Hey, my laptop is still busted, and I still canāt afford a replacement just yet. Iām still around, though! In the meantime, can anybody recommend me some good meta posts to reblog, maybe? With the IDW continuity ending, it feels like I ought to see it off with... Something. Although Iām not exactly sure what.
(First on the agenda after I get a laptop is poring over Rodimusās entire arc, start to finish, in IDW, due to popular demand.)
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My laptop broke in August of last year, and I haven't yet been able to get a replacement, so that threw off my plans to work on more meta. I do hope to write a bit more meta this year, but being restricted to working on my phone is proving a bit challenging.
If there's any meta you especially want to see (particularly if you're willing to screenshot and crop panels for me, but even if you can't), please let me know!
These are the current contenders:
Pre-MTMTE Rodimus/Hot Rod (an analysis of his unbelievably forgiving nature, among other things)
Transformers Armada (a full breakdown on why it's my second favorite TF show)
IDW Optimus (a detailed rundown on the self-righteous hypocrite from start to...not finish, but present comics)
Starscream (there's a lot to work with here, admittedly)
MTMTE Ratchet (how a mech can be an excellent surgeon and a terrible doctor--written from the perspective of a chronically ill person who sees doctors frequently)
I'm open to other topics, as well, but these are the ones that have been percolating longest. If you have any ideas or questions or anything, please feel free to ask. I would ideally like my next meta to result in less...well. I didn't read the comments, but I saw a number of nasty posts about my meta in the tags and on blogs I no longer follow. I'm not sure how I can spell out my disclaimers any more clearly. Many also seemed to have not read the post, bringing up points I covered within, so I don't know what to do about that, either.
I'm leading toward writing about Rodders, since many readers don't know about his pre-MTMTE characterization, but ultimately... Well, all of them are a bit unfeasible without image editing software--or at least unzipped cbz files.
I just wanted to explain my silence and state that I'm still interested in working on more meta. In the meantime, if there's any detailed meta that you think belongs on this blog, shoot me a link.
And again, happy new year. May you get the justice you deserve.
Iāve spent months emotionally gearing myself up to make this Megatron meta post. It will contain mentions of real life abuse--verbal, emotional, physical, sexual--from my own life, as well as links to sites that discuss said topics. There will be a focus on emotional and narcissistic abuse, as that is the kind I have the most experience with--and the kind I most see Megatron perpetuating in More than Meets the Eye.
I understand that many people identify with Megatron. It may be best for you to skip this post if you count yourself among them. I want to be clear that this is my reading of the character, and I do not fault others for reading him differently; Iām not going to go after anyone for liking him or shipping him with people. Itās fiction. Do what makes you feel safe and happy. I can guarantee you are not the first to block me for saying I believe Megatron is abusive.
If you are interested in reading about why I, personally, view Megatron in this light, I would like to make one final request. This subject matter is extremely personal. I have spent four and a half years in therapy, but this still affects me powerfully. If you find yourself getting the urge to argue with me, please keep in mind that I will not be responding to comments for my own health.
So why am I posting? Because I have seen no discussion of this in fandom. When Megatronās abusive behavior is described, it is invariably treated as a thing of the past, not the present. And I think that multiple views of a character in fandom lead to richer interpretations in fanworks and other meta.
And, with that, weāre off to the races.
(Note: This post is over 18k words long and contains over 70 images. If you would prefer to read this as a Google Doc, useĀ this link. I recommend going to the View dropdown and un-toggling Print Layout if you do so. If you would rather read this as a Tumblr post, please use the read more below. The Google Doc may be better if you would like to use a functional outline navigation system or if Tumblrās habit of stretching images bothers you.)Ā
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First things first: abuse is cyclical. An abuser is not always going to be abusing someone--if they did, no one would ever tolerate the mistreatment. When times were relatively good, my mother and I would crack jokes. My ex would hold my hand and tell me cheesy pickup lines. This is known as the āhoneymoonā or āidealizationā stage of the abuse cycle, and it is as much a fixture of abuse as the tension-building and abuse phases.
If an abusive relationship never left the abuse stage, no one would ever tolerate it. No one would stay. So violence must be rationed, and after each new outburst, the abuser is likely to promise that--this time for sure--it will never happen again. They then āproveā it with a honeymoon period and the cycle turns anew.
As a result, there is no way to point at one instance of kindness and say that someone isnāt actually abusive. It is likewise not generally possible to point to one instance of cruelty and call it abuse. Abuse is almost never a one-time thing. As a result, Iāve gathered examples from throughout season two of MTMTE and from the latest issue of Lost Light.
Since itās the most clear and unambiguous example of Megatronās abuse, Iām going to be singling out one particular relationship--the one between Megatron and Rodimus.
RODIMUS
To help me structure the problems I have with Megatronās treatment of Rodimus in the time since the Lost Light left Cybertron, Iām going to borrow text from Psych Centralās āEight Mental Abuse Tactics Narcissists Use on Spousesā article as well as tactics mentioned in their āSigns of Emotional Abuseā article and my own experiences.
Degradation
This is perhaps the most obvious type of abuse Megatron commits. He constantly belittles and demeans Rodimus. On the surface, it may at times seem justified. A minor comment on a fair annoyance.
Here he calls the Rodpod a vanity project, for instance. Getaway does much the same. But we know--and he likely has been told--that this wasnāt a vanity project. This was a gift from the crew to Rodimus.
Itās easy to forget. Thereās no clear origin for the Rodpod before it was rebuilt, and, frankly? Itās not important. Whether it was a gift or something he had built, this is a privately owned ship, and this is a possession that clearly means something to Rodimus.
I grew up in the 90s, and I had a lot of tacky plushies and furbies and beanie babies--all extremely easy to mock, especially as I got older and they remained sentimental. Even when I wasnāt a kid anymore, I wanted to hold onto these things, and I think thatās understandable. If Iād lost my neon purple stuffed frog and had gotten a replacement as a gift, it would have been an easy avenue of casual attack. As it was, I mostly got, āAre you seriously keeping this ratty old thing?ā about anything that reminded me of happier times. It was always a coded jab at me, a deliberate forgetting of where a gift had come from or why I might want to remember.
This hits me especially hard since everything Megatron says here? Is an uncharitable lie. But believable lies have a way of spreading and turning into a commonly held ātruthā--and Getaway later cites the Rodpod as a reason that Rodimus deserved to lose everything.
Which, ultimately, is the goal of abuse--start small and build until you can justify anything because of their ābad behavior.ā
But, of course, this particular comment is targeted at a different audience, intended to undermine Rodimusā standing with the crew and change the story to something that makes it seem as though Rodimus is squandering quest resources on trivial items.
Much of the time, the audience for Megatronās comments is Rodimus himself--wearing at his already thin self-esteem and feeding the self-hatred weāve seen him manifest throughout the series. (If you doubt either of those assertions, I plan to write meta about Rodimus later on. For now, I ask that you remember that he self-harmed by carving the results of the vote into his palm--explicitly so he would always know how many people didnāt want him there.)
Actually, for further confirmation, letās take it to canon:
While he āadmitsā to thinking heās better than everyone else after having a very direct cry for help shot down with an insult, I hesitate to say this indicates in any capacity that his self-esteem is fine.
You see, Iāve been accused of the same. Literally--to the point where this exchange with Ratchet made me sick the first time I read it. How else is Rodimus supposed to respond to this kind of jab, especially when heās in the middle of handling a crisis?
To me, the willingness to accept as ātrueā something that directly contradicts his own experiences, especially coupled with the reassurance-seeking behaviors and low self-esteem, makes him especially vulnerable to emotional and verbal abuse.
And so, letās turn our focus to Rodimus himself and answer the questions posed by the article to see how well Megatronās behavior holds up.
Do they tell you that your opinion or feelings are āwrong?ā
Without any warning of what to expect, Rodimus was presented with his own corpse--which has half its brain sliced out. They specifically didnāt tell him why they were calling him in, which I canāt imagine helped soften the horror. Heās in a very reasonable state of shock.
And thereās Megatron calling his reaction tiresome, even though his eventual reaction when faced with the spectre of his own death is to scream and punch Perceptor. Rodimus is just quietly attempting to come to grips with an upsetting situation, not hurting anyone by taking a moment to process.
But, of course, he isnāt allowed to process. Megatron is the captain of this ship, and he expects everyone else to handle their feelings quickly and efficiently, even if he never does.
This is a hallmark of narcissistic abuse--considering oneās own feelings bigger, more important, more valid than those of others. And itās fully in line with the dynamic, too, to attempt to invalidate said feelings by emphasizing oneās role as an authority over the victim.
āDonāt you think, as your mother, itās fair to expect a little consideration?ā might have been fair if the consideration hadnāt involved her demanding things Iād already done for her--which she promptly pretended I hadnāt done, or that Iād done them improperly, or that I hadnāt adequately managed my emotions while doing them.
Itās patronizing enough from a parent. From someone who shares the same rank as you? Itās condescending in the extreme--not to mention entitled.
Do they belittle your accomplishments, your aspirations, your plans or even who you are?
But, of course, Megatron doesnāt respect Rodimusā rank. Rodimus owns this ship--Drift purchased it as a neutral vessel and I would be genuinely shocked if he didnāt insist on signing it over to Rodimus after convincing Rodimus to let him take the fall. This ship? This is his ship. Optimus had no right to set Megatron up as captain; he didnāt even have the right to forcibly install him on the crew roster.
In fact, if youāll pardon the brief aside, Rodimus had very fair misgivings about allowing Megatron onto the Lost Light.
Rodimus points out that Megatron is dangerous--this is undeniably true, no matter what your stance is on his character. And Ratchet responds by lying to Rodimus to convince him to let a powerful criminal aboard. Which is, ironically, the same thing that kicked off season one--only this time itās Megatron instead of Overlord.
Personally, I think that this shows Rodimus has learned his lesson and is trying to avoid a repeat of that particular disaster.
He also offers a great insight into why Optimus is cooking up this outrageous plan:
And, although this is just conjecture, I think that this is part of why Megatron targets Rodimus. He can be insightful--especially when it comes to people and their motivations. This makes him a threat to Megatronās otherwise nearly unchecked power as captain of this ship. However, he is also susceptible to manipulation, as we saw with Prowl.
Megatron is extremely intelligent and very good at manipulating others; he plays a long game, as Ravage walked us through at the end of DotL. And with the idea that Rodimus tried to bar him from his ārightful placeā at the helm of this ship, with the idea that Rodimus was the one chosen by the crew to be captain, I would like to return to the panel at hand...
Here we hear Megatron say--exasperated, belittling--āHow many times?ā As if this argument should be concluded by now, and Rodimus is being childish to keep forcing the issue.
Iāve heard this exact line in this exact tone too many times from multiple abusers. How many times would I dare to defy them? I wasnāt trying to be defiant; as Rodimus just did, I reminded them of an inconvenient (for them) fact, one they wanted to convince me wasnāt true. I doubt I could list every iteration of this Iāve seen in real life.
