The Inherent Romanticism of Headpats - Why Ship Dazatsu
I was scrolling through the dark corners of bsd tumblr and came across a few âWhy I Ship (blank)â posts and thought Iâd like to try and articulate my unending love for dazatsu in a similar fashion! Please note that I am in no way trying to steal the spotlight from other ships or trying to claim that dazatsu is âbetterâ - itâs just my favorite and I wanna talk about them! Also, I physically cannot talk about them without a shipperâs bias - Iâve had them in my heart since like late 2016. This is ingrained into my spirit.
So, without further ado, letâs talk about why I ship dazatsu (and why you should too). yes iâm kidding about that last part.
warning for manga spoilers and headers that would make amazing fic titles. tag me if you use one. manga pictures taken from dazaiscans and easygoingscans.
1. The Promise to be Good
hehehe letâs start with maybe the most obvious one that is, arguably, the most canon fact about these two. Just because I choose to view it as romantic doesnât mean it IS - but it is certainly a beautiful aspect of their relationship and yes it makes me soft every time I think about it.
We all know Dazaiâs past and what inspired him to make the switch from the Port Mafia to the side that saves people - Odasaku. No matter what you say, itâs obvious that Oda and Dazai have a very close, meaningful relationship - and arguably, Odasaku had the biggest impact (and the most importance?) in Dazaiâs life. When Oda told Dazai to leave the Port Mafia, to go make something beautiful with his life - he did. And itâs those words alone that keep him motivated to stay in his job and help protect the city - because he loves it, maybe, but because someone he loves urged him to.
Dazai, despite what his strange poetry may make you believe, is only human. As much as those words mean to him, he gets discouraged.
Along comes Atsushi, the starving tiger boy by the river. Atsushi is an orphan parallels to oda saving the orphans already, and he was in dire need of someone to save him. So, Dazai did. Whether it was because of the tiger or Odasakuâs last words, Dazai saved Atsushi and gave him life. He provided food, shelter, a means to provide for himself - even companionship. Everything Atsushi has, it started with Dazai picking him up off the riverbed and lugging him along. Whatâs more, Dazai didnât just turn him over to somebody else - he presented a case to Fukuzawa to keep him and serves as his mentor. Further along in the canon story, he provides Atsushi with the emotional guidance that he needs (Portrait of a Father, anyone? Letâs cry over that for a second.) He doesnât just give Atsushi a momentâs care - he helps him build himself up, he supports him, and together, they protect the people of Yokohama.
Atsushi is living, breathing proof that Dazai is living up to his promise to be a good man. Even better, he seems to be perfectly happy with confirming that yes, Dazai is good, whenever Dazai needs it.
In this way, they complete each other. They provide a source of comfort that nobody else has been able to. Atsushi is Dazaiâs proof that he is doing the one thing he wants to do, more than anything - be what Odasaku wanted.
2. You Saved Me, We Save Each Other
Keeping that in mind, Atsushi is sort of Dazaiâs reward for being good. Now, Iâm not implying Dazai is owed Atsushi at all - to an extent, you could argue Atsushi is maybe even too good for Dazai. But Dazai is trying to be a good man, and Atsushi is the one who tells him and reaffirms his efforts and gives him that praise, that recognition, that reward for being good. Dazaiâs main inspiration to stay on the light(er) side is Odasaku - but that doesnât mean that Atsushi canât become another huge driving force that makes Dazai want to stay on that path. Oda motivates him, gives him the reason to start. Atsushi can be the prize that makes trying worth it when he tends to forget.Â
Atsushi saves Dazai. He saves him from his self-doubt, and from the world that gives him every reason to believe he has failed in his promise. If anything, that promise might be Dazaiâs strongest lifeline. By reinforcing the line, Atsushi is saving Dazai.
And of course, Dazai saves Atsushi. He did literally save him by the river, and he helps teach Atsushi how to Not Die by virtue of being his mentor, but itâs more than that. Dazai has been the one to save Atsushi from his own mind time and time again. He provides a reason for Atsushi to believe he has (or is) earned/earning the right to live. Atsushi isnât entirely over his desire to prove himself worthy - but Dazai is always the one to tell him that he has succeeded in his goal. Dazai is the one to say âYouâve proven yourself. You deserve the life youâre living.â
3. You Learn Something New Every Day
As Atsushiâs mentor, Dazai naturally teaches Atsushi things. But beyond the simple strategic battlefield lessons, Dazai has been there for Atsushi multiple times to help him address and begin to overcome his trauma. Sure, some efforts are worse than the others (dazatsu stans just wipe our memories of the train station scene and thatâs valid and sexy of us i think.) But in times when Atsushi is clearly distressed, Dazai has been there to help him through it. Heâs helped Atsushi sort through his grief, and heâs helped Atsushi start to see that his feelings are valid and that heâs allowed to live a fulfilling life.
