:: Restless: Leaving Childhood Behind - Part IV: Buffy's Dream - The Hands ::
Written By ShadowKat         (Other parts to this essay series available at "The Collected Musings of Shadowkat")


(All Btvs quotes come from Psyche Transcripts. I also want to thank Lanna De La Rossa and Rosalind for the inspiration.)

We know what mind, heart, and spirit mean, but do we understand the meaning of Manus: the hands?  First Manus - is Latin for hand. Some cultures, including our own, see the hands as a source of healing, example: laying down of the hands? Or in massage - if you press on certain points on the hand you can relieve pain. In many western religions, such as Muslim, Christianity, Judaism - hands can be interpreted as a means of uniting followers or of receiving instruction. While in Eastern philosophy such as China's Tao Te Ching - the right hand corresponds with the principle of action, the left with wisdom or non-action. In India, the left hand is associated with lunar quality of desire and emotion, the right with solar principle of action../../nbsp; Some yoga schools believe that each finger on the hand corresponds with a different element: thumb with fire, the forefinger with ether, the middle finger with water, the ring finger with earth, the little finger with air../../nbsp; An enormous amount of energy flows through our hands - energy to heal, to create, to balance, to communicate, and to transform. They are our most powerful interface with the world and with others. (Taken from The Hand as a Microcosm at  www.sol.com/kor/12_01.htm..)

In Season 4, Btvs, it is made clear that Buffy is the Hand. She is Manus. The card with one hand open and one closed like a fist. She uses her hands to slay the demons and her hand to remove Adam's heart../../nbsp; But it is equally made clear that the hands cannot act alone. They need mind, spirit and heart. Without the other three - she could use them in the wrong manner. And what happens when she doesn't use her hands? When they are chopped off? Or she rejects them?  Or when she forgets that hands are used to unite and heal as well as destroy?  The SG puts themselves time and again into Buffy's hands. And Buffy unites them, all of them, Xander, Willow, Giles, Anya, Tara, Spike, Dawn.... Even when she was dead, they stayed united in her name../../nbsp; What happens when you lose the hand? Does the world enter into chaos? Isn't the hand the means of keeping the balance, of keeping order? This seemed to be the result in Bargaining, when the SG lost the Hand. Demon Bikers roamed Sunnydale and trashed the town, not a pleasant image. (See Bargaining Part I & II, Season 6, Btvs.)

Yet the Hand cannot act alone, it needs mind, heart, and spirit to guide it. All must act as one, united../../nbsp; In Yoko Factor after Buffy insists on attacking Adam by herself  - Willow states: "Oh, great../../nbsp; And then when you have your new "no arms" we can all say "Gee, it's a good thing we weren't there getting in the way of that!"" If Buffy acted alone without the mind, heart, and spirit currently encompassed by her friends, she may have lost her arms or hands.

When we grow up, we have to learn how to incorporate mind and heart and spirit in ourselves. We have to sometimes act alone, independent of the group. We have to know how to depend on ourselves. Buffy has gotten used to depending on Xander's heart, Willow's moral spirit, and Giles' mind for far too long. She longs for those easy days of high school when they all met in the library and planned their attacks on the demon world. But childhood ends sooner or later and people move on and you have to learn how to incorporate some of these skills in yourself../../nbsp; In season 6, her friends reluctantly meet at the Magic Box to help but they clearly have lives outside of slaying. Slaying was not their sworn duty. They are not the Slayer or the Hand. They can help, provide support, but they can no longer be a major part of it. It is long past time for Buffy to learn how to handle the job on her own.

In each of their dreams, the first slayer attempts to warn Xander, Willow and even Giles that continuing on this path could lead to their deaths. Your magic won't help you, Willow. Your heart won't protect you, Xander. Your mind won't guide you, Giles. The slayer must act alone, at times between worlds; she is of the world and outside the world. If you continue to take an active role in this battle, you will be destroyed. You cannot hope to know the source of our power, or for that matter understand it.