This is not something you say to an equal when discussing something that is objective fact. Rodimus is the co-captain, much as Megatron wishes to deny it.
And he continues to deny it. Itās not a real rank. Itās a made-up rank. He is the one true captain, and Rodimus is a recalcitrant second-in-command in denial. Megatron doesnāt have the best track record with those--which Rodimus would be fully aware of. I refuse to believe that the Autobots never saw footage of Starscreamās treatment at Megatronās hands.
So I think that it makes sense that, rather than push farther when Megatron has already raised his voice, Rodimus redirects. This was a tactic I, too, used to avoid moving from the tension-building phase to the abuse phase in my own relationships.
Do they regularly ridicule, dismiss, disregard your opinions, thoughts, suggestions, and feelings?
This is a pretty obvious example of ridiculing someoneās feelings--and itās another dig following right on the heels of the last two. Although all three are relatively small, the fact that they come one after another, basically coloring every statement Megatron makes, feels uncomfortably familiar to me.
Even if these are justifiable complaints--which I donāt believe they are, but I recognize they may be open to interpretation--the steady build-up is worrying.
My mother did much the same thing. One mild example was that she would tell me to go wash my face--I had acne, so this could have been reasonable advice. However, it slowly escalated until every time she saw my face, she would suck her breath in between her teeth and cringe. āGo wash your face!ā If I complied immediately, there was no reward beyond, āSee, isnāt that better?ā (Which it wasnāt--the repeated scrubbing made my acne substantially worse.) And even then, within an hour, she would repeat the comment.
And if I didnāt comply? She would keep cringing and insisting until she brought acne pads over to physically drop on top of me before walking off with a smug smile. This despite the fact I was bathing twice a day and scrubbing with one to four of those pads a day. (No wonder my acne got worse, right?)
So when I see these types of minor but incessant insults--nothing big enough that any onlookers would feel comfortable defending Rodimus, nothing serious enough to justify lashing out--it rings alarm bells in my mind.
Furthermore, Rodimus turns away, but Megatron looms right behind him. I find the body language of this interesting--even when Rodimus approached previously, he left roughly an armās length between them--enough to not really be getting into Megatronās bubble despite his frustration. It may be an angle thing, but it seems as though Megatron is closing that distance, subtly physically intimidating Rodimus. Heās closer still in the next panel:
Much less than the almost-armās length that Rodimus gave him--and heās much larger than Rodimus, not to mention more powerful, which means that his physical presence alone can be a weapon. Healing Abuse Working for Change, an abuse prevention group founded in the 70s, specifies ālooming over you, getting āin your faceā or blocking a doorwayā as a variety of physical abuse (source).
Rodimus may have approached Megatron, but he respected Megatronās space. Megatron did not return the favor--particularly when escalating his ridicule and getting increasingly aggressive in terms of tone and expression.
Iāll discuss other aspects of this panel in a later section--for now I want to focus on the intimidation and the way he insists that it is impossible for Rodimus to do something as adult as ātake stockā--he is capable of it, but clearly Rodimus is not.
Why? He doesnāt need to state it explicitly; his previous comments are explanation enough. Rodimus is childish for not tailoring his emotional reaction to a traumatic scene to suit Megatronās needs--and for not conceding the argument to Megatron and arguing about facts.
And when Rodimus turns back to look back at his own corpse?
When you complain do they say that āit was just a jokeā and that you are too sensitive?
Rodimusā head is bowed, and he looks resigned to me. Another red flag, since that was usually how I reacted to that particular brand of abuse, particularly when my ex or mother got into my personal bubble. If I didnāt shut down and comply, I ran the risk of inciting something worse.
Especially coupled with yet another dig at his emotional maturity and sensitivity, this conclusion to their altercation leaves me queasy.
If you have never been in a relationship where this is the norm, it can be hard to fathom exactly how taxing it is. You think that, if it were bad enough, you would notice. You would leave. But none of these comments are quite unreasonable enough to prompt a full-blown fight; none of them are hills worth dying on, particularly for someone who already has (hidden) self-esteem issues.
Iāve heard a metaphor for situations like these. If you place a frog in a boiling pot, theyāll jump out immediately. But if you place them in cool water and gradually turn up the heat, they get used to it. Eventually, they boil--because they were trained to tolerate minor abuses along the way.
Over time, in an environment where nonstop digs are normalized, they become background radiation. Rodimus turns away, unable to fight back against any single point aside from the few attempts at fact-checking and explanation he already made. Itās not worth fighting. Itās not worth pushing. If he pushed harder, maybe--but Megatron knows what heās doing. He knows how far to push.
He wrote the script, after all: attack, withdraw, isolate.
Of course, if this scene were the only such example in the series, I would put it down to Megatron waking up on the wrong side of the bed and Rodimus not wanting to deal with the grumpiness. Itās the context of the entire series that informs the cycle.
Do they give disapproving, dismissive, contemptuous, or condescending looks, comments, and behavior?
Because this panel--containing a very similar dig--takes place a full year later. Instead of encouraging Rodimus or bantering back at him, he dismisses him.
āBut doodling is a sign of inattention and Rodimus should focus!ā you might say. And you would be wrong. As Time reported, doodling helps people focus. So, while teachers and other authority figures demean it, itās largely because of the lack of respect they (falsely) believe it implies.
Furthermore, even though no one was aware of it, Rodimus was doodling the lost map to Cyberutopia. Itās possible that he was compulsively driven to carve it--and I do mean compulsive in the true sense of the word.
(An aside: I have obsessive-compulsive disorder and, when unmedicated, perform up to six hours of compulsions a day, so I think Iām qualified to make that call.)
He had merged with the matrix--it reformatted him, in fact. It seems reasonable that having the map lodged in his processor would itch like having a word on the tip of his tongue. His doodling in this case would have been more like filling a genuine physical need.
If you have never experienced a genuine compulsion, I canāt explain the visceral need of it. Fighting it down is much like holding your breath--if you hold out too long, it becomes intolerable. You feel like you will die. Like you are actively dying.
Of course, this is conjecture--itās entirely possible that his doodling serves only the usual purpose: increased focus. And you know whatās a helluva lot more disrespectful than doing what you need to do to focus? Disguising verbal abuse as jokes.
Do they tease you, use sarcasm as a way to put you down or degrade you?
This example is super upsetting to me. On the surface, yeah, haha, Megatron made a joke, good one, Megs.
But...Rodimus was literally turned inside out. He was left in a dark hallway, alone and in pain, unable to move, unable to speak, for an indeterminate amount of time. Someone violated his mind to remove knowledge so basic itās fundamental to them as a species.
To make sure not to understate things, letās ask the psychiatrist who has the most experience with the procedure:
The most painful thing a Cybertronian can ever experience. A mental violation followed by incredible pain.
And that painful-looking mess of organs there in the brig?
Thatās Rodimus. Who apparently rushed ahead to shut off the lights and protect the mechs in the brig--mechs who were trapped in place and likely targets for a criminal who likes to feast on āsin,ā wouldnāt you say?
Meanwhile Megatron and the others are far enough behind that Sunder has come and gone--turning Rodimus inside out, but not prisoners like Getaway, who were left safely in the dark. The timing, to me, makes it look like Rodimus barely got there in the nick of time.
Which, of course, only gets a disparaging comment from Megatron, who wonāt even get off his moral high horse to fight back against Sunder and protect his crew.
Rodimus may or may not be able to hear this condescending comment, but when he comes back to work, fresh out of the medbay? Megatron kicks off by making fun of the experience. Rodimus counters humorlessly--clearly not digging this particular joke--and Megatron follows up with, oh, by the way, the only mech you probably count as a friend these days? Helped me come up with this terrible joke at your expense.
Making fun of your own trauma can be cathartic. Making light of someone elseās trauma, particularly when theyāre literally leaving their hospital bed for the first time after the fact? No--thatās cruelty. Thatās another example of convincing Rodimus that heās too sensitive. Canāt he take a joke?
And he does take it--with only a minor dodge. Hence the barbed follow-up.
I would say that this is just an example of a tasteless and poorly thought out joke, but Megatron knows people. We see him manipulate the DJD masterfully--and those are mechs who know him, mechs who know the ins and outs of manipulation and abuse. So Iām inclined to believe that this is deliberate rather than a misstep, especially in light of his follow-up...
He cuts off Rodimusā attempt to move away from the unpleasant subject by literally talking over him (note the overlap of the speech bubbles) in order to make a ājokeā about Rodimus resigning. Which--as we saw in the first scene, as we see in many scenes--is a continual point of contention between them.
Megatron is taking advantage of a moment of probable vulnerability by priming him with a ājokeā followed by a comment meant to make him feel alone, and then another ājokeā meant to indicate the desired behavior.
This is a pattern Iām familiar with, as you might expect by this point. In the case of my ex, he would use this pattern--making light of something traumatic that had happened to me, following up with a non-apology that referenced the fact that no one wanted to put up with my issues, and then bringing it home with an unsubtle joke about things he wanted to do to me to āmake me feel better,ā no matter how I tried to indicate my own discomfort.
And I, personally, donāt think that this is any less bad here, even though that was really awful and--after enough rounds of it--inevitably succeeded in getting me to give him what he wanted to make it stop. Because, even if Rodimus seems to be in good spirits, trauma can present itself in different ways. And an experience like that, especially given the complete lack of emotional support he experienced before, during, and after? Yeah, no, Iām not prepared to believe that he's actually unbothered instead of coping by acting tough, not when he tries twice to dodge the ājokeā.
And Iām also not prepared to believe that Megatron can't see right through that act, especially in light of the fact that he also makes a habit of making fun of Rodimus in front of everyone he can.
Do they make fun of you or put you down in front of others?
Megatron continually puts Rodimus down in front of the crew.
In case the screenshot ends up too small to read, he says, āI hope this puts paid to the notion that I ignore everything my āco-captainā says on the grounds that heās lazy, petulant, and pathologically ill-suited to commandā¦ā
From the air-quotes around āco-captainā to the specific insults he uses, every word of this is supposed to cast himself as the responsible, capable captain and Rodimus as the immature usurper. He maintains a formal voice for his own actions--heās being magnanimous by agreeing to Rodimusā rendezvous plan on the planet below. Why, if he doesnāt, Rodimus will probably be petulant and whine about it, so really, any inconvenience is on Rodimusā unstable emotional state.
Which seems over the top, but look at what he said. He starts by heavily implying that Rodimus shouldnāt be respected as a leader, then follows this assertion with three āreasonsā for this.
Lazy - Rodimus goes out of his way--literally--in season one to go on side-quests that help people. Heās always personally willing to go to the frontlines of any conflict heās willing to risk his crew in. And when the co-captains are each presented with the opportunity to risk their lives for the sake of saving others (Rodimus in #21 and Megatron in #33), they have two very different reactions.
We are shown no panels of Rodimus balking; he immediately allows Perceptor to wire him to the anti-killswitch. When told it might kill him and will certainly destroy the matrix, he says, āThere goes our map.ā And after spending what might be his last moments telling Minimus the truth about Overlord, he says, āSelf-sacrifice, Magnus--itās cheap. Itās a cheap way out. I need to live so I can make amends and--ā before the anti-killswitch cuts him off.
