The Mind of Sauron: Control, Deception and Manipulation ( A meta )
Introduction: Why I Wrote This (aka Why I Spiraled into the Mind of a God with Control Issues)
Look. I didnât plan to spiral into a 7,000-word psychological breakdown of a millennia-old demigod who literally forged evil into jewelry. But here we are.
I spent a bit of time on it. I had to pick out the interviews and could have written so much more, but sometimes less is more. Anyway!
What inspired this? A toxic cosmic control freak. A crying god. A tear. A lie. A forge. A moment. A thousand manipulations. And the absolute audacity of Charlie Vickersâ performance and the showrunnersâ layered writing that screamed: he believes his own lies.
Iâve always found Sauron fascinating â not because heâs âsexy evilâ (though, letâs not lie, Annatar is stupidly hot), (or that he is my favourite character) but because heâs terrifyingly consistent in his need for order, control, and self-deception. Heâs not evil because he wants to burn the world. Heâs evil because he loves the world â conditionally. As long as it obeys.
This meta is my attempt to understand him. Not to redeem him (lol no), not trying to pacify Sauron but to peel back the layers of arrogance, delusion, manipulation, and deep-rooted trauma. To trace how a being born of AulĂŤâs light ends up crying over a dead smith he just murdered, then walks away like nothing happened. (moron)
Itâs also about how no one â not Celebrimbor, not Galadriel, not even Sauron himself â is immune to the trap he lays.
So buckle in. Weâre going deep. Into denial. Into power. Into darkness. Into that moment he said, âYouâre going to give it to me.â Because this isnât just about villains. This is about the villain who believed he was the hero.
And just to be clear:
Iâm not saying Sauron is some âemotionless dark void of doom who just vibes in Mordor.â
Quite the opposite. He feels. He hates.
He is angry, arrogant, obsessive, manipulative, wounded, brilliant, relentless â and yes, sometimes he even cries. (what a loser)
Sauron is not a flat villain. Heâs a canonically complex, terrifyingly consistent, three-dimensional character â and the show (for once) treats him like it.
This post is for everyone who looks at him and goes:
âWait. Heâs not just the bad guy..â (well actually he is)
I donât need people to like him.
I just need them to understand him.
LET GET IN:
I. The Self-Deceiver
One of the most psychologically compelling elements of The Rings of Power is the portrayal of Sauron not as an overtly malicious force, but as a deeply self-deceived being â someone who truly believes he is saving the world. His evil is not born of hatred for Arda, but from a warped, twisted sense of love: a conditional love that demands obedience, perfection, and control.
âHeâs in denial, but thereâs probably a little element of him that realizes that. [âŚ] Thereâs an element of him that would have that self-awareness, that would be, âIâve gone down this rabbit hole now.â But as much as he realizes that, heâs trying to crush those feelings as he goes and advances forward.â
â Charlie Vickers
Sauronâs denial is not simply a facade for others â itâs a lie he tells himself. He is emotionally intelligent enough to deceive with precision, yet emotionally fractured enough to believe his own performance. He is not unaware of his fall, but he represses that awareness, knowing he cannot afford to pause and reflect. To do so would risk collapse. He marches deeper into tyranny, clinging to the idea that it is all necessary â that itâs still for a greater good.
âHe thinks Middle-earth could be beautiful â if everyone just listened to him.â
â Charlie Vickers
Therein lies the tragedy. His vision of peace is absolute order. His concept of healing is domination. His desire to âfixâ Middle-earth is rooted in a compulsion to remake the world in his own image â and he believes he has the right, even the duty, to do so.
âI think that thereâs that inherent side of him that itâs just like, âIâm going to control and heal and fix Middle-earth because itâs in my nature.ââ
â Charlie Vickers
This is not new. As the showrunners remind us, even Tolkien described Sauron as ânot evil in the beginning.â His desire for order, for structure, came from a real place â but it festered, darkened, calcified into tyranny. His denial is what shields him from recognizing that he has become the very thing he once sought to correct.
âNothing is evil in the beginning, even Sauron was not so.â
â J.R.R. Tolkien, quoted in the show and emphasized by the showrunners
By Season 2, this denial has begun to erode. He lashes out, loses control, and in moments of failure â like Celebrimborâs resistance or Galadrielâs rejection â we see the cracks in the mask. But even then, he doubles down.
âHe is falling deeper and deeper down the rabbit hole.â
â Charlie Vickers
He cannot stop. He cannot change. Not because heâs incapable, but because he believes that to change is to surrender â and surrender, to him, is the ultimate failure.
At the heart of Sauronâs denial lies something deeper: a near-divine perfectionism rooted in his origin as a Maia of AulĂŤ â the Vala of craft, logic, and structure. Sauron was not bred for chaos. He was born from the very impulse that seeks symmetry in the world. And that instinct has metastasized into an obsession.