Neither for that matter, does Buffy. Up until now I was convinced the theme was like that old Beatles song - all I need is a little help from my friends. Or that line Buffy sings in OMWF - "what can't we face if we're together?" Now, I'm beginning to see that some things particularly in adulthood - have to be done on one's own. The hero's journey is often a solitary one. This does not mean, however, that you can't have companions or friends traveling along the path with you, just that in the final battle - you are alone. You are making the journey. Just as Willard in Apocalypse Now must go on alone to confront Kurtz. At the end of his journey, his companions are no longer with him. The final part of the journey is his alone.

But being alone and abandoned is what Buffy fears most. It is what she has always feared. And it plays a central role in her dream. In Fear Itself - her mother assures her: "I will *always* be here for you../../nbsp; And you got Mr. Giles and your friends../../nbsp; Believe me, there is nothing to be afraid of"(Season 4, btvs) But the little fear demon warns her: "They're all going to abandon you, you know" This explains why Buffy reacts the way she does. Her dream like those of the other three Scoobies, centers on what she said in Yoko Factor: "So . . . I guess I'm starting to understand why  there's no ancient prophecy about a Chosen One . . and her friends"

Buffy's Dream - Rejecting the Hands

Buffy's dream starts in her dorm room not the Summer's House. It's interesting that both Willow and Buffy start out in the dorm. It is also interesting that none of Buffy's close friends: Giles, Willow or Xander really appear in her dream. Anya is her dorm roommate not Willow. She is facing Willow's bed, but Anya is the occupant. In the first scene Anya is trying to wake Buffy up.

ANYA: (whispers) Buffy, you have to wake up right away!
BUFFY: I'm not really in charge of these things. (Closes eyes)

This is the first time Buffy rejects the advice of a guide in her dream. She rejects it by denying responsibility even for something as simple as waking up. I'm not in control she says. Leave me alone. An attitude that reminds me of this season - from Afterlife through Normal Again - Buffy has been acting like someone else is in charge. It's as if Season 5's take-charge attitude did her in. She had to take charge of Dawn, handle Dawn not being real but a key, protect Dawn, deal with her mother's death, help Riley, fight the Knights, handle Spike's sudden devotion to her and somehow use it to her advantage, keep the peace between the SG, and save the world again, this time by sacrificing her life for her sister. Buffy thought she was done. Finished. She was at peace. In heaven. Until her friends tore her back to their reality. Woke her up. (Bargaining Part II and Afterlife, Season 6 Btvs. ) It's not the first time they did it either - way back in Prophecy Girl (Season 1 Btvs), Xander brought her back to life after the Master killed her. (She was supposed to have died then, that had been the Prophecy.)  So it's understandable that her first response is to ignore Anya and go back to sleep. But the first slayer won't let her - when Buffy rolls onto her back she sees its face snarling down at her.

The scene then shifts to Buffy's room, but it's not her room, it's the room Buffy and Faith were in during Faith's dream in This Year's Girl (Season 4, Btvs). It's Joyce's den. And Buffy is lying in the same bed she made with Faith in Faith's dream.

(Cut to Buffy standing in the doorway of the bedroom, looking at the bed.)
BUFFY: Faith and I just made that bed. (Shot of the bed, still rumpled but now without Buffy in it.)
TARA: (offscreen) For who?
BUFFY: I thought you were here to tell me.
BUFFY: (looking back at bed) The guys aren't here, are they? We were gonna hang out (looks at Tara) and, watch movies t-
TARA: You lost them.
BUFFY: No. (Looks confused) No. I think they need me to find them.