We go on an entire hunt while Megatron avoids coming clean about being able to mass-shift; itās how we find out Brainstorm is a Decepticon. It takes five pages. And although Megatron agrees in the end, his quote on the matter is, āOh, I couldāve said something earlier, but hereās a survival tip: when everyoneās lining up to make sacrifices...always get to the back of the queue.ā
Which maybe doesnāt qualify as laziness--but it still paints a very different picture than Megatron is doing here.
Another point of fact is that even though Megatron has said in this arc that Rodimus has spent the time since launch hiding, Ravage points out later in the arc that heās observed the same behavior in Megatron. More on that later--under Double Standards and Projection--but worth noting here to undermine the āhonestyā in the lazy point.
Petulant - This particular insult is set up to make Rodimus look emotional and childish. This is a pretty common tactic in abuse--it makes it hard to believe anything the person in question says. After all, theyāre a child, do they really know what theyāre talking about? Surely they just misremembered. Surely itās safe to ignore their petulant demands unless you feel like indulging them.
Which is exactly what Megatron is implying heās doing here. Indulging the whimsy of a child instead of working with the mech who shares his rank.
This particular brand of trivializing is a favorite when setting up for gaslighting, which Iāll talk about later. After all, if you can convince someone theyāre immature--that theyāre too inexperienced or emotional or downright crazy to trust their own perceptions--then they need to turn to someone with the authority to tell them what the truth is.
And if you can also convince those around the victim that this is true--as the villain does in Gaslight (1944), which gives us the techniqueās name--by slandering the victim and undermining their authority, you have others who can ask, āAre you sure you didnāt imagine that?ā even when you arenāt around to enforce the reality you want.
The air-quotes around āco-captainā are small, and words like āpetulantā are minor--but as Psychology Todayās article on Gaslighting points out, it always starts out slow. These words are weapons--and words have always been Megatronās weapon of choice.
Pathologically Ill-Suited to Command - The final nail in this sentenceās coffin is this one. As I mentioned above, prepping for gaslighting is easier when you can convince your victim and their would-be support network that the victim is crazy--and here we see Megatron pull out that argument. Pathologically ill-suited to command.
Itās not poor baby Roddyās fault, you see--his brain isnāt wired for command. He doesnāt have the intelligence of the True Captain. He doesnāt have the stability. He might like to pretend, but these are delusions.
As someone with several mental illnesses (primarily anxiety disorders, including obsessive-compulsive disorder, but also depression), I heard this one a lot. A lot. I tried for years to take crazy as a point of pride; sometimes I still want to. But itās been used as a weapon against me for years. āAre you insane?ā prefaced a lot of furious dismissals of innocent requests I made when I was young, but it sometimes still happens when I try again to interact with my family. I also had panic attacks that got called ātantrumsā to trivialize them.
Rodimus likely has PTSD--heās a veteran with a traumatic childhood, after all--and Iāve seen headcanons that he has ADHD. We also know for a fact that he self-harms--and so do all the people Megatron is addressing, since the cuts were visible all the way until the morning of the day this issue began. (It was even commented on when they were looking at Rodimusā corpse.)
Casually pathologizing someone who visibly self-harms is an easy way of isolating them. Making it an indication that Rodimus is unfit for command? Easier still. Itās also a ready-made dismissal whenever someone doesnāt like your argument. I could offer examples, but this blurb has gone on long enough as it is--and I think every mentally ill person I know could likewise offer examples of it.
This is far from the only time Megatron publicly insults Rodimus in ways that undermine his credibility as a leader. In fact, he does it often enough to have become an in-joke among the crew between Dark Cybertron and the first arc of season 2:
This is the first arc in season 2. The first arc. And yet theyāre already saying that Megatron always says this.
Which...isnāt really fair. Rodimus isnāt an engineer. If you review the scene in issue one, he gives the order to jump, and no one tells him that the engines arenāt ready until after theyāve malfunctioned, and even then they canāt tell him why. He immediately has them set down and refuses to take off until theyāve figured out exactly what went wrong--which seems responsible to me.
But, of course, anything that goes wrong can become Rodimusā fault, even if he wasnāt the one responsible.
Megatron also deliberately insults Rodimus in front of Ultra Magnus, the mech who was, once Drift left, probably the closest thing to a friend Rodimus had on the ship:
Note the way he frames it: āa crisis in morale precipitated by his own woeful captaincy.ā
We know people actually liked the Rodimus Stars, even though they were ridiculous. Maybe because they were ridiculous. We saw that in the Trailcutter Spotlight, where the entire story revolved around characters like Trailcutter and Swerve trying to get Rodimus Stars.
Yes, itās silly. He doesnāt have a great system for passing them out. But thatās not what Megatron focuses on--instead he once again targets Rodimusā supposed ineptitude.
Am I boring you to tears yet? Itās five hundred insults that all make the same point, one after another, to everyone he can get to listen, for over a year.
Until eventuallyā¦
Even the mechs that once supported him are instead convinced that Megatron is correct. Rodimus is incompetent, incapable of leadership--Minimus is comfortable joining Megatron in mocking Rodimus after he took a long weekend off to do something he enjoys.
Something I find interesting about this is that they accuse him of disappearing when thereās work to be done, but he has no idea whatsoever what the work theyāre doing is.
In fact, he doesnāt know anything about the situation at all. Heās been gone three days, and they clearly hadnāt started decorating before he left. He even makes the reasonable suggestion of maybe just maybe avoiding the death zone, even if he goes with Megatronās reasoning in the end.
This implies to me that he didnāt know there was work to be done. Either it came up after he left, or he wasnāt properly informed before he left.
As for the ānot returning their callsā bit--I suspect that meteor storms might interfere with comms. Iām fairly sure thatās a repeated subplot in most sci-fi Iāve seen, and the Lost Lightās comms arenāt especially robust at the best of times, let alone whatever handheld or internal unit Rodimus mightāve had.
Leaving things in the hands of Megatron and Minimus for three days--just a long weekend--isnāt irresponsible. Everyone deserves to be allowed to have hobbies. Everyone deserves to have a long weekend now and again, no matter their job. But Megatron has turned this--along with a laundry list of things he himself does--into a way to justify isolating Rodimus.
Isolation
How isolated is Rodimus? Since season two started, there have been no scenes of Rodimus spending downtime with anyone--until Drift returns, the one friend who hasnāt been exposed to months of Megatronās unending degradation and insults.
Itās possible I missed a scene in my reread, but even though every other member of the group who ends up on the Necroplanet in Dying of the Light has at least a panel of casual or friendly interaction with others, the closest I found for Rodimus was the scene when he was fresh out of the medbay and Megatron made fun of him. Not promising, to say the least.
From all the available evidence, Iād say that Rodimus is an extrovert. He seems more energized in front of crowds, he was so charismatic he was partly responsible for short-circuiting the personality ticks, and he does things like naming his favorite crowd the Rod Squad. He likes people, clearly--and heās shown repeatedly to care about protecting his crew, as well as total strangers.
He also habitually seeks external validation because of his low self-esteem. Without this kind of support, he resorts to self-harm (see the numbers he carved into his palm) and other unhealthy coping mechanisms.
Again--planning to do a Rodimus meta at some point. For now, letās roll with the idea that heās a social mech who craves being around others and needs external validation to function, which I donāt think is particularly difficult to believe.
The lack of interpersonal interaction in season two--alongside the belittling comments he faces when he does interact with others--indicate that heās isolated. Heās a charismatic mech; thatās part of how he helped to kill off the personality ticks. And yet by the time they leave for the Necroplanet, heās receiving no external validation, no interpersonal support, nothing. Heās alone.
He may not be the best at friendship--but neither are Whirl, Cyclonus, or Swerve, all of whom end up with strong friendships and support networks. Considering the previous section and Megatronās clear attempts to isolate Rodimus, one can only surmise that he was ultimately successful in cutting him off even from Minimus.
So what does Megatron accomplish by shutting out all sources of external validation, anyone who might rebuild Rodimus after Megatron verbally tears him down?
In my experience, heās setting himself up to have power over Rodimus. Remember--Rodimus is so full of self-doubt even before the beginning of the series that he reaches out to Ratchet, only to get shot down there. (āBeneath my cocksure exterior I have terribly low self-esteem.ā) No longer able to lean heavily on Drift for emotional support and cut off from any positive reinforcement, heās put in an extremely vulnerable place.
I, too, am an extrovert. Sometimes Iām fairly sure that it makes me intolerable to be around, especially since I do the same reassurance-seeking behavior as Rodimus. If I go too long without interacting with friends, my depression makes a bitter comeback.
Yes, it would be awfully nice if I could go without social interaction or reassurance or positive external feedback in general, and certainly no one is obligated to provide such things for me. But the fact of the matter remains that without these things, Iām left vulnerable and hungry for any scrap of affection I can find.
And, in my experience? My abusers have deliberately starved me from outside attention to put me in that vulnerable state. It was easiest for my mother, which isnāt surprising; she already had absolute power over where I went and who I saw. What she didnāt have--and what she wanted more than anything--was my undivided attention and affection.
So when I displeased her--and there were quite a lot of ways to upset her--one tactic she used was cutting me off from other sources of support. People who could verify that sheād said one thing on Tuesday morning and something radically different by Wednesday night. People who could help me cope with the nonstop insults, the micromanaging, the unbearable pressure.
Without them? I crumbled. I did anything my mother asked--and I apologized when I did it āwrong,ā or if I had āmisunderstoodā the order sheād changed halfway through my obeying it, or if sheād simply forgotten that I had, in fact, obeyed her already. She was the only one who could arbitrate the Truth; I didnāt have anyone else to turn to.
My siblings and I banded together sometimes to stave this off, but at other times they behaved more like Minimus--going along with Mom to keep the peace, to keep her focused on me instead of them, or just because they actually agreed with her, I canāt quite be sure. In the end, Iām not sure that it matters.
For a specific example--I was required to hug my mother and tell her I loved her before I went to bed every night. One night, I could tell she was sleepy when I hugged her, but she said, āI love you, too,ā so I thought I was safe.
No such luck--she woke up at two in the morning convinced that I hadnāt hugged her good night or said I loved her. She burst into my room, sobbing and shouting, and I had to stumble out of bed and try to calm her down.
Iām fairly confident that she didnāt cite that as the direct reason for the ensuing silent treatment and enforced āfamily timeā that meant I couldnāt see friends for a while, but the timing was suspicious.
We see this general pattern a few times with Megatron and Rodimus, as well, the most recent of which was in Lost Light #4. Iāll cover other aspects of that later, but, for now:
Transgression: Rodimus asked about teleporters.
Warning: āHush.ā
Withdrawal: āNot now, Rodimus.ā
Isolation: Public humiliation.
And that pattern--do something āwrongā to earn punishment, an initial outburst, pulling back with the silent treatment, and then isolating them from others as a way to build tension for a final blowout? Uh...
