1:02:37 Senjougahara asking "Can you tell me once more that you are still in love with Araragi-kun?" is a projection of her own feelings of doubt and frustration that she mentioned in Nise, that if anyone other than Araragi would have tried to help her, no matter what kind of a person they were, she would have probably fallen in love with them too. That is why Hanekawa says "she sounded a little like she once did". In that way this is not just about critiquing Hanekawa.
51:50 pay attention to the chapter numbers in this arc 57:30 the reason why they woke up so late is because of what happened during the night, black hanekawa went out and senjiou got her energy drained
One thing to keep in mind is that unless you count the trainwreck that was the Kizu 3 gym storage room scene, this shower is Hanekawa's first experience of any sort of intimacy since early childhood. Don't forget that Senjou has her own agenda through all this though so I wouldn't take everything she says at face value.
its shit like this that makes me wonder just how much he had planned out from the start. he must have at least had a rough idea for almost everything, seriously
What Hanekawa was talking about with Araragi doing stuff in middle school was the same stuff he does now but without oddities. Essentially he was like how the fire sisters are where he sought out trouble and tried to help people. Hanekawa also says he had some sort shift in his first year of high school and stopped doing that kind of stuff, which you will learn more about in Owari
Regarding Hanekawa's seemingly selfish conviction in doing good things and a very important trait of her that you seems to still be missing (even though it was already mentioned last arc) is that whenever she does something good, her actions tends to go way beyond what a normal person/girl would do without her even realizing it herself. Like burying a random dead cat in the road. Most normal people would probably just feel a bit sad about it and just move on with their lives, but very little will go far as burying the cat themselves. In that sense, her action tends to make her abnormal instead. You're convinced that her main conviction to doing morally good things is that she just wanted to be a normal girl hence, putting off a facade and doing all this good actions for the sake of it and in that sense, her emotions. But that doesn't really makes her 'truly genuine' if that's the case no? The reality is that her actions makes her do the opposite, doing morally good things like a machine without her emotions getting in the way and ending up doing it better than most. (again, that aspect is what Araragi respects about her.) But that ain't fully a healthy thing for sure. One could even call it a curse, hence the cat wanting to save her master from it. Anyway, just wanted to point out one of the most interesting trait that makes Hanekawa's character interesting to me and how it ties to the whole thematics of Monogatari.
"Did they skip the shower?" - Don't fret my dear Pink.
You were so close! Both here and in the previous episode you were talking about "the cat coming out at night" and stuff lol
1:02:37 Senjougahara asking "Can you tell me once more that you are still in love with Araragi-kun?" is a projection of her own feelings of doubt and frustration that she mentioned in Nise, that if anyone other than Araragi would have tried to help her, no matter what kind of a person they were, she would have probably fallen in love with them too. That is why Hanekawa says "she sounded a little like she once did". In that way this is not just about critiquing Hanekawa.
"Half an hour of fun in the shower". Truly one of the monogatari moments of all time
51:50 pay attention to the chapter numbers in this arc
57:30 the reason why they woke up so late is because of what happened during the night, black hanekawa went out and senjiou got her energy drained
*Senjougahara briefly appears in the ED.*
Pink: Hanekawa ar u gae?
I'm dying
One thing to keep in mind is that unless you count the trainwreck that was the Kizu 3 gym storage room scene, this shower is Hanekawa's first experience of any sort of intimacy since early childhood. Don't forget that Senjou has her own agenda through all this though so I wouldn't take everything she says at face value.
now go back to bake ep 1 to see how Hanekawa answers Araragi's question about whether she likes banana
its shit like this that makes me wonder just how much he had planned out from the start. he must have at least had a rough idea for almost everything, seriously
@Trí Đào Thank you. Nisio Isin's writing never ceases to amaze me.
What Hanekawa was talking about with Araragi doing stuff in middle school was the same stuff he does now but without oddities. Essentially he was like how the fire sisters are where he sought out trouble and tried to help people. Hanekawa also says he had some sort shift in his first year of high school and stopped doing that kind of stuff, which you will learn more about in Owari
I think the parents haven't been mentioned yet, so it could be considered a spoiler.
@@isryzor I had thought it was mentioned at some point in Nise but I may have been wrong. I edited it out just in case. Thanks
17:00 actually predicted
Regarding Hanekawa's seemingly selfish conviction in doing good things and a very important trait of her that you seems to still be missing (even though it was already mentioned last arc) is that whenever she does something good, her actions tends to go way beyond what a normal person/girl would do without her even realizing it herself. Like burying a random dead cat in the road. Most normal people would probably just feel a bit sad about it and just move on with their lives, but very little will go far as burying the cat themselves. In that sense, her action tends to make her abnormal instead.
You're convinced that her main conviction to doing morally good things is that she just wanted to be a normal girl hence, putting off a facade and doing all this good actions for the sake of it and in that sense, her emotions. But that doesn't really makes her 'truly genuine' if that's the case no? The reality is that her actions makes her do the opposite, doing morally good things like a machine without her emotions getting in the way and ending up doing it better than most. (again, that aspect is what Araragi respects about her.) But that ain't fully a healthy thing for sure. One could even call it a curse, hence the cat wanting to save her master from it.
Anyway, just wanted to point out one of the most interesting trait that makes Hanekawa's character interesting to me and how it ties to the whole thematics of Monogatari.
This arc is a banger
Bringing back comments for algorithm gods!
Imagine not needing to speculate and just read Hanekawa's thoughts, wouldn't it be wild.