Once again Tara is used as a guide. Buffy and Willow's dreams parallel one another: Willow's starts in her bedroom with Tara while Buffy's starts in her dorm room. Tara asks both girls if they know who they are and what's to come and appears to try to warn them about what lies ahead. In both dreams Tara seems almost ghostlike, like a spirit that is outside the action of the dream, unaffected by it../../nbsp; In Willow's dream Tara asks about their cat and shouldn't they give the cat a name. In Buffy's dream Tara asks whom they made the bed for. Both Willow and Buffy think Tara will provide the answers but she just provides more questions. The other parallel is with Xander -  Xander is also looking for his friends in his dream, Joyce informs him that they've left, just as Tara informs Buffy that she has lost them. The difference is that Xander is afraid of being left behind, Buffy is afraid of losing them. What does Spike say to her in Smashed (Season 6 Btvs.)? "Poor little lost girl, got no one to love?" And what happens in Normal Again?  (The following occurs in the asylum reality - the world with Buffy's parents and the safe hospital. Buffy appears to be hallucinating this reality due to a demon toxin that she has been poisoned with. The Doctor is discussing what keeps dragging Buffy back to the world of Sunnydale, which the Doctor considers the false reality.)

DOCTOR: Yes ... but I'm talking about those things you want there. What keeps you going back.
BUFFY: My friends.
DOCTOR: That's right. Last summer, when you had a momentary awakening, it was them that pulled you back in.

She can't lose them. She is desperately afraid of losing them. Someone asked why Buffy has kept her current relationship with Spike a secret from her friends - and I think this is the key. Fear of losing them. Fear of being rejected. Of being abandoned. Of being the "poor little lost girl". So if she's lost them, she needs to find them, it's what she believes is her mission. Finding her friends../../nbsp; But is it? Really?

BUFFY: (upset) It's so late.
TARA: Oh ... that clock's completely wrong. Here. (Shot of Tara's hands holding out the Tarot card "Manus" (the hands). It has a picture of two hands crossed, one open, the other balled into a fist.)
BUFFY: I'm never gonna use those.
TARA: You think you know ... what's to come ... what you are. You haven't even begun.(Shot of the bed, now neatly made.)
BUFFY: I think I need to go find the others.(She leaves.)
TARA (softly) Be back before dawn.

Tara tries to tell Buffy that finding her friends isn't what's really important here. What's important - is "the hands" What Buffy is. Just as what was important in Willow dream was what Willow really is. But Buffy rejects the Hands. Buffy's more worried about the time and finding her friends - both items that Tara dismisses as unimportant, handing her the Manus card instead. (Which may actually be the key to finding her friends, if Buffy would only take it. After all the closed fist and open hand symbolize uniting that which is within with that which is without. The interior world with the exterior world.) "I'm never gonna use those," Buffy says instead../../nbsp; It's the first time Buffy rejects the hands - the slayer../../nbsp; She does it at least twice more in her dream. Just as Xander circles three times back to his basement, avoiding the stairs, and Willow has people mention how she is still in costume at least three times, before it is finally ripped off. In response to Buffy's statement, Tara says the same line that is later echoed by Dracula: "You think you know ... what you are ... what's to come. You haven't even begun" (This line is stated at least twice in Restless. It is important to remember what is repeated in each dream. Xander: "that's not the way out" Willow: "again these are just my clothes, not a costume".)

Buffy may not pay attention to Tara in Restless, but she does pay attention to Dracula. It scares her that she doesn't understand what she is. The hunger that Dracula senses inside her worries her. Even though she fights him off and tells him it doesn't matter and he doesn't know her at all, she still asks Giles to help her figure it out at the very end of B vs. D episode. (Which is why Giles decides to stay in Season 5 and not return to England as originally planned.)  It's also important to note that at the end of Buffy vs. Dracula, Dawn shows up, similar timeline to Tara's statement: Be Back Before Dawn. Somehow the two are connected. That's not the end of this theme, "you think you know who you are, what's to come…", which is explored sporadically through Season 5../../nbsp; In Fool For Love, Buffy consults Spike, the killer of two slayers and as close an expert as she has on slayers and vampires. In a dark take on the Giles/Buffy training study session, Spike instructs Buffy on the relationship between Slayers and Vamps. And at one point he even tells her that she's asking the wrong questions, just as the First Slayer states towards the end of her dream. "Ask the right questions. You want to know how I beat 'em? The question isn't 'How'd I win?'. The question is 'Why'd they lose?'"  But Buffy is afraid to ask the right questions, she's afraid of what the slayer is, afraid to let it define her as she believes it defined Faith. (Remember what Faith said in Bad Girls : "Hey, slaying's what we were built for. If you're not enjoying it, you're doing something wrong" And that was not long before Faith killed a man without remorse. Buffy is terrified of becoming Faith.)