Thatās a script Megatron wrote a long time ago, and he knows exactly how effective it can be.
Ultimately, what Megatron gets out of setting himself up as the only one to interact one-on-one with Rodimus is a lack of oversight, a lack of outside influence, and--if he presses hard enough, if he twists Rodimus around for long enough, if he sways the opinions of enough of the crew--eventually he might succeed in becoming sole captain of their merry band. With Minimus in his pocket? Itād be a recipe for total control over not just Rodimus, but the entire group.
Rage
āThis is an intense, furious anger that comes out of nowhere⦠It startles and shocks the victim into compliance or silence.ā (āEight Mental Abuse Tactics Narcissists Use on Spousesā by Christine Hammond, MS, LMHC)
This is what most people think of when they picture abuse--the most violent of the symptoms. Itās also the one that Megatron has deliberately been keeping in check, pulling it out only when the long game heās playing is at risk of being cut short.
I have said before that abuse can only be viewed in a pattern--one instance of shouting doesnāt necessarily make an abusive relationship. In the context of an abusive relationship, however, even one instance of rage is a powerful tool for controlling someone. Even if someone never again takes it āthat far,ā the victim remembers. And they know that the threat is always going to be present.
When I was fifteen, I did something to upset my mother. To this day, I have no memory of exactly what I did wrong. What I do remember is my mother taking a book and slamming it against my temple so hard that it knocked me to the floor. She then grabbed me by the hair and dragged me up to scream in my face. I remember being held high enough that my knees werenāt on the floor, but my legs were still bent--the only point of contact I had with the world was my toes. I remember being so terrified that I had no idea what she was saying other than the tone, the way spit hit my face. She then stormed out of the house and blamed me for it.
The older of my two younger sisters tried to run away that night, and I nearly jumped off the roof of our house. I remember very clearly that the only reason I didnāt was because I was convinced that I would only break my legs, and she would use it as an excuse to trap me at home with her.
Beyond that, my memories blur. I remember that either that night--or perhaps another night--my littlest sister caught our motherās attention. I remember making an attempt to distract our mother. Was that why she attacked me? I donāt remember. Did I make her more upset? I donāt remember, although I recall fearing I had. What I do remember is the moment that she grabbed my seven-year-old sister and threw her--physically threw her--out of the way. My sister landed wrong--on her wrist--and broke a bone. I remember her crying. I remember my mother telling her to shut up. I remember that it took a while before Mom took her to the hospital, and then that we were all ordered not to tell anyone how sheād broken the wrist.
Aside from these instances, my mother never laid a hand on any of us.
She never had to. Itās been twelve years--almost thirteen years--and I still feel it every time we interact. I remember that sheās capable of it. I remember that she was willing to shift her rage onto the more easily accessible target despite my best efforts. All the way until I moved out--and beyond then, and into the present--itās kept me from being willing to confront her about some of the worse things she says and does.
Itās been over a decade and I donāt think Iāll ever forget that fear. For a while, I was so deeply afraid of even sharing the story--after being ordered to be silent about it--that I think Iāve only told a few of my closest friends and my therapist. The only reason Iām sharing it now is because Iām posting this anonymously. Because, at heart, I am still afraid.
Now, I could cover the handful of examples of Megatron hitting characters here. I could make conjectures about how Rodimus cares more about the wellbeing of others than his own, and threats of violence against characters like Trailcutter, Perceptor, and Minimus would be more likely to keep him in line than violence against his own person. I know that was true for me.
But none of those were done directly in front of Rodimus, even though he would have heard about them later. That makes it harder to draw conclusions about without wandering a bit too far off panel. So Iāll be discussing physical violence in those charactersā subsections--and for now, Iāll be looking at the times Megatron has threatened violence directly at Rodimus.
In context, Rodimus respectfully said that he and the others were reporting for duty; he even saluted. Megatron then ordered all of them to carry Ravage back to Ratchet, and Rodimus objected.
What was his objection? Was it, ābut this is only half of Ravage, and even Ratchet probably needs both halves to repair himā? Was it, ābut there are a lot of us, and probably we donāt all need to carry Ravage, so maybe some of us could stay and helpā? We donāt get to find out, because Megatron doesnāt accept any objection to his orders, no matter how softly or respectfully put.
In this scene, with the DJD nearby, his long game is, as I said, at risk of being cut short. So he breaks out the rage to terrify Rodimus into unquestioning compliance.
Whatās more, it worked. They all fled.
Maybe this doesnāt look like violence to some of you. But his expression and the way he towers over Rodimus as he screams? Looks almost identical to my motherās face in the anecdote I shared above. And to me, that screaming was violence.
In fact, screaming like that was the only kind of violence my abusive ex-boyfriend perpetrated against me. He was physically larger than me; he would get me cornered in a bus seat and loom over me exactly like this while screaming insults. And I know for a fact that some people donāt think this counts, or believe this behavior can be justified--when I reached out to the older of my two younger sisters about how he kept doing this, she told me that I deserved it, and she wasnāt the only one.
As a result, in the context of Megatronās treatment of Rodimus, and in the context of this being a tool that worked to control him, I would personally count it as an abusive tactic--one that I believe was deliberate. Especially since he never apologized.
And then, almost immediately after Rodimus risks his life to save Megatronā¦
Rodimus is standing directly behind Ratchet as they try to convince him to pretty please put down the gun, as we can see in the next panel:
And, of course, Megatron pulls the gun on them--all of them. And Rodimus, the one who brought him through the portal, the one who rescued him, is looking down the barrel of a fusion cannon over Ratchetās shoulder. This group of mechs--the Rod Squad, his favorite people--are all being threatened.
And then Megatron says that itās time he left, and itās hard not to think, under the circumstances, that he means heās done playing at being an Autobot, done being nice. Heās wearing Tarnās mask as a deceptibrand, for goodnessā sake! For all intents and purposes, at this moment, it looks like Megatron is through with the quest and has no intention of going to trial.
A few days later--or however long it takes them to build the Den and end up on Functionist Cybertron--you can see that Rodimus is still thinking about this:
There are other potential explanations, of course, but--in context? I find it both telling and worrying that Rodimusā instinctive reaction when Megatron shouts his name is a full-frame flinch. Not with battle prep or defensive stances or anything that would indicate he learned this response from being ordered around in battle. Just the same sort of flinch I still sometimes get when my mother raises her voice.
And, although itās been a bit since I used this format, letās answer another question from the checklist:
Do they accuse you of something contrived in their own minds when you know it isnāt true?
This is the last example Iām going to use for rage--and a tirade like this is an example of out-of-nowhere fury used to shock Rodimus into silence.
The thing is? Megatron pulled all of this out of his tin-plated ass.
In this scene, Rodimus did not once mention the Lost Light. He only tries to ask about the teleporters, and then Megatron derails him with this.
Now, Iām going to give JRo the benefit of the doubt, here. Instead of assuming heās forgotten about Nyon--the core of Rodimusā backstory--and abandoned Rodimusā main driving force as a character by having him sacrifice others to get what he wants instead of, yāknow, literally being willing to risk his life saving people at every single opportunity heās ever had⦠Instead of pinning writing that terrible on JRo, Iām going to assume instead that Megatron cut off and then derailed Rodimus before he could suggest what he actually had in mind. Misunderstandings and assumptions being thwarted both play a role in JRoās writing, after all.
And, with any thought at all, it actually makes perfect sense that Rodimus might need teleporters for a plan--for saving the people of this Cybertron, not for tracking down the Lost Light. These mechs arenāt safe on Cybertron, even in this supposed āsanctuary cityā--and thereās no way to transport all of them offworld. There are too many of them--we see veritable thousands in the streets.
So how do you save everyone? Do you start another war to rise up against your oppressors--because the first one went so well--or do you get everyone the hell off the planet?
Sure, maybe Rodimus wants to use the teleporter after the fact. Iād be surprised if he didnāt--he left half the crew he still has on a distant planet with a bunch of potentially dangerous strangers.
As for why Rodimus responds to this accusation the way he does instead of by saying what he actually intended--have you ever been accused of the worst thing? Something that is so antithetical to your character that you feel like the person accusing you of it has never interacted with you? How could you have given this person the idea that you would ever, in a million years ever, consider doing what theyāve just accused you of?
Well, you see, that confusion? That disorientation? The scrambling to find any common ground to argue on and finding that you have no footing because you donāt even know what to expect--whatās real and what youāve made up? Leaving you floundering to counter a point in a way that at least connects to their reality?
Thatās another abuse tactic. And itās called gaslighting.
Gaslighting
āNarcissistic mental abusers lie about the past, making their victim doubt her memory, perception, and sanity. They claim and give evidence of her past wrong behavior further causing doubt. She might even begin to question what she said a minute ago.ā (ā11 Signs of Gaslighting in a Relationshipā by Stephanie Sarkis Ph.D.)
I have more experience with gaslighting than literally any other form of abuse, to the point that I still struggle to believe that my memory isnāt just faulty, that Iām not just overreacting, that these things really did happen, that Iām not the one making things up. Thatās why I extensively cite every point I make: I feel as though no one will trust me or my word, but maybe if I bring in enough data points--enough hard facts--itāll make up for the fact that Iām the one writing it.
Gaslighting seems so minor, and it is so hard to point to examples when youāre living in it. Even the extensive trauma I described above doesnāt hold a candle to the scars left by decades of gaslighting. I cannot overstate how deeply emotionally scarring it is, the way it can change the entire way you see the world, the way it makes trusting yourself and others almost impossible at times.
This is a hard section for me to write. Perhaps the hardest, in fact, and I say that despite the fact that writing the last section gave me flashback nightmares so intense I couldnāt sleep for three days. To get through the experience, Iām using the framework offered by the article linked in the above description and referencing other sections of this meta post. Any brevity in this section is a result not of a lack of evidence in canon but of an overabundance of my own trauma.
And with that disclaimer, letās dig in.
They deny they ever said something, even though you have proof.
āYou know they said they would do something; you know you heard it. But they out and out deny it. It makes you start questioning your realityāmaybe they never said that thing. And the more they do this, the more you question your reality and start accepting theirs.ā (ā11 Signs of Gaslighting in a Relationshipā by Stephanie Sarkis Ph.D.)
I would personally amend this to say that they deny they ever said or did something, even if you have proof. This can range quite a lot:
āMom, you said that youād already picked up the stuff for my school project, but I canāt find it anywhere. Where is it?ā
āYou never even told me you had a project! This is what happens when you leave everything to the last minute.ā
āBut I have your text message right here?ā
āLet me see that. No, no, thatās not what I meant at all, why would you think that was what I meant? Are you stupid?ā
Which was a pretty staple āmisunderstandingā in our house, but less frustrating than the times my motherās reaction to evidence was to say, āI swear to God that I never said that, and if Iām lying, may He strike me down where I stand!ā Which was, unfortunately, at least as common--more common, actually, when we were in public. And when God didnāt smite her, she gave us a smug smile and considered herself proven right.
