulars? How far will we go to harm others and is it justified? That’s the Chimera ant arc.
One of the big points in this arc is the switch in the character dynamic and characterization of Gon and Killua. Gon is the dumb nice kid who listens to Killua, the much smarter, but much more aggressive, blood thirsty kid (yeah he comes from a family of assassins), during the third arc of the arc, it’s turned on its head and Gon is now calling the shots. This only happened because someone near and dear to him, named Kite was killed by one of the Chimera ants, when that happens, an important flaw of him is revealed. Gon is selfish and has a one track mind, he’s more than willing to put his needs first if he deems it as beneficial to him. Gon killed the person who killed Kite, Gon was willing to kill people that got in the way of killing the person who killed Kite, and was find if he died in the pursuit of killing the killer. That’s how much Kite meant to Gon and when Killua sees how much Gon has changed, it generally scares and worries him. Regardless of how destructive he was to himself and others, he still thought what he was doing was right and in the name of justice because he was killing bad people and didn’t care that he was becoming a killer as long as it meant that bad person was gone and they wouldn’t hurt any more people. (Much like Death Note) This is a very similar situation to Kurapika who at any other time was calm, but would not hesitate to kill the phantom troupe who killed his entire family. He thought what he was doing was justice and he was right, if he didn’t kill them, they would and do just kill more people.
Both of them put their own beliefs on the back burner for doing what was necessary even if it wasn’t the “right” thing. While Kurapika was more righteous, and Gon more selfish, in pursing their goals to the point of obsession they pushed away their friends and stepped off the moral high ground for the betterment of society, themselves, and their loved ones.
Part 3: How this all ties together
Steven and Gon are very similar characters who opt for the moral high ground and don’t really want to hurt others unless necessary. However Gon, threw away being a “good person” because someone close to him died. I believe such a drastic change happened because for all his life, he’s been good and has been good to other people. Something awful happened to him and at that moment, he broke and was unforgiving to the world when he was previously so forgiving. He’s also like 12 or something.
Compare this to Steven, who has also had awful things happen to him. Like Homeworld stealing his dad, but do you know what happened after he got his dad back? He ran away, didn’t think twice about those humans trapped in that utopia and the next episode did nothing. He’s not actively against Homeworld, he’s not trying to make himself get stronger so he can do something to stop his dad getting stolen again in the future. When Kite died, Gon trained to get stronger to make sure nothing like that would happen again. Homeworld stole his dad, could’ve done a lot worse to him and Steven did NOTHING. All the gems who actively try to kill him and his loved ones, Connie almost drowned and Greg got his leg broke because of Lapis, Jasper imprisoned him and everyone as well as damaged his home, his friends Peridot tried to kill him and talked shit about his mom, etc… they just keep hurting him and he does NOTHING. He harbors no hatred towards them, no animosity, there’s no want for him to get stronger or learn more about gem history and his own powers to protect his friends. Gon was like this too, but he dropped that act because Kite died, now Lars died for Steven (though he brought him back) and instead of feeling an ounce of rage or anger or anything he drinks a glass of tap water??? Are you serious? We’re at this point where Steven is disgusted at thought of his mom killing PD, knowing they were in a war, knowing friends of hers died repeatedly, knowing she was a leader, knowing she was in an oppressive society, and yet because she supposedly did a bad thing and didn’t talk it out she’s the worst thing ever and Steven is ashamed. Huh?
Part 4: V for Verdict
I’m not saying Steven should be exactly like Gon and murder people, I just use him as comparison because they’re very close in age and have near identical personalities and hero archetypes. I’m saying for him to be realistic and not act like he’s dead inside. Let Steven get upset like he used to in s1, let there be emotional turmoil of all the shit homeworld has done to them. All the turmoil we’ve gotten from Steven is him feeling bad about himself or his mom. That’s it. Oh and that 1 time Steven got mad at Peridot for 2 seconds but not after she said that shit about Rose, Garnet, Pearl, Amethyst, and pushed Greg off the roof, but because she betrayed Steven. Though, I have high hopes that changes as the stakes get higher and Steven finally starts to actually, kinda sorta dislike homeworld.
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