FIRST SLAYER: You're afraid that being the Slayer means losing your humanity.
BUFFY: Does it?
FIRST SLAYER: You are full of love. You love with all of your soul. It's brighter than the fire ... blinding. That's why you pull away from it.
BUFFY: (surprised) I'm full of love? I'm not losing it?
FIRST SLAYER: Only if you reject it. Love is pain, and the Slayer forges strength from pain. Love ... give ... forgive. Risk the pain. It is your nature. It will bring you to your gift.

And what is Buffy's gift? Death - according to the first slayer and Spike. Again they echo each other: "Death is your art, you make it with your hands day after day …" and the First Slayer: "Death is your gift" That may be what scares Buffy the most. And it may also be what is causing her to miss the point. Rejecting who she is - rejecting who we are - closes us off to those who love us../../nbsp; Isn't that what has happened in Season 6?  Buffy is rejecting her calling and herself, and as a result she has become closed off from her friends, from emotion, from love. What did she tell her mother all the way back in Fear Itself? "I don't know. - I'm starting to feel like there is a pattern here. - Open your heart to someone, and he bails on you../../nbsp; Maybe it's easier to just not let anyone in"(Season 4 Btvs.) But it's more than just a fear of abandonment - it's also self-hatred. Buffy has rejected herself on a deep subconscious level. ("I came back wrong. I am wrong," she tells Tara in Dead Things. ) If you can't love and respect yourself, how can you love or respect anyone else? How can you be the slayer? The Hand? End of digression - Back to Buffy's dream.

In the next segment of the dream she is back at Sunnydale High and she is asking people if they have seen her friends. "Have you seen my friends? They wouldn't just disappear?" Along the way she passes her mother who is living in the walls of the school. This whole portion of her dream may be a metaphor for the journey between adolescence to adulthood. The part about her mother living behind the wall = rebellion? You block off the parent figure who's been pestering you, by encasing them behind a wall, leaving a hole big enough for their face to peek through occasionally. I don't want to deal with you any more, you're no longer necessary, so I will conveniently block you out. And in a sense that is what Buffy has done to her Mother all along. In the beginning of Restless, before the gang goes to sleep, Joyce mentions how this is the first time she's met Riley. Buffy has been dating and sleeping with Riley all year long and this is the first time Joyce met him? Her mother lives in the same town../../nbsp; All during high school Buffy has put Mom someplace convenient where she can locate her whenever she wants to. (Hence the fact her mother is behind a wall in Buffy's high school.)  "I'll always be here for you," her mother tells her in Normal Again, "you'll always have me," she says in Fear Itself. And in a sense that's true - inside Buffy there's a place her mother will always reside. (Although I hope it's the world of the asylum and not the walls of Sunnydale high.) In the dream Buffy eventually leaves her mother and the world of high school to locate her friends, believing them to be in trouble. She does the same thing in Normal Again - she leaves the world of her parents and childhood to be with her friends.

The next segment of the dream - she follows someone who looks like Xander up the stairs. This makes sense, in Season 5 and most of Season 6 - Xander appears to be ahead of her on the road to adulthood. Upstairs is clearly adulthood, or the next stage after high school../../nbsp; When she climbs the stairs, Buffy exits the sunny world of high school to the darker world of Riley and the Initiative, the first stage of her adulthood. The world is no longer black and white with Mommy nearby and the bright sunny halls of high school. The villains are no longer just demons, but possibly the government, possibly even your boyfriend.