As this escalated--gradually, over the course of my entire childhood--eventually she built to a moment so big and so obvious that I actually realized what she was doing. That it wasnāt forgetfulness. That it wasnāt a case of repeated misunderstandings. That she was reconstructing reality as it suited her, and I was powerless to stop her.
What moment could possibly have been jarring enough to open my eyes to that? I talked in the rage section about the night my mother knocked me to the ground and hauled me up by my hair. What I didnāt tell you is that after she dropped me back to the floor again, I looked up at her and, still sobbing, asked her why sheād hit me in the head with her address book.
āI didnāt,ā she said, still towering over me as I lay curled on the floor. āI would never.ā
āThen--ā Maybe it was her hand, I thought. Maybe I was confused. I felt so disoriented and terrified and I didnāt understand what was happening. āThen why did you pull my hair?ā
āI didnāt,ā and she looked angry enough to do it all over again. āIt must have gotten caught in the zipper.ā
The zipper, of course, being on the address book sheād just denied smacking me with.
When I tried to point out this logical flaw, she redirected--and then stormed out of the house, blaming me for the fact that she needed to abandon us. Even though she came home a few hours later, the guilt worked--and I was too afraid to bring up the incident ever again.
And hereās where Iāll be frank--I said that that incident opened my eyes. And it did--but not that night. That night, I was terrified Iād imagined the whole thing. I had no evidence. Sheād hit me, but it hadnāt left a mark. Sheād pulled me up by the hair to bellow in my face, but I couldnāt even remember what sheād said.
If my siblings hadnāt been there to question her with me--to reaffirm it had actually happened--to be honest? I might to this day believe it was a nightmare. That sheād never actually laid a hand on me. And thatās what long-term, slow-build gaslighting does.
So--a few small denials, a pointed redirection whenever holes get poked at, all of that seems trivial in comparison, Iām sure. But it builds. It has to start small if the abuser hopes to normalize it. Because, at first? You question them. You start hoarding evidence. But if it goes on long enough? You start to question yourself. You start to question any evidence that you, personally, collected. Eventually youāre left questioning yourself so often that you stop questioning them.
Which is why even minor instances of gaslighting--if theyāre part of an abusive pattern--should be noted as soon as possible.
In this case, Megatron asserts heās been saying something when Rodimus has proof that he hasnāt even been around to say it. He says it both to belittle Rodimus and to set up a reality where heās been dutifully doing his job instead of secretly doing prep work for the ultimate supervillain device in his habsuite (Iām talking, of course, about the antimatter he spends months channeling, almost certainly in violation of his parole).
Before you doubt Rodimus--and I wouldnāt be surprised if you did, because another goal of gaslighting is to make others doubt the perception of the victim--Iāll point out that Ultra Magnus also comments on Megatron hiding himself away.
So Megatron was lying to begin with--he hasnāt been saying that for weeks. He hasnāt been in a position to say anything to Rodimus for weeks. And when called out on it, he neither apologizes for the lie nor even allows time to address the fact that he did so. Instead, he picks something we know to be a sore point--and therefore a good distraction.
Taking stock, not sulking. Because, as Rodimus clearly remembers:
And from the way Rodimus reacts? Especially given my own experiences? I would guess that this wasnāt the only time Megatron said it--just the only time caught on camera, so to speak.
Also, yes--in the next panel, Megatron claims that heās been working, something that both Ultra Magnus and Rodimus have both confirmed isnāt true. The truth is that heās channeling antimatter for his own purposes--regardless of whether he eventually uses them to benefit the others, with no one aware heās setting this up, he has no oversight.
They tell blatant lies.
āYou know it's an outright lie. Yet they are telling you this lie with a straight face. Why are they so blatant? Because they're setting up a precedent. Once they tell you a huge lie, you're not sure if anything they say is true. Keeping you unsteady and off-kilter is the goal.ā (ā11 Signs of Gaslighting in a Relationshipā by Stephanie Sarkis Ph.D.)
These lies, in my experience, can range from nearly inconsequential to the extreme. My mother would routinely tell me that I hadnāt said something that my siblings later confirmed I said, but that could be dismissed as forgetfulness or poor hearing. She would also tell me that Iād promised to do something when weād never discussed the matter in the first place, then tell me that I was the one forgetting. That was a little harder to handle--my siblings didnāt listen to every conversation between me and Mom, so I had no one to back me up. Itās much more difficult to prove you never discussed something than to prove that you did.
But, like I said--minor. Hard to prove or disprove. These tiny lies make it hard to trust reality and harder to trust your memory or judgment. These are also almost impossible to point to when discussing abuse with those who have never experienced it, because they look like misunderstandings at worst. Itās insidious and frustrating and only when you get to a big lie--the kind you build up to over years (or after more than twenty issues)--that you can point to it and say, āSee? I have proof. I can prove this time it isnāt true!ā
Megatron is claiming--genuinely daring to claim--that he was the one to first suggest stopping to help people along the way. When heās been complaining about Rodimusā so-called āside-questsā since day one. In season one alone, we saw them stop on the DJD homeworld so Ratchet could help cure a plague, Temptoria to rescue prisoners being used as batteries, and, eventually, the Big Hero moment when Tailgate uses a semicolon to save them all.
Except something that nobody seems to talk about in season two--as far as Iāve found, at least--is the fact that Rodimus is actually the one who saved all the constructed cold mechs with the help of Perceptor. Tailgate shutting off the suggestion beam and shutting down the Legislators was also critical to the operationās success, of course, and Iām hardly going to say that Tailgate doesnāt deserve his due credit, but Rodimus was also fully ready to die for a universe of strangers.
I covered this above when talking about how Megatron called him lazy, but letās pull in the panels for comparisonās sake.
Here we see Rodimus getting hooked up without a single panel of hesitation. As soon as they were ready to wire him in, he went.
He asks if itāll kill him and has no qualms when heās given a decided maybe.
And when he does save the CC mechs, you would expect, wouldnāt you, that he would never let anyone else forget it. After all, everyone (especially Megatron) insists heās a self-centered jerk. But he lets Tailgate take full credit, and the only mention of Rodimusā role in the proceedings after the fact comes when Optimus gets angry at him for destroying the Matrix.
Meanwhile Megatron drags his feet for five pages as the foam gets progressively worse and more dangerous, hoping theyāll find Brainstormās shrink ray so that someone else can go in his place.
But it was Megatron--who stays on the ship, who sends mechs to do battle but spares himself from the dirty work that would strip him of his self-righteous high horse--who first had the idea to help people. Right. One hundred percent his idea, and Rodimus should have told him they were saving organics so he could leave them to die.
Itās a lie. Itās a big enough lie that anyone could point to it and objectively prove that itās not true. But Megatron says it, and Rodimus placates him instead of fighting him on it. Heās just happy that lives are getting saved; he doesnāt try to take any of the credit.
I find it unpleasantly relatable that Rodimusā first reaction is no longer to correct Megatron, as he once did--in fact, as he did in the last example where we caught Megatron out in an obvious lie--but instead to offer him something to calm him down. Something to mitigate fallout. Something I, myself, have done countless times.
Their actions do not match their words.
āWhen dealing with a person or entity that gaslights, look at what they are doing rather than what they are saying. What they are saying means nothing; it is just talk. What they are doing is the issue.ā (ā11 Signs of Gaslighting in a Relationshipā by Stephanie Sarkis Ph.D.)
I want to write a separate meta post about Megatronās bullshit redemption arc because I donāt want my opinions on that to distract from the primary point Iām trying to make with this meta. However, it also fits this point to an almost ludicrous degree.
Rather than break down Megatronās entire character arc, Iāll focus on a few relevant points and save the rest for another post.
What Megatron says: āI am on this quest to make amends by finding a new world for our people after destroying our original planet.ā
What Megatron does: never apologizes to the people he wronged using his own words, takes control of a privately owned neutral vessel with the help of a mech who holds no democratically appointed position nor has any kind of oversight, deliberately sends them three jumps off course to the necroplanet for the express purpose of derailing the quest.
What Megatron says: āIāve renounced violence.ā
What Megatron does: continues to send others into battles heās not willing to fight, refuses to act even when it means that his crew will likely suffer casualties, orders acts of violence from behind the protective distance of a screen.
What Megatron says: āItās not about me! I am taking a vow of pacifism because, if I were to pick up a weapon again, I would be unstoppable.ā
What Megatron does: continues to reach for the dark matter that would make him unstoppable (even at the cost of shirking his duties--note that he missed Brainstormās trial), continues to risk the lives of others--apparently, by this logic, for their own good.
I could go into greater depth--I hope that someday I will get to tear this particular topic open--but, for now, Iāll leave it at this. What Megatron says can be very pretty, particularly if you ignore the overblown narcissism hidden in the message, but in practice itās functionally worthless. He does virtually nothing to actually advance the honorable goals heās espousing--only enough to make himself look good and noble.
This is something my mother and ex excel at. My mother can talk anyone into believing sheās a good and loving person who gives everything she has for us kids, tailoring how she frames her beliefs to most please whoever her audience is. Growing up, I heard a lot about how lucky I was to have such a loving and wonderful mom. My mom has even been able to talk me in circles--āI only threatened you with a pray-away-the-gay camp because I wanted you to know you had other options! I didnāt want you to be bullied, so I had no choice but to completely isolate you from your DFAB friends any time your sexual orientation came up!ā
Only, uh, of course Iām not framing that the way she did. Thatās just what all the pretty talk amounted to. I only picked it apart years after moving out of the house.
Actions speak louder than words--because in situations with this brand of abuse, words are just tools to further the abuse, not tools for honest communication. With gaslighting, especially, words are meant to confuse.
They know confusion weakens people.
āGaslighters know that people like having a sense of stability and normalcy. Their goal is to uproot this and make you constantly question everything. And humans' natural tendency is to look to the person or entity that will help you feel more stableāand that happens to be the gaslighter.ā (ā11 Signs of Gaslighting in a Relationshipā by Stephanie Sarkis Ph.D.)
Gaslighting has profound effects over time. In āIdentifying Victims of Narcissistic Abuseā on Psych Central, the provided list offers some idea of the scope of the damage that victims endure.
What I find most interesting about that list in the context of this meta post, though, is that it increasingly describes Rodimus as season two of MTMTE and then Lost Light each progress. From second guessing and increasing difficulty concentrating and making decisions to being highly strung and irritable to fear responses when Megatron says his name, this all actually adds up to a potentially realistic picture of how trauma can affect someone.
Itās not pretty. In fact, it can leave people looking and feeling unstable, which adds further fuel to the gaslighting fire.
I canāt say for sure whether JRo intends Rodimusā increasingly erratic (and, at times, desperate and out of character) behavior to be read as a response to this prolonged abuse. I hope he does--it makes more sense to me than the alternatives.
Especially since this particular article on gaslighting goes on to cover many of the points Iāve already addressed in this meta, which I think hammers home their severity.
They use what is near and dear to you as ammunition.
