ok last one for now
"In Family, Tara’s family shows up and insists she return with them , basically becoming the surrogate mother/slave. They tell her that she will be revealed as a disgusting demon by the time she reaches 20 just like her mother was. The witch inside her is a demon and this is the part of Tara that she has been struggling to hide beneath a geeky exterior. (Interesting side note - Willow is doing the reverse - Willow is trying to hide the geek beneath the monster, so is Spike for that matter. Both Willow and Spike are ashamed of the inner geek, they can’t imagine anyone loving it. So they allow the monster to surface and remain in control. Unlike Giles and Tara - they prefer the monster. It protects them, empowers them. The geek is what scares them. The geek is weak.
The moment Tara confesses what she’s done - they forgive her. They forgive her for having a monster inside. She is accepted as part of their family. Giles has the same reaction when he confesses his sins in The Dark Age, Buffy tells him to forgive himself. Jenny eventually does. As a result neither Giles nor Tara are afraid of the rejection that their monsters will cause. They see the danger, but are no longer ashamed of what they are. Why? Because they’ve forgiven themselves and having accepted the danger that resides in them, are able to exert some sort of control over it. Tara like Giles uses magic sparingly. They both have a deep respect for the damage it can do, because it has almost destroyed them both in the past. The difference between Tara /Giles and Willow, is they were never trying to hide the “geek”, they were trying to hide the “monster”. A monster both have on occasion associated with magic.
Giles and Tara leave because they know that sometimes you have to face your monster alone. Giles feels he is allowing Buffy to cling to her childhood, to ignore her monster, to stay arrested in that period between life and death, forever a child. While Tara believes that staying only enables Willow to continue to use the monster to hide the geek. It is ironic really - Willow believes Tara would hate the geek, but it’s not the geek Tara fears, it’s the monster that Willow refuses to acknowledge, the monster she sees Willow becoming. It’s the reverse of Tara’s old dilemma; Tara was afraid of the monster."
- Tara/Giles Parallels: Dealing with the Monster
xNow, I actually have thoughts to this one.
while I find this analysis fascinating, I’m not necessarily sure it works that neatly. Willow doesn’t have a “monster,” she has feelings she doesn’t understand and unhealthy ways of understanding the world around her because of how she’s been taught. yes, willow tries to hide under geek. she uses it to her advantage, but she’s never entirely comfortable or proud of it given it’s who she was before she met buffy and she didn’t like that version of herself. the one who had no friends, who was too afraid to stand up for herself or take control of her life. from the moment buffy enters her life, it becomes about control. over what she can do, these new choices she can suddenly make, to change the powerless person she was before.
like buffy says, it’s about power. willow’s strong reaction to the fight she and tara have in S6 about the magic use relate 150% back to the fight in S5. Not because it’s the same fight, it isn’t really. (the first time, i actually don’t think willow’s magic use was out of control at all and i actually don’t think tara brought it up the proper way.) what willow’s S6 actions relate to is the consequences of that fight. willow and tara had a fight. they separated. tara got attacked by Glory. willow nearly lost tara. willow plays by the rules of their world and constantly loses against the expectations piled upon her.
it ultimately brings us back to the point raised in this meta, which is
“But the real problem with Willow is not that it is dangerous to have her near power. Power is dangerous and corrosive, yes, yes. But the real issue is that she has no model, whatsoever, for how to be powerful and “good.”
(emphasis mine)
for willow, she equates weakness with powerlessness and uselessness. when she can do more powerful magics, she’s more useful and therefore a better person. yes, xander has no powers, but he’s a man and a fairly decent sized one at that so at least more skilled at combat. willow is a wisp, she can’t even fight. willow equates a fight with Tara or a fight with Buffy to always have devastating consequences. if there’s a fight, willow did something wrong and therefore she gets punished. it’s how she was raised, neglectfully and ignored, so it’s no wonder she has these underdeveloped ways of dealing with life. every time she and tara have an argument, or even try/start to, something bad happens. they might have been completely unrelated, but for willow, they’re compounded into the same action/reaction sphere. you fight, something bad happens. you fight, they get hurt.
without the darker, more powerful magics, the world would have ended back in S5. if willow didn’t travel into Buffy’s mind and release her from her catatonia after Dawn was captured, if willow didn’t weaken Glory by restoring tara’s sanity, Glory would have had her Key and boom- world endy.
and then the scoobies are left with the aftermath of trying to continue the Slayer’s fight with no Slayer, so who steps up to become the Big Gun? who’s the only real powerful person to take over? willow. As Tara says, even Xander chose it:
XANDER: “Excuse me? Who made you boss of the group?”
ANYA: You did.
TARA: You said Willow should be boss.
ANYA: And then you said “let’s vote,” and it was unanimous….
TARA: ….and then you made her this little plaque, that said “Boss of Us”, you put little sparkles on it….
if we ignore how adorable this is, (I’m sorry, I can’t help but imagine little toddlers Xander and Willow in art class together- Xander gluing his fingers together, Willow giggling and helping him to the sink…c’mon, that’s precious) it really speaks to one half of the larger problem. Yes, Willow may have made some bad choices, letting her issues with control and power blind her judgement. But the Gang, through perhaps with legitimate need and reason, helped pushed her towards it and didn’t stop to take responsibility for that when it got out of control. Willow was always left on her own to deal with the magic - from the very beginning in high school, teaching herself spells. The Scoobies always blindly accepted the help Willow was offering, without questioning, without looking.
Tara was the last of her innocence, Tara was her platform to magical competence. Tara was her safe place to grow stronger. But when Tara got attacked by Glory, that’s when Willow realized ok, if I want to be able to really help out here, I need to up my game. She may not have done it the best way, with the dark magics, but that innocent time of her life was over. Before, when she used the magic to emotionally manipulate people, it was accidental (Something Blue, etc;) Afterwards, it comes as a choice. Because Willow’s followed the rules and in the world of the Slayer, they constantly shift and break and Willow can’t catch up fast enough. But everyone leaves her on her own eventually to deal with it.