RILEY: We're drawing up a plan for world domination. The key element? Coffeemakers that think
BUFFY: World domination? I-is that a good?
RILEY: Baby, we're the government.(He swings around in his chair to strike a James Bond-like pose../../nbsp; The camera shoots him from below, through the glass tabletop. On the table we see a handgun.) It's what we do.

A world where people carry guns and the lines between right and wrong are not so clearly drawn. A world where high school nerds could actually be worse than the demons you fought in high school. Riley strikes a James Bond pose, wears clothes similar to the ones in As You Were and talks about gadgets and his new leadership role in the government. The room goes dark. And the other guy…who had been Adam speaks to Buffy.

OTHER GUY: She's uncomfortable with certain concepts. It's understandable. Aggression is a natural human tendency. Though you and me come by it another way.(Shot of Buffy with the dark-haired creature behind her.)
BUFFY: We're not demons.
OTHER GUY: Is that a fact?

She is uncomfortable with the concept that humans can be aggressive, evil. In high school - it even took her by surprise. As she states in Gingerbread when two kids appear to be killed by a cult (Season 3, Btvs): "Someone with a soul did this?" How can that be? So is it surprising that the idea that she could be related to demons is so shocking to her? Demons = evil, remember? That is the child's view. It doesn't help that Riley calls her "killer". Remember Riley shares a similar black and white view: (New Moon Rising - Season 4 Btvs.)

BUFFY: You sounded like Mr. Initiative. Demons bad, people good.
RILEY: Something wrong with that theorem?

I think this segment of the dream explains perfectly why Buffy and Riley could never work. In it, the sirens go off, Riley and Adam attempt to build a "fort" with pillows to protect themselves and Buffy states she has weapons. When she opens her bag to pull them out - she paints her face with mud instead, the face of the slayer. The demon?

RILEY: Thought you were looking for your friends. Okay, killer...if that's the way you want it. I guess you're on your own.

This action is repeated in Dracula and Into the Woods- he accuses her of transferring her interest in Angel to Dracula, in Into the Woods - he accuses her of shutting him out, not caring about him. He never once calls her "killer" except in her dream. But I think that's what she hears when he talks to her, that's what she fears he is thinking. It's not really his fault that he can't grasp her struggle. As Adam puts it, Riley comes by the aggression differently and has never really understood the mystical world. He still separates things into logical black and white boxes like a solider.

Before we leave Riley, I'd like to address the metaphor of Riley and Adam sitting at opposite sides of the table. And of course the gun. The gun is easy - it represents human aggression, which is just as deadly and horrible as demon aggression, as the Scooby gang is about to discover. Up until Season 6, Btvs has purposefully tried to avoid guns. Only Angel really had them. Why? As Jane Espenson pointed out in her discussion of Angel - Btvs took place in the adolescent world of high school, guns really have little or no place there.(Rahael's post on Ats DVD). In Buffy's dream, we see the gun clearly displayed right after the comment about how they plan to achieve world domination. The means aren't really important, just the aggressive, take no prisoners desire behind it. Adam and Riley - the monster and the man? Or are they both? Adam also symbolizes the first man - when she asks what his name was - he replies, before Adam not a man amongst us can tell. I wonder if Buffy's lineage dates back before Adam? The demons clearly do. At any rate, Riley leaves and Buffy continues on her journey alone. (Once again we only have Riley - no Spike. Which makes me wonder if they've combined the two? Possibly Adam = Spike? At any rate Riley/Spike leave and Buffy moves on alone.)

Finally Buffy reaches the desert and is disappointed not to see her friends, for she still believes this is the whole point of her journey, to locate her friends. Instead Tara reappears along with the first slayer. Tara speaks for the first slayer in the dream.

BUFFY: Why do you follow me?(The woman shakes her head.)
TARA: (offscreen) I don't.
BUFFY: Where are my friends?(Shot of the woman backing away from Buffy, still crouching down low.)
TARA: (offscreen) You're asking the wrong questions.