āThey know how important your kids are to you, and they know how important your identity is to you. So those may be one of the first things they attack. If you have kids, they tell you that you should not have had those children. They will tell you'd be a worthy person if only you didn't have a long list of negative traits. They attack the foundation of your being.ā (ā11 Signs of Gaslighting in a Relationshipā by Stephanie Sarkis Ph.D.)
I could rehash this point--but Iāve already spent several thousand words on it. From mocking the Rod Pod to tearing down Rodimusā identity as a leader and a hero to rattling off reason after reason why heās worthless, the entire degradation section could fit under this bullet point.
They wear you down over time.
āThis is one of the insidious things about gaslightingāit is done gradually, over time. A lie here, a lie there, a snide comment every so often...and then it starts ramping up. Even the brightest, most self-aware people can be sucked into gaslightingāit is that effective. It's the "frog in the frying pan" analogy: The heat is turned up slowly, so the frog never realizes what's happening to it.ā (ā11 Signs of Gaslighting in a Relationshipā by Stephanie Sarkis Ph.D.)
Once again, a point I covered in previous sections. Abuse builds up bit by bit, allowing the abuser to skate by without being called out. What would have looked like a vicious and unfair tirade at the beginning of the abuse--uncalled for and baseless--eventually looks like a righteous ādressing downā of a petulant child.
They tell you or others that you are crazy.
āThis is one of the most effective tools of the gaslighter, because it's dismissive. The gaslighter knows if they question your sanity, people will not believe you when you tell them the gaslighter is abusive or out-of-control. It's a master technique.ā (ā11 Signs of Gaslighting in a Relationshipā by Stephanie Sarkis Ph.D.)
This is the reason I homed in on that particular choice of words by Megatron in the degradation section. It seems like itās no big deal--all varieties of this abuse seem like theyāre no big deal. Until they build and build and suddenly everyone believes--both in the comic and in the fandom--that Rodimus deserves the treatment he receives at Megatronās hands and should not be trusted with any serious task. Everyone immediately believes the worst of him in every situation.
They try to align people against you.
āGaslighters are masters at manipulating and finding the people they know will stand by them no matter whatāand they use these people against you. They will make comments such as, "This person knows that you're not right," or "This person knows you're useless too." Keep in mind it does not mean that these people actually said these things. A gaslighter is a constant liar. When the gaslighter uses this tactic it makes you feel like you don't know who to trust or turn toāand that leads you right back to the gaslighter. And that's exactly what they want: Isolation gives them more control.ā (ā11 Signs of Gaslighting in a Relationshipā by Stephanie Sarkis Ph.D.)
And here we have the final critical point I covered above--the result of all the dismissive comments, the intention behind the isolation. No one trusts Rodimusā judgment. No one trusts Rodimus to even have good intentions anymore.
Itās a personal hell for someone as extroverted as Rodimus--and it could all end if he ceded power to Megatron. And wouldnāt that be easier?
They throw in positive reinforcement to confuse you.
āThis person or entity that is cutting you down, telling you that you don't have value, is now praising you for something you did. This adds an additional sense of uneasiness. You think, "Well maybe they aren't so bad." Yes, they are. This is a calculated attempt to keep you off-kilterāand again, to question your reality. Also look at what you were praised for; it is probably something that served the gaslighter.ā (ā11 Signs of Gaslighting in a Relationshipā by Stephanie Sarkis Ph.D.)
This seems counterintuitive, doesnāt it? If youāre spending months or years breaking someone down, why would you ever throw in a compliment?
The thing is, this particular brand of abuse--this variety of manipulation--makes the victim especially susceptible to praise as a weapon. When starved of praise, itās natural to crave it. And in two rereads of season 2? I found exactly one instance of someone praising Rodimus. In issue 43, Rodimus says that Swerve called him the best dancer heād ever seen. Other than that? Nothing. I reread twice specifically looking for positive comments about Rodimus, and there was absolutely nothing for him.
I was lucky enough to have friends who told me that I was worth something even when I was being abused. And even then, I craved praise from my mother more than anyone--both because sheād conditioned me to look to her above all the others, and because she was the one who was the hardest to please.
Of course, when she did praise me, it was either performative--ālook what a good mother I amā--or it was to get me to do something that I desperately did not want to do. āYouāre such a good daughter, (name)--I know you actually do love us. Thatās why youāre looking forward to this three month trip (where youāll have no contact with any of your friends and no means of escape), right?ā
And I went. So help me, once she pulled out that card, I honestly believed I had no choice but to go. Every summer, I fell in line.
If Iād been as starved of praise as Rodimus had--if my mother had succeeded in fully isolating me as she so often tried to do--I donāt think I could have pushed back on any subject at all.
At the start of Lost Light, the issue summary indicates itās been five years since the ship first took off. Assuming half of that was during season two, thatās two and a half years--during which we only have evidence of a single, passing compliment. Especially for someone like Rodimus, thatās downright devastating.
And then Megatron drops this bomb during their most critical argument:
It works.
Rodimus stops pushing. Rodimus stops fighting him. Stops begging him to help them not die by standing with them instead of watching them fight from a screen, directing them in how to die. (Which he doesnāt do, by the way--he makes no contact with the group once they leave until he strides out onto the battlefield.)
This is the antithesis of everything Megatron has said for the last two-ish years. This is everything that Rodimus has wanted to hear.
Itās pure manipulation, of course--Megatron goes back to doubting Rodimusā leadership and judgment without a single pause. He doesnāt hear Rodimus out on the battlefield or on functionist Cybertron. If this compliment had been genuine? He would have.
But no. It was a means to an end, and it worked. Rodimus did exactly as Megatron wanted. As Megatron knew he would.
The final point the article on gaslighting brings up is one I want to address separately--projection and double standards.
Projection
āThey dump their issues onto their victim as if she were the one doing it. For instance, narcissistic mental abusers may accuse their spouse of lying when they have lied. Or they make her feel guilty when he is really guilty. This creates confusion.ā (āEight Mental Abuse Tactics Narcissists Use on Spousesā by Christine Hammond, MS, LMHC)
āThey are a drug user or a cheater, yet they are constantly accusing you of that. This is done so often that you start trying to defend yourself, and are distracted from the gaslighter's own behavior.ā (ā11 Signs of Gaslighting in a Relationshipā by Stephanie Sarkis Ph.D.)
Megatron has claimed--first to Optimus and later to everyone who would listen--that he would find success where Rodimus found failure. It was part of his sales pitch to avoid imprisonment until his retrial.
So he said then, when they had no map and their only plan was to track down Thunderclash, who was having visions to guide him toward Cyberutopia. And, once theyād found him, the map heād carved was destroyed in the fight with the personality ticks, leaving them rudderless once again.
Or so it seemed.
Up until this point, Megatron has disapproved of Rodimus taking supposedly pointless sidequests. However, as soon as Rodimus produces a hand-carved map to Cyberutopia, he changes his tune.
Rodimus has just very reasonably expressed that Cyberutopia is in the opposite direction and given his position as co-captain: they need to stay on task and find the Knights. Here, Megatron overrides him without even acknowledging that, technically speaking, he doesnāt have veto power. Of course he gets the final say even if they share the same rank. Why shouldnāt he? Co-captain is a position made up for Rodimusā ego; if Megatron decides that itās time for a literally pointless sidequest, then itās time to start getting the quantum engine jumping.
He looks so smug as Rodimus arches an optic ridge in the background. No one questions Megatronās authority to make the executive override here, though, including Ultra Magnus, who would be the one in the best position to point out that the captains share a rank and Megatron canāt just arbitrarily ignore the chain of command. Ultra Magnus is also probably the closest thing Rodimus has to a friend on the ship, and he still doesnāt speak in Rodimusā support here.
Even though, by the terms of the quest and Megatronās parole? Rodimus is the one clearly in the right.
Megatron has been accusing Rodimus of shirking responsibility, of laziness, and at one point of not having the steel to face his own death (in the form of his corpse). And yet, when they can finally actually get on the right path--when Rodimus has hand-delivered a map--his first action is specifically to derail the quest.
And for what possible reason?
Because of character flaws heās been accusing Rodimus of since day one.
Of not facing his death quickly enough.
Of not even being able to start the quest--when, of the two of them, Megatron is the one who sent them deliberately off course as soon as he could.
Of vanishing when work needs to be done.
This is all par for the course with projection. It can look coincidental; it can even on occasion look well-intentioned. But it ultimately comes from a self-centered place where the one doing the projection can have a few possible motives.
Self-Centered Motive 1: Being unable to conceive of motives separate from those they would have.
Self-Centered Motive 2: Being unable to conceive of being wrong about someoneās internal motivations--or, indeed, about any assessment they make.
Self-Centered Motive 3: Deliberately using the projection to cover for oneās own behavior. (This isnāt necessarily indicative of shame or guilt; it can be done to draw attention away from behavior they believe they will face repercussions for when they would like to continue perpetrating said behavior.)
Self-Centered Motive 4: Deliberately using the project to confuse and disorient an abuse victim, putting them on the defensive. (After all, āNo, you,ā is an argument that could be regurgitated by a āpetulantā two-year-old and therefore easy to dismiss, particularly when you habitually tell others that your victim is just childish and overly sensitive.)
The first and second motives are unlikely to be the case for Megatron, who is a master-class strategist used to dealing with schemers. He wouldnāt be able to remain several steps ahead if he was unable to read intentions behind other peopleās choices. He also wouldnāt have lasted particularly long as leader of the Decepticons if he couldnāt infer the motivations of others.
Meanwhile, motives three and four would serve him extremely well, particularly in this situation. If he spends sixteen issues convincing the crew that Rodimus is the irresponsible one holding back the quest, if Rodimus tries to counter by saying, āBut youāre the one trying to keep us off course!ā--well. Can you imagine anyone taking him seriously?
Oh wait. You donāt have to--they had that argument in Lost Light #4.
And, as Megatron knew would happen, even Minimus Ambus believed his lie. No one--no one at all--believed Rodimus or took his side.
Great bit of misdirection, isnāt it? It also has the benefit of leaving Rodimus doubting himself--questioning whether he actually is working hard enough. Thatās the gaslighting aspect of the technique; it destabilizes your reality and makes it harder to question what your abuser says about you or asks of you. Because if you and you alone think that something is true? Peer pressure is likelier to silence you.
It wonāt always--the Asch conformity experiments are an interesting place to begin for further research, if youāre interested--but in those experiments, even though it was clearly objective reality being described, only one in four participants consistently fought majority opinion. When itās something more nebulous--personality traits, personal failings--it seems likely to be a little harder to fight.
And when youāre already being conditioned not to fight this particular person (with bouts of rage and the other abuse techniques Iāve described here), it can be hard to convince yourself that it would be worth fighting in the first place.
Mix this with Rodimusā already present self-worth and guilt issues? And itās frankly stunning to me that he contradicts Megatron as often as he actually does. I know that I didnāt have it in me that often--itās almost unspeakably exhausting to have this kind of fight, particularly when you have no one on your side and no hard evidence to point to.
This is still relatively early into the abuse, admittedly--six months after the trial. But Rodimus is still trying to assert his own reality in the face of Megatron projecting.
