Tumgik
#nothing like a good cry to re-evaluate your life choices huh Spock?? šŸ˜‚
ichayalovesyou Ā· 2 years
Text
(Re)Discovering A Strange New Spock: ā€œThe Naked Timeā€ (1x04)
Previous: Charlie ā€œXā€
Next: The Enemy Within
A meta anthology where I re-examine TOS, especially Spock, in light of the new information Discovery & Strange New Worlds has revealed about him to us.
Onto the Analysis! (SUPER EXCITED for this one!!)
Opening Banter w/ McCoy
Now, the appropriateness of Bonesā€™s comments in regards to Spockā€™s physiology has been a topic of debate since the moment that the nature of Spock & Bones relationship has come into question.
We know theyā€™re both massive smartasses, the most pointed of Boneā€™s remarks being ā€œassuming you call that green stuff in your veins bloodā€. Which poses the question, has Spock obnoxiously corrected or split hairs or revealed something he shouldā€™ve said much earlier about his own physiology talking to McCoy? We know for a fact the answer is yes, often while also calling Bones ability to do his job into question a la ā€œbeads and rattlesā€.
If my speculation is right, McCoy probably expected Spock to go off on some ā€œum, actuallyā€ monologue. Instead he gets a snide remark about how happy Spock is his physiology is not Human. Ironically, admitting to delight, which is of course, an emotion.
If there is anything that notoriously, repeatedly pisses Bones off is Spock looking down upon humanity and being disgusted by the humanity that is within himself. That flares Bones temper more than any insult Spock ever throws at Bones himself. He bites his tongue this time, but we know he wonā€™t always.
All that being said, this is the friendliest theyā€™ve been (with Jimā€™s life not in the balance) since the M13 Salt Vampire incident in The Man Trap. Even if the banter is condescending, itā€™s better than outright arguing/hostility.
Spock & Chapel Under The Influence
So the WHOLE point of this episode is that the virus not only intoxicates but reveals the hidden nature/truths that the infected individual has been repressing, it unleashes emotional inhibitions. My point beingā€¦
I donā€™t think Chapel has admitted ANY of this to Spockā€™s face before, ever. In fact, Iā€™m willing to bet they will never have anything candid and truly romantic in Strange New Worlds because of the newfound significance of this scene.
She will be pining for him for the next seven years, because he is engaged. She will get engaged to Roger Korby, who is so much like him but not. Roger will disappear, presumed dead, before they can be married. But Spock is here, she knows Spock is alive, and this virus is making her feel some kinda way about it.
Another layer to this is that Spockā€™s feelings regarding Chapel are obviously perturbing for him. This much is true in SNW as it is in TOS, heā€™s letting her touch him but refuses to call her Christine, Chapel only calls him Mr. Spock. The familiarity, the friendliness is gone but the emotions are there. He says ā€œnurse, you shouldnā€™t-ā€œ because theyā€™re both engaged, but he lets her touch him.
The way he freezes and turns when she blurts out ā€œIā€™m in love with you Mr. Spockā€ is such an Oh God No moment for him. Which is why Iā€™m thinking she NEVER told him the truth. He canā€™t even look at her as she makes truthful, intense observations about who he is that fill him with shame even if they shouldnā€™t.
Then all he can do is apologize profusely! Is he apologizing for being human or for being Vulcan? Is he apologizing for leading her along without noticing? Is he apologizing because he doesnā€™t love her in the way she would like him to? Is he apologizing because he canā€™t be with her because theyā€™re both engaged? Is he apologizing to her because he wants to do away with the failings of emotion altogether??
Is it ALL of these things at once?! Probably! Not only that this is one of the last times he calls her Christine post SNW! I would like to say THANK YOU Strange New Worlds for making this scene so ridiculously juicy! Holy moly!
Spock Under The Influence
After an incredibly emotional encounter like that, is it any wonder Spock has a full on nervous breakdown? All that grief, all that rejection, all that turmoil erupting to the surface the minute he walks away from someone who understands him, or at least tries. Regardless of how he feels about her.
We havenā€™t seen him process any of the awful emotional losses heā€™s taken up to this point. So we can presume that losing Michael, letting Pike sacrifice himself for him, his failing engagement with Tā€™Pring, and now the intense encounter with Chapel are all hitting him like a ton of bricks. The virus isnā€™t allowing him to use his Vulcan training to compartmentalize any of it anymore.
He tries to use the good old fashioned Vulcan mantra ā€œI am in control of my emotionsā€ which fails. He then tries to calm himself by telling himself heā€™s an officer, and ā€œmy duty is toā€ to what? To your family? To the sister you lost? To the fiancĆ© whoā€™s rejected you/youā€™ve rejected?To Starfleet? To the Captain you lost? To your new Captain? Who provokes new emotions in you that you despise? That sends him flying off the handle even more. Logic and duty are failing him.