After all he was a pupil of AulĂŤ. His nature is to build and refine and create order. But eventually, it becomes: âIf itâs not perfect, it must be corrected. If it disobeys, it must be reshaped.â
This isnât just about power. Itâs about needing things â people, systems, entire civilizations â to align with his internal blueprint of harmony. Thatâs what makes his manipulation so dangerous: he genuinely believes heâs fixing a broken world, even as he breaks it further.
And in that way, he doesnât see himself as a tyrant. He sees himself as a craftsman⌠who simply uses people as raw material.
II. The Manipulator: Weaponizing Truth
Sauron doesnât conquer with brute force â at least not at first. His greatest weapon isnât a blade or a ring â itâs the truth, carefully tailored and strategically delivered. His manipulation isnât built on deception in the traditional sense. What makes him truly dangerous is that he tells the truth â just not all of it.
This is what the showrunners of The Rings of Power emphasize as central to their interpretation of Sauron:
âHe doesnât lie. He just tells the version of the truth that serves him best.â
â Patrick McKay
This philosophy is what allows him to infiltrate others so effectively. He listens â deeply. He identifies not just your weaknesses, but your wants. And then he becomes the answer to them. This is not manipulation in the crude sense of flattery or flimsiness. Itâs methodical. Clinical. Intimate.
âHe sees you completelyânot just who you are, but who you want to be. He can be the answer to all your wishes and all your problems.â
â J.D. Payne
This quote reveals the core of his strategy. He doesnât force himself into someoneâs trust â he makes them want to believe him. Whether itâs Galadrielâs grief, Celebrimborâs hunger for legacy, or the desperation of Men, Sauron studies his target until he knows exactly how to slip past their defenses.
We see this most clearly in his conversation with Galadriel in the Season 1 finale. He never denies who he is. Instead, he reframes it â âYouâre not seeing what Iâm offering.â Itâs not a lie. Itâs a recontextualization. And to someone emotionally vulnerable, it almost works.
âThe way you beat your enemies is to figure out what they need and figure out how to give it to them. Help them master their fear, and then you can master them.â
â Sauron (as Halbrand)
This line is more than a tactic â itâs his entire doctrine. He believes people are ruled by fear. And if he can offer them control over that fear â whether through power, guidance, or clarity â he earns their loyalty. Their trust. Their surrender.
Why Sauronâs Manipulation Feels So Intimate
What sets Sauron apart from other villains is the emotional precision of his tactics. He doesnât try to break people with cruelty â not at first. He breaks them with hope. With gentleness. With honesty.
He knows that the truth, when framed correctly, is far more persuasive than any lie.
âYou can tell someone the truth â and still keep them exactly where you want them.â
Thatâs why his conversations always feel layered. Even as Halbrand, every word he says carries a double meaning. Whether itâs âLooks can be deceiving,â or âIâm sorry about your brother,â the viewer is left wondering: is this genuine empathy, or is it another trap?
âIs he saying something because he believes it, or because heâs trying to get something? Or both?â
â J.D. Payne
And therein lies the horror â the answer is both.
In Season 2, Sauronâs manipulative tactics become more pronounced as he exploits the vulnerabilities of various characters. His interactions with Galadriel, Celebrimbor, and others showcase his ability to present himself as a benevolent figure, all while orchestrating events to his advantage.
âWe saw in season one that Galadriel⌠her pride and her PTSD were a crack that he could get into and manipulate her to get everything he wanted. Now heâs going to do that with everybody.â
â Patrick McKay
Sauronâs manipulation isnât just about achieving his goals; itâs about reshaping the very fabric of Middle-earth. By exploiting the cracks in societies and individuals, he aims to mold the world into his vision of order and perfection.
âWhat is going to be happening over the course of season two is, every single one of these societies and heroes that we set up in season one, are now facing serious cracks in the foundation that Sauron can exploit.â
â Patrick McKay
His manipulative prowess is further exemplified in his relationship with Celebrimbor for example. By presenting himself as a knowledgeable ally, Sauron gains Celebrimborâs trust, guiding him to forge the Rings of Power, instruments that ultimately serve Sauronâs desire for control.
âHeâs trying to manipulate him. Heâs trying to get Celebrimbor to do something.â
â Patrick McKay,
Sauronâs manipulation is a testament to his deep understanding of psychology and human (and elven) nature. He doesnât force his will upon others; he makes them believe itâs their own choice, their own desire, that leads them down the path he has laid out.
Sauron is a shapeshifter not just in form, but in meaning. Every line of dialogue is a crafted instrument, playing multiple melodies depending on who hears them. And thatâs what makes him so dangerous: he doesnât just deceive you â he lets you deceive yourself.
III. The Cosmic Connection: Sauron and Galadriