Before
we begin, let’s put aside the fact that romance in books or movies isn’t a
requirement for me. Let’s ignore the
fact that many a love triangle has overrun otherwise engaging characters in
compelling stories, and let’s not comment on the fact that the central triangle
in The Hunger Games doesn’t generally
display Suzanne Collins’s writing skills to their utmost. None of these reasons compare to why, in the
Team Peeta vs. Team Gale debate, I’m forever Team Katniss.
First
things first: once she realizes how both
Peeta and Gale feel about her (and that takes a while, because it’s hard for
Katniss to believe that virtually anyone gives any sort of damn about her,) she
tells both boys that romance isn’t the cards.
She doesn’t do it especially artfully, but she’s earnest in her
assurances that it’s not about anything either of them did. Although “it’s not you, it’s me” has a
reputation for being a cliché, when she says it, she means it.
The
past baggage and present dangers behind that “it’s not you, it’s me” are formidable. Let’s start with her conviction that she can
never get married, because she feels she can never get pregnant, because she’s
terrified at the thought of her child being sent into the Arena. This is the world the characters live in, and
that’s a huge, horrifying prospect for a 16-year-old girl to come to grips
with. With fears like that inside her,
it’s no wonder she’s not in any sort of headspace to be in a relationship. Then, of course, there’s the small matter
that she’s incredibly busy with super-important stuff throughout the trilogy. Whether she’s trying to survive a sadistic
televised battle to the death, satisfy the Capitol propaganda machine so the
president won’t murder everyone she loves, or figure out how to be the symbol of
a revolution her actions inadvertently helped inspire, she’s got a lot on her plate. For much of the series, she’s in straight-up
fight-or-flight mode, and she doesn’t have much time to process her feelings
for either boy, which are complicated and confusing in both cases.
And
really, once she’s said no, there’s nothing else she should have to say. But she cares about both Gale and Peeta and
feels she needs both of them in her life (plus, she’s Katniss, so she’s
inclined to assume responsibility for other people’s pain regardless of whether
it’s actually her fault.) So she tells
them all of this – that she’s in no place to even begin to think about a life
that includes anything like that, and at the moment, she’s working hard enough
just trying to keep herself, her family, and her friends alive. She tells them all this, and while the two
boys have different reactions over the course of the story (in Peeta’s defense,
he’s often at least slightly more understanding than Gale,) there’s a tendency
in both to throw their hurt feelings in her face.
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