He stumbles over to the view screen, he tries to communicate? To work? ā€œToo lateā€ too late for Chapel to reach him because heā€™s chosen his Vulcan nature over his Human one? Too late to stop himself from caring about other people? Why? Because Kirk carved into his heart before he was aware and could prevent it? All of the above? Again, probably.
Then, he tries to start doing math (presumably). Which is where the Lā€™tak Terai comes in. My guess is it gets worse when heā€™s distressed, he canā€™t do whatever he was trying to do on the monitor if heā€™s too upset to keep the numbers, or anything else, ordered properly in his mind.
We see him desperately try to communicate with Michael and his mother in Light & Shadows by repeating the coordinates to Talos IV in the wrong order over and over. We can only assume he feels like heā€™s lost his grip, so for whatever reason he is, with effort, counting by twos, in order. This also fails him as he ultimately becomes a sobbing mess before he can get to eight.
The problem isnā€™t because logic is failing him or because of his Lā€™tak Terai, it is because he has been deeply, vehemently, neglecting his emotions.
ā€œIā€™ve Got It, The Diseaseā€¦ Loveā€
When Kirk enters, Spock immediately reveals more of the truth to Jim. His attitude toward his mother has changed since the earlier meltdown ā€œjust because one of my ancestors married a human femaleā€ has transformed ā€œmy mother, I could never tell her I loved herā€.
Chances he regrets how heā€™s been regarding her previously. Which lends more credence to my Lā€™tak Terai (inherited from Amanda) theory. While his resentment for his father always broils beneath the surface. This is the closest heā€™s come to relying on his humanity since SNW.
ā€œJim, when I feel friendship for you Iā€™m ashamedā€ he says this like a revelation, like he wasnā€™t aware of the shame until now, or at least not itā€™s source. Heā€™s allowed himself to get close, and the sign heā€™s beginning to accept that lies in the fact that he only calls him Jim in this scene. Heā€™s allowing himself to care about Jim and acknowledging that truth within himself. Something heā€™s been fighting since The Man Trap.
But Jim (understandably) isnā€™t listening, which frustrates Spock. Heā€™s trying to be vulnerable against his usual judgement right now. So he speaks in the language Jim is speaking, violence. Theyā€™re hands are locked in a stalemate for a moment. A stalemate Spock could easily win if he wanted to considering he smacks Jim across the room moments later. The logical conclusion is that he allows it to be a stalemate.
We already know how Vulcans regard touch, touch of the hands especially. If nothing else it is a desperate ā€œstop fighting me, look at me, please listen to meā€ move, perhaps telepathic, perhaps not. I wonder if Spock had surmised that the disease transfers through touch, and in his inhibited judgement, allowed himself to infect Jim. Forcing Kirk to be as vulnerable and uninhibited as he is.
What does Jim do as he realizes the infection has gotten to him? He tells Spock not to love, whether heā€™s referring to Spock telling him he was his friend, a confession of affection, or was informed that love from when their hands clutched. He is telling Spock not to love him, that theyā€™re both better off without love.
Spock watches with sympathy as Jim reveals that the weight of being the youngest captain in the fleet, not only that but captain of the flagship, is CRUSHING him. Jim interestingly correlates how Spock feels about him to his burgeoning affection for Janice, but feeling as though he canā€™t ever reach for her. As if those feelings werenā€™t all that different.
Like Spock, heā€™s terrified that if he lets himself feel, it will destroy everything heā€™s worked so hard to maintain. In this, Spock looks at the man heā€™s finally allowed himself to acknowledge as his friend, and sees himself. In that moment he follows his sisterā€™s advice ā€œfind the person that seems farthest from you, reach for themā€.
All he can do to help Jim now is to try the impossible, the one in ten thousand chance. He does the thing that is hardest for him to do, he follows his gut and takes the risk, the intermix formula. Because right now, itā€™s the only chance they have, and Jim needs him, Kirk said as much himself.
Closing Banter
When Spock enters the bridge, heā€™s still infected, and asks Kirk if he is alright. He calls him ā€œJimā€ in front of the entire crew for the first time, rather than as a hushed aside.
Thereā€™s a subtler conversation going on between Spock & Jim when Kirk asks what the time warp did to them. He is not only asking in a literal sense, but asking what transpired in the conference room did to the two of them.
I believe this confirmed that when Spock tells him they have three days to relive. Almost as if heā€™s asking if he wants to just pretend what happened did not, that itā€™s water under the bridge. Kirkā€™s response is ā€œnot those last three days.ā€ As if to say no, what happened between us matters to me.
ā€œThis does open some interesting prospects Captainā€ then conveniently followed by some technobabble. The question, now that they both acknowledge the confrontation was important for their relationship, is what do they do now?
ā€œWe may risk it one day, Mr. Spock.ā€ Other than the literal professional conversation theyā€™re having what else could this possibly mean? Other than that they will one day risk openly caring about each other, being open to love, whatever form that does or does not take.
It is an unbelievably important moment for their relationship, and for Spock overall.
80 notes Ā· View notes