And he is projecting. Need proof? Ask Ravage an hour or two later in this arc:
Heās been sitting in his room for six months, the same as Rodimus. But to distract others from that fact, he loudly accuses Rodimus of it--publicly, purposefully. āI ātake stock.ā You sulk. Youāre sulking now.ā
As the second blurb says, it puts Rodimus in a position where he must defend himself against the accusations, distracting from the fact that Megatron is also doing this.
And it works: Rodimus goes on the defensive, and no one questions the narrative that Megatron is setting up.
This narrative allows Megatron to twist situations (and facts) to suit himself with relative impunity.
Twisting
āWhen narcissistic spouses are confronted, they will twist it around to blame their victims for their actions. They will not accept responsibility for their behavior and insist that their victim apologize to them.ā (āEight Mental Abuse Tactics Narcissists Use on Spousesā by Christine Hammond, MS, LMHC)
Megatron avoids apologizing like the plague. He apologizes exactly once in the series--and then leaves without trying to get the injured party to the medical bay or calling a medic, which makes it more than a bit hollow. Beyond that? He never apologizes for his actions during the war--for Grindcore, for setting up the DJD, etc--and he also never apologizes for things like decking Perceptor and nearly sending him through a computer screen. He certainly never apologizes for his behavior toward Rodimus.
Instead, he twists the situation so that heās justified in his awful behavior or so that the blame falls on someone else. He does this, too, when something threatens the narrative heās been building or Rodimus ādisobeysā him. For example, when Rodimus overrides his condescending hush command that Megatron had no place issuing...
Rodimus is offering a potential counter-strategy that Megatron hasnāt approved: evacuation and escape. Itās something they discussed while Megatron met the ātroopsā instead of coming to the briefing:
A solution Rodimus brought up at the time, using the same language he describes the teleporter with above:
So heās trying to work out, it seems, whether thereās a possibility of rescuing the mechs already teleported away--and whether thereās a chance they could get all of these civilians to safety.
I discussed this possibility in rage, but Iād like to look at a different panel for the lead-up to that, where Megatron twists the narrative:
See how he turns his controlling and dismissive behavior (āHush, not now.ā) into an attack that invents a sinister motive Rodimus is clearly supposed to apologize for? This being despite the fact that all Rodimus asked about was teleporters--something that would be absolutely vital in evacuating a civilian population off-planet.
Itās a successful twisting of the situation--successful enough that even I bought it on my first read-through. Despite everything, despite all logic and circumstance and evidence, Megatron convinced even me that his narrative was the right one.
But when I read again? It was groundless. Megatron describes Rodimus as being obsessed; if heās referring to the paint job, then Drift pointed out it lends itself to multiple interpretations--including mourning. Other than that, all Rodimus has done is organize a plan to get them home. Nothing about his behavior reads as obsessive to me.
But letās stick to these panels and break it down:
Rodimus attempts to participate in the conversation. Considering that he and Rodimus share a rank and the group is currently planning what to do, itās perfectly appropriate for Rodimus to try to pitch in, especially since he was the one at the briefing while Megatron met the ātroopsā in another area. He knows more about the situation than Megatron in some ways, and heās trying to use that information to help.
But Megatron gets visibly angry and tries to shut the attempt down. Based on his behavior through the series as well as my own experiences, I think I can guess why.
Rodimus ādisobeyedā him, which undermines the vision Megatron has of himself as the ārealā captain. The image heās been trying to sell the crew. If he can spin this as Rodimus being childish, he can salvage the situation and maintain his narrative. Scolding him like a child sets that up.
Itās technically also possible that heās somehow forgetting Rodimusā experiences with Nyon and nonstop heroism despite being present for both, although that seems like an awfully large and uncharitable lapse on his part.
This implies to me that this isn't the first time Megatron has dismissed Rodimus like this--but before Rodimus can call him out further, Megatron twists the narrative, and now it's not about teleporters or exit strategies. It's a personal attack on Rodimus.
This comes, frankly, out of nowhere. It's an unprovoked attack against someone who shares his rank and is trying to contribute to the planning process--you know, trying to do his job.
Here's the thing. I'm familiar with these derailing types of attacks--where anything I do can get twisted and turned into something that requires an apology when I'm (a) trying to help, (b) doing my job, and (c) trying to do it respectfully but also efficiently due to time crunches. And, like Rodimus, I've been baited into shouting back at my abusers.
It's a win-win for them. Sure, they derailed first--they shouted first--but since I fought back, it can't be abuse. Since I got distracted from the point I wanted to make, I proved them right. I'm too sensitive. I deserve to be ātaken to taskā or āput in my placeā or whatever euphemism you care to use. Because I stop looking like a crying victim on the floor, it stops counting as abuse.
If you think I'm exaggerating, I can assure you I'm not. Read any comment thread about abuse or assault and see how long it takes for people to find reasons why this person wasn't really a victim. Why they deserved it.
I should have talked above--under almost every section--about my abusive ex-boyfriend. Really, it's painful how much is relevant. But I haven't, because⦠Fuck me, this is the sixth complete rewrite of this section, and I'm still tearing up. I haven't, and it's because experience has convinced me that no one will take my side because I wasn't a good enough victim.
I'll keep it simple and relevant--just a single example that I feel parallels the above scene. It happened within a week of when my mom hit me; I was 15. My ex was failing a writing class, and he showed me his homework. I thought he was asking for feedback, since, y'know, he was failing. But I only got as far as saying he'd misused a comma before he told me to shut up.
I say he told me. That sounds so mild. We were sitting near the front of the school bus together; I was trapped between him and the window. He had eight inches and fifty pounds on me, and he used it to loom over me like Megatron continually looms over Rodimus. I say he told me to shut up; he got in my face and screamed it in front of a bus full of our peers.
He then proceeded to scream insults at me until he was red in the face. I wasn't qualified to judge his commas, I was an idiot, on and on. He had a bad habit of yelling at me in 1337-sp34k--yes, out loud--because it made him feel intelligent when I couldn't understand it. To be honest, I think that parallels with Megatronās consistent condescending use of ābig wordsā--the point of communication is to communicate, not to feel smart about our superior vocabulary.
Like Megatron, he would get loud and condescending and demeaning and use speech I couldn't understand to prove that I wasn't as smart as he was. Like Megatron, he would loom over me, using his height and bulk to intimidate me when I started getting āuppityā or otherwise ticked him off. Like Megatron, he mostly did this when we had an audience--it was other types of abuse he perpetrated in private.
And, like Rodimus, sometimes I backed down--but sometimes I shouted back.
Not often. Usually I kept it to a few incredulous statements. But there were times when he said something so shocking, so untrue, I had to defend myself--like Rodimus does in this scene. And--once again, like Rodimus--I got so āhet upā that I would lose my point, forget my words, and find it impossible to actually figure out how to fight his points. Partly because they were so groundless it felt like there was no evidence I could pull to counter them.
I told my sister about it, once. And she said that since I yelled back sometimes, I deserved it.
She wasn't the only one to say that, but it hurt the most coming from her. And it hurts again when I read posts about Megatron and Rodimus where people talk about how great it is that Megatron finally put Rodimus in his place, how much Rodimus deserved to be screamed at. It's just fiction, true, but in the back of my mind, I always think, āIf I told you that this happened to me, would you say I deserved it, too?ā
Because I've seen very little recognition of the fact that victims do sometimes fight back. They often pay for it, but when you're driven into a corner you don't lie down and take it every time.
No one looks like a Hollywood victim all the time--crying and āweakā and only staying because of fear. Anyone of any personality type can be abused. And abusers are experts at seeming like good, upstanding people; they need to be able to build a narrative that casts them as the hero or anti-hero. You need to see a whole pattern to recognize them for what they are--and they're invested in hiding that pattern by any means necessary so they won't lose that control, that power over both their current victim and other future victims.
Some abusers apologize going into the honeymoon phase of the abuse cycle as part of perpetuating that narrative. Others avoid taking blame at any cost, refusing to take responsibility for their actions. Megatron makes excuses rather than apologies and never does the work to make amends; like my abusive ex, he thinks experiencing any guilt at all absolves him of the hard work of fixing things. It doesn't; feeling bad is meaningless. It accomplishes nothing. And excuses relieve that guilt--the false high of unearned absolution.
Do they make excuses for their behavior or tend to blame others or circumstances for their mistakes?
Itās not his fault, you see! This murder squad he personally trained massacred two hundred of his crew members (the theory at the time of this panel was a ānear futureā scenario, not parallel quantum shenanigans), but really, he knew this would happen the moment Optimus made him say sorry. These are natural consequences of making him do something he didnāt want to do.
Now, itās true that Megatron didnāt order them to do this, but immediately putting the blame on Optimus making him vocally renounce the cause he was already claiming heād renounced⦠When, yāknow, these are his hand-picked and hand-trained assassins who he used to terrify his troops into abject obedience to all Decepticon beliefs⦠Itās just mind-boggling to me.
To explain another way: he just entered a ship full of two hundred mutilated corpses, all but a few showing signs of extreme torture. And he makes it about him. And he does that while still trying to dodge all blame. Itās a natural consequence of him reading the speech Optimus wrote for him, but itās not because he trained a team of murderers in the art of violent murdering, no, that part has nothing to do with anything. They didnāt answer to him, he says, when heās the only one who has Tarnās comm number. When Tarn personally credits him with shaping him into the person he became.
The DJD are responsible for their own actions, certainly, but that doesnāt mean that Megatron isnāt responsible for giving them a list of traitors and turning them loose on his troops--and on innocent bystanders.
This would be a good opportunity for a sparkfelt apology. We could have seen Megatron mourn these dead and regret training the DJD and tell the survivors that heāll find a way to talk to the DJD and make sure this never happens again (something he could have done at any time--he does have Tarnās number, after all). We could have seen him start making reparations six months after saying heād changed.
Instead we see him give a self-righteous little speech about how heās totally blameless.
This may not be directed at Rodimus, but Rodimus numbers among the dead--he was the first corpse they found. And he cares not one bit that his living co-captain and second in command have vanished, with only gray and disfigured corpses to replace them. No, the most important thing in this situation is to twist the narrative and make sure everyone knows itās not his fault.
This is what happens when heās made to do things he doesnāt want to do. There are consequences; he doesnāt need to make reparations because the consequences are natural and right.
Living for millions of years with the DJD as real boogeymen who could appear and wreak this kind of devastation without warning if Megatron gave a single word? Itād be hard not to see those natural consequences as a threat.
Manipulation
āA favorite manipulation tactic is for the narcissist to make their spouse fear the worst, such as abandonment, infidelity, or rejection. Then they refute it and ask her for something she normally would reply with āNo.ā This is a control tactic to get her to agree to do something she wouldnāt.ā (āEight Mental Abuse Tactics Narcissists Use on Spousesā by Christine Hammond, MS, LMHC)
All of the above is manipulation, without question. But Iām including this as a separate bullet point because it allows me to address a particular tactic that doesnāt fit neatly under any of the other sections.