Atsushi isnât the only one learning, though! Thatâs one of the best parts of the ship - Atsushi teaches Dazai, too. Dazai has spent a long time feeling as though nobody will understand him intimately, or as deeply as Odasaku did. But Atsushi is getting there. Heâs one of the closest to it, I think. From saying things like Dazai is a good man, to picking up on Dazaiâs feelings at Odaâs grave in Dead Apple, and even the end scene when Dazai asked Atsushi directly if he thought he was a good person and Atsushi said without hesitation âSure, why?â Atsushi teaches Dazai that he is human. He teaches Dazai that he is capable of feeling and forming close, intimate connections. They help the other learn about the areas they need to, and in both cases, theyâre becoming patient teachers and prized pupils.
4. Iâll Listen When Nobody Else Will
Everybody knows how Dazai is often brushed off when talking about dying. People have brought up that the agency just has faith in his resilience, but that doesnât meant that they arenât acting without care towards Dazai. Atsushi does this too - in the very first episode, Dazaiâs attempt at suicide is just taken with him being exasperated at his antics before pushing him down. But hereâs the thing - itâs generally agreed upon that Atsushi is the one who is sent out to find Dazai. Atsushi is the one who knows where to find him. Arguably, Atsushi is the one that will listen to Dazai. Heâs becoming the one who can not only pick apart Dazaiâs mannerisms and slightest tells - he isnât proficient, but heâs working on it - but heâs the one that treats them with care.
Iâve spent a lot of time noting similarities between the understanding Atsushi has of Dazai to the understanding Dazaiâs truest friend had to him. Hereâs one thing that separates Oda from Atsushi, and for me, itâs one of the major reasons why I personally ship one more than the other: Odasaku didnât push Dazai the way Atsushi does. Both Oda and Atsushi have a way of laying out a field for Dazai to talk and bounce his thoughts off of, no matter how cryptically they come out. But Atsushi asks questions, he prods at the darkest corners of Dazai and he allows Dazai to question himself so he can continue to grow. Where Oda gave Dazai a place to feel comfortable in where he was, Atsushi gives Dazai a space to feel comfortable as he grows, which is what he needs in order to continue being a good man.
And please note, this isnât me saying dazatsu or Atsushi is better than odazai or Odasaku. What I mean to say is this is where the difference lies, and Atsushi gives Dazai what he needs now - something he might not have needed without Odasakuâs urging to leave.
When two characters are each otherâs north star, where is there not romance? Dazai is very much Atsushiâs main source of guidance, a side effect of being his mentor for sure - but itâs more than just asking questions. Their relationship runs deep into Atsushiâs train of thought, to the point where Atsushi hallucinates Dazaiâs presence when he feels uncertain. Any time Atsushi needs guidance or reassurance, he looks to Dazai.Â
This is more shipper goggle-y, but I like to believe Atsushi does the same for Dazai. Iâve said over and over again that above all else, Atsushi is Dazaiâs proof that he is being good. I also like to think that Atsushi, in a way, is a ray of light for Dazai to follow. Heâs selfless (although for some reasons that deserve to be readjusted), heâs kind, and he loves life - all life. Heâs a sunbeam in action that provides a perfect example for what Dazai could be and is trying to be - and if this light is happy with keeping Dazai close, maybe thereâs hope for him after all.
6. What Makes Life Worth Living
Atsushi and Dazai are opposites in once major aspect: Atsushi has a sort of reverence for life, whereas Dazai craves to escape it. These are two major points of their characters - but hereâs the kicker. Dazai wants to get close to human emotion. He wants to understand what makes life worth living. Atsushi is quite possibly the strongest candidate to show him what he can do and how loving life can help. Iâm not saying that Atsushi is Dazaisâ fix-it-all elixir, but he has a good chance to gently prod at Dazai and get him thinking.
Atsushi can show Dazai what makes life worth living. And thatâs something that I think would do Dazai a world of good.
7. Can I Change for the Better?
ATSUSHI! INSISTS! DAZAI! IS! GOOD! I will not ever diminish this point because it is so important! Dazai seems to have it in his head that his blood is mafia black, that he can play the charade of a good man but will never be more than an actor playing a part. Atsushi, though - Atsushi is constantly telling him that he is good. Atsushi, who probably couldnât keep up a lie for that long because the poor boy has zero tact. Dazai even asks Atsushi frequently if heâs a good person, and Atsushi always says yes. Atsushi gives Dazai what he needs to hear.