Tara keeps trying to tell her that it's not about her friends. But Buffy can't hear her. Finally Tara tells her what it is about, who Buffy is, who the slayer is: "I have no speech. No name. I live in the action of death, the blood cry, the penetrating wound. I am destruction. Absolute ... alone" I am the Hands. I am a part of you that you cannot quench. The part that you cannot, should not share with your friends.

(Shot of Buffy's hand, holding a bunch of Tarot-shaped cards. In the one on top we see a scene of Giles, Buffy, Willow, and Xander in Joyce's living room watching TV)
BUFFY: I am not alone
TARA: The Slayer does not walk in this world.
BUFFY: I walk. I talk. I shop, I sneeze. I'm gonna be a fireman when the floods roll back. There's trees in the desert since you moved out. Now give me back my friends.
FIRST SLAYER: No ... friends! Just the kill. We ... are ... alone!
(The bald guy leans in between Buffy and the First Slayer, holding up two slices of cheese. He grins and shakes the cheese at Buffy, then retreats offscreen.)
BUFFY: That's it. I'm waking up.

Wow - denial much? Buffy isn't listening. Are we? The first slayer is trying to tell Buffy that when it comes to slaying - they are alone. When it comes to the vocation - it is theirs alone. The first slayer incorporates mind, heart, soul and hands. Buffy was strongest in Primeval when all four joined inside her. Just as she was strongest against Glory in the Gift when all four joined inside her. The difference? In the Gift, she did it alone, on that tower with Dawn. The four elements were clearly there - she did not require her friends to provide them. Her moral spirit outshone Willow's, her heart outshone Xander's, her mind outshone Giles'../../nbsp; She did it alone with the hammer with Glory. She made the decision to include Spike, to forgive him and treat him as a man even though he had tried to kill her repeatedly in the past, knowing he understood and would protect Dawn with his life if necessary. (In that way her heart and spirit outshone her friends.) She made the decision against the advice of her friends. At the end of Season 5, Buffy moved past them on to another plane../../nbsp; In Season 6, Bargaining Part I & II, they brought her back down to theirs. Out of time. Out of place. Back to their world. And somehow she's lost what she is, what the slayer is../../nbsp; She's lost the use of her hands. Rejected them as wrong, just as she rejects herself over and over again this year. Just as she rejects the hands over and over again in her dream. The cheese man tries to give her two pieces of cheese held in his right and left hands - and she says - "I'm waking up now" (The second time in her dream that she's rejected the hands.) Her hands are the source of her power, a power that can unite, exact justice, slay evil and heal../../nbsp; Instead she pummels the wrong people and does the wrong tasks - whether that is beating up Spike or churning the double meat../../nbsp; The Slayer tells her that her friends can't be in on the kill. She tells Buffy's friends the same thing. If they continue to follow her - they will do so at the peril of their own hearts, spirits and heads../../nbsp; Instead of listening to the slayer, Buffy screams for her friends. Demands they continue to act together. She rejects what she learned when she leapt from the Tower at the end of Season 5 and in doing so, has rejected the power of her hands. Hence all the images of chopped off hands this year.

The final image in Buffy's dream is Buffy on the floor, once again ignoring and rejecting the first slayer../../nbsp; The Slayer is trying to tell Buffy what she is. But Buffy pushes it aside, returning to her friends on the couch, and effectively breaking the slayer's spell over them all. Everything seems fine again. Or so we think. But is it? Now awake, Buffy goes upstairs and visits her Mom's den and looks at the naked mattress. In the voice over, we hear Tara say: "you think you know what you are…what's to come…you haven't even begun" The first slayer is reiterating her warning.

Buffy needs to deal with who and what she is. To let go of the old childhood dreams. To embrace the slayer. To take up her arms and move onto the next stage, even if that means leaving Xander and Willow behind. (Giles already left.) Sometimes when we grow up - we have to change the nature of our old high school or childhood relationships, and if we can't? Move on without them. The next stage of our journey sometimes has to be alone.

Thanks for reading. Looking forward to your comments as always!

~ Shadowkat

 

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