Do they continually have āboundary violationsā and disrespect your valid requests?
Megatron has no respect for Rodimusā personal space, particularly when heās being ādefiantā in some way. Paring away text to focus on body language, it becomes even more abundantly clear.
From the beginning of season two, he towers over Rodimus, jabbing a finger less than a handās breadth from his face.
When he wants to be obeyed, he physically gets in Rodimusā face--snarling and huge.
And as a new arc begins, heās once again looming and jabbing fingers in Rodimusā personal space.
If I listed every panel where Megatron was shown leaning physically over Rodimus, Iād be including almost every panel they share. And before anyone says itās because of Megatronās size, and he canāt help but loom--he doesnāt do it to other characters unless they, too, are āmisbehaving.ā Heās perfectly capable of keeping a straight back and relatively professional distance with most mechs, even when being threatened, even with extreme height differences:
Straight back, no leaning over Tailgate, no snarl. Itās the same with other crew members. With Rodimus, however, his nonverbal cues are constantly screaming dominance fight.
Now, Iām a small person, so maybe Iām especially sensitive to this--Iām just barely five feet tall and not muscular in the slightest. When much-bigger people get in my space the way Megatron gets in Rodimusā space, itās terrifying. Respectful people donāt do those things, and you canāt convince me that itās merely a product of his size. My boyfriend of almost ten years now is eleven inches taller than I am, and heās never once loomed over me or used his size to intimidate me.
I might be willing to call it thoughtless rather than an abuse tactic, since it is possible to loom unintentionally--except he singles Rodimus out for this treatment.
And it works.
After the first example above, Rodimus is visibly cowed while Megatron practically presses himself against his back:
Note the lowered spoilers on Rodimusā back, the lowered head, the expression on his face.
And after the second panel, he literally transforms and obeys Megatron without further question.
Constant physical intimidation has unfortunate effects on a person, particularly when used alongside verbal and emotional abuse tactics like the ones Iāve been describing. This is a documented aspect of physical abuse--of which physical intimidation is a part--but I also know it intimately.
My abusive ex boyfriend never hit me, but he used physical intimidation tactics like these on a daily basis. He sat between me and the aisle on the bus and got in my face and snarled at the least provocation, but he also just--loomed. He was always--always--in my bubble, to the point that sometimes my friends would literally push him out of it. He would stand behind me like that, and when I have nightmares I can still feel his hard-on pressed against my lower back, his hands on on my hips or shoulders to keep me where he wanted me, the heat of his breath on me as he curled above me, around me, cutting off every exit until he was physically my entire world.
Which brings me to the panel that finally set me off enough to write the meta post Iād been mentally composing for over a year:
I feel sick when I look at this panel. When I look at the hand on his back and the way Megatron curls around him and the way the hand thatās always jabbing fingers in his face is caging him in. When I look at the way Rodimus is hugging himself, pulling in and away from Megatron--because in is his only escape route, because Megatron has cut off everything else. Verbally isolating him, then emotionally, then physically.
Rodimus doesnāt have any friends here to shove Megatron out of his bubble. Rodimus has the certainty that Megatron could be screaming at him (again), could be threatening him with hands in his face (that we can see are the size of Rodimusā torso), could actually be injuring him--which we havenāt seen, but, honestly? āWhenever you shout my name I expect to get shot,ā uh, isnāt a ringing endorsement of what might be happening behind closed doors, where most actual violence plays out.
Even if Megatron hasnāt hurt him--and I havenāt got enough proof to conclusively say one way or another--the threat is still there. As I said, my abusive ex never hit me. But I knew--every time he screamed, every time he got in my face--that he could. That he was capable of it.
He didnāt have to hit me. Like Rodimus, my defiance never lasted--without support, with too much fear, I decided that I needed to pick my battles. And, one by one, he pushed through my boundaries. Because if it wasnāt worth picking a battle over him stroking my inner thigh outside my shorts, was it worth fighting him on stroking the inside of my waistband? With that boundary demolished, was it really so unexpected--really worth challenging--when he went past the waistband?
After all, it was my fault he was so riled up. Iād done this to him. Didnāt I owe it to him to fix the problems Iād caused? But I guess that particular bit of nastiness comes from the next section--the victim card.
Victim Card
āWhen all else fails, the narcissist resorts to playing the victim card. This is designed to gain sympathy and further control behavior.ā (āEight Mental Abuse Tactics Narcissists Use on Spousesā by Christine Hammond, MS, LMHC)
At every point in Megatronās āredemptionā arc, he casts himself as a tragic figure. Poor Megatron, made to stand trial! Poor Megatron, asked to provide evidence to expedite the trial! (optional; he didn't consent to mnemosurgery and they immediately left) Poor Megatron, asked to read a speech renouncing the cause he already said he'd renounced! (optional; purely a get-out-of-jail-free card) Poor Megatron, surrounded by incompetence on this privately owned neutral ship he was given captaincy of in place of his prison stay! Poor Megatron, forced to drink āpoisonā! (optional; again, he made the choice himself) Poor Megatron, having to share the ship with the mech who owns it! Poor Megatron, faced with the knowledge that some people wish the war had never happened! Possibly even the knowledge of how many mechs he killed! What terrible knowledge.
Poor Megatron, indeed.
All of these situations are fair and reasonable for him to encounter. He's not a tragic figure for facing any of these things; in fact, the last two are hardly even about him. Billions died, and we're supposed to feel sorry for him surveying the field of flowers? For having to face the facts of what he did when he still doesn't face any negative repercussions for his choices?
This is entitlement, but it's also an abuse tactic. My ex used this trick to guilt me into roleplaying sexual situations I was really, really not comfortable with, while my mother used it to get me to do...well, in retrospect, basically anything she felt like I owed her.
Used on the wrong party, this tactic is just grating--case in point, Getaway and his mutineers. He specifically cited this overall strategy in his last call with the crew on the Necroplanet. But on someone who already has a guilt complex--someone who's easily manipulated by authority figures telling him it's his duty to do one thing or another, insisting nothing he does is enough and he owes more than he can give--the sort of person who carves into his hand the number of people who wanted him gone? Yeah, that's a different story.
Do they blame you for their problems or unhappiness?
Prior to this panel, Rodimus just informed Megatron that Brainstorm seemed to have jumped through time. Rodimus specifically gives him time to process the info, too.
He's beings downright nice about it.
And, yes, it's absolutely fine to need time to process or to freak about things not going according to plan. That's natural! I say this despite the fact that Megatron--a mech made of black holes--isn't exactly unfamiliar with weird science. In fact, one of the thirteen ores seeded by Shockwave had time properties, and they literally just met quantum doubles of their entire ship. I'm a little dubious about his claims of a minor breakdown here, but the freak-out itself isn't the real problem here.
What's not fine is taking that as an excuse to once again lean in over Rodimus (note the angle Megatron shifts to once he starts yelling), jab a finger in his face, and personally insult him. What's he done to warrant the āYou are ridiculousā line and accusatory tone, other than tell Megatron something he didn't want to hear? How does keeping him briefed and patiently waiting for him to process lead to the conclusion that Rodimus is his own, personal punishment?
Well, keeping a level head while publicly briefing Megatron means undermining some of that narrative heās so carefully constructing, where Rodimus is rash and rude and impulsive and irresponsible. Unsuited to command. Because in this scene? Rodimus looks and acts like a capable and considerate commander.
There's also the fact that Rodimus is treating him like a peer rather than a superior here.
Now, that might not be why Megatron lashes out. He might genuinely be disturbed by the idea of time travel and instinctively target his current favorite (emotional) punching bag. But I think it's telling that he immediately turns something going wrong into being Rodimusā fault when he's actually doing his job quite well in this scene, not to mention respecting Megatron as co-captain. It's also telling that he breaks out the same physical intimidation tactics I described in the last subsection the moment he gets agitated.
So why do I think this is an abuse tactic and not poorly-handled panic, aside from Megatron's extensive experience with various types of weird science? Because Rodimus doesn't try to contradict him. He doesn't fight the point or defend himself. And, sure, that could be a sign of maturity--but it can also be a sign that he's beginning to internalize Megatron's message, especially when looked at in the context of everything else I mentioned in this post.
In fact, letās cover his motivations and intentions a bit more directly.
INTENTIONALITY
Assessing whether abusive behavior is deliberate can be nearly impossible when youāre living in it. For example, I highly doubt that my mom is any kind of mastermind with an ultimate end goal of control over me. Iām not actually sure what she was thinking for any of that--she insists most of it never happened and has a different justification every time I ask about the parts she doesnāt deny (although she sometimes denies those, too, depending on her mood).
Even if Megatronās behavior wasnāt intentional, it would still be unacceptable, dangerous, and traumatic. But I do genuinely believe itās deliberate--partly because of the following scene:
This is coming from Ravage--a spy with extensive experience that goes all the way back to the day of the Senate. Heās seen a lot. And he makes a compelling argument:
Ravage points out numerous occasions where Megatron played the long game--planning ahead, setting up for what he might want someday as well as what he wants today. Reaching for the dark matter, delaying his trial with sidequests as soon as the opportunity presented itself--those, too, are examples of this.
So it stands to reason that all of this manipulation could serve the fairly straightforward goal of setting himself up to be sole captain of the Lost Light--or some other goal we havenāt yet worked out that requires tearing down Rodimusā reputation and isolating him from the rest of the crew.
IN CONCLUSION
Megatron is abusing Rodimus. Emotionally and verbally at the very least, but possibly other forms of abuse. Heās certainly threatening physical abuse with his nonverbal cues--and, by some definitions, is in fact perpetrating physical abuse by bodily intimidating Rodimus.
The evidence is overwhelming, and I think that this interpretation gives greater depth and meaning to JRoās characterizations of both Rodimus and Megatron. Through this lens, Rodimusā increasingly erratic and seemingly out-of-character behavior as the series progresses can be viewed as a response to gaslighting and other abuse. Meanwhile, for Megatron, this interpretation serves to connect his current behavior to his wartime behavior in a way that feels more in line with IDWās past version of him instead of a sudden and hollow change.
Ultimately, though, this interpretation is important to me as an abuse survivor. I don't fault those who want to write their own version of Megatron, but, if I'm being honest? I never again want to see another post insisting that Megatron can't be written as abusive. (and if you think this is vagueblogging about someone in particular, I swear it's not. I've seen multiple posts and tweets echoing this sentiment. This isn't some vague callout post; it's an alternative interpretation that runs counter to the dominant fandom narrative as I've encountered it.)
You can keep your interpretation of Megatron. He is a fictional character who has been written by dozens of different people in numerous canons. If you don't want to write about him as an abusive and manipulative jerk, by all means, don't. The only request I make is that you not condemn those who do.
Multiple interpretations of canon lead to more varied and interesting fan works. And I think that's good for everyone.
Additional Reading
In case you want to do further reading, here are some links to other articles I looked at while making this post. I may add to this if I find any others that feel relevant.
15 Types of Verbal Abuse in Relationships
10 Signs You Are in a Relationship with a Narcissist (first part in a series)