Atsushi, however, has his own issues. He has his own trauma to tackle, and his own bad habits to reform to become a better person. Atsushi isn'tâ a bad person, but he also isnât the best version of himself. Dazai can help him become that. Dazai can give him the guidance he needs, as he did with sorting through his grief surrounding the headmaster. Dazai can help Atsushi start the battle against his past, and he has been there with him every step of the way, whether in body or spirit. They help each other be better.
8. I Trust You With What I Love Most
Iâve said this before and Iâll say it again - the toast they added to the end of season 3 is one of the most tender moments Dazai has ever had with anybody. One thing Dazai never does is let people in on his past - not past the necessary details, anyway, and especially not the intimate moments he holds in his heart. But sharing that toast with Atsushi - inviting him in to the toast he shared with Oda and Ango, âTo the stray dogs,â - itâs one of his most vulnerable times on screen. I donât care what you say. Dazai deliberately letting Atsushi in, giving him this tiny piece of his past heâs had tucked away in a safe place - that was him offering up a piece of his heart. Iâm soft just thinking about it again.
Other than that, Dazai has an enormous faith in Atsushi. Heâs built entire plans trusting that Atsushi will do his job perfectly the way it needs to be done. Hell, towards the end of the Guild arc, it was his faith in Atsushi to bring the doll down to him that convinced Twain they were beat. Not to mention, Dazai has trusted Atsushi enough to form a new partnership without him in order to protect the city - and if thatâs not one of the most blatant displays of trust and faith youâve seen, I donât know what is.
9. Thereâs a Softness Within Me I Didnât Know I Had
Another thing thatâs good for Dazai - Atsushi is comfortable. Dazai can let his guard down, just a tiny bit, around Atsushi, There was the graveyard scene in Dead Apple, or the toast scene at the end of season 3 - those are moments where Atsushi has given himself a moment to relax and show Atsushi how proud he is. This kind of emotion, this vulnerability that says âIâve been hoping youâd pull through and look at how amazing youâve becomeâ - thereâs a softness that holds that Dazai doesnât hold for anybody else. Itâs a gentleness or pride, of trust, of somebody becoming more than you could ever imagine and coming back to you, even thanking you - itâs a sensation nobody else has given Dazai, because nobody else has been a protege as trustworthy and gentle as Atsushi.
(and, believe me, thereâs a hundred other examples of the softness in the anime, manga, official art, and so much more. hereâs a thread that you can still add to if you want)
Atsushi is also soft with Dazai. He wants to make him proud, sure, but there isnât any fear once their job is done. Atsushi doesnât have to fear horrible repercussions if he makes one misstep - Dazai allows him to learn, to grow, and to feel however he seems fit (or, itâs a skill heâs improving at as the series goes on.)
They give each other a safety to feel vulnerable. They are comfortable to each other. And, of course, they have a special softness for the other that they do not hold for anybody else.
10. My Mistakes are the Cracks You Have a Knack for Fixing
Again, Atsushi is always there to reassure Dazai that he can be a good man. One part of this is that he insist that Dazaiâs past doesnât have to affect his future. Heâs one of the only people who tells Dazai that he doesnât hold him accountable for what heâs done before - heâs Dazai-san now, and thatâs what matters to Atsushi. Atsushi gives Dazai the most space to fix these mistakes, to move past them, and to learn from them, not holding them against him at all.
In the same way Atsushi is Dazaiâs proof that heâs being a good man, he is also Dazaiâs proof that he can fix the mistakes he made. (Of course, Iâm not excusing the way he strings anybody along - but the first step to fixing a mistake is admitting you have made one and working on yourself, and thatâs what Atsushi allows him to do.)
In conclusion, I think Dazatsu is so soft and amazing because itâs about the healing and acceptance. BSD is all about gray morality, and dazatsu is a soft ship that can take each otherâs bad and accept them. Itâs not only about seeing the darkest side of somebody - itâs about accepting those flaws but also giving them space to grow. They grow and they learn and they heal together. They ensure that the other never has to go through a drastic change alone. In a way, they can be home for the other, a refuge from the shitty cards life has dealt them and a steady lifeline to reach for a better tomorrow. Thatâs why I love dazatsu - because I canât see another situation with nearly as much love and trust as they have. They are tender, they can be vulnerable, and they can heal.Â
Like the beautiful sunset hours the met in, they celebrated in, they console each other in, they allow the other to turn the page on their past and start anew, with a clean canvas for a dazzling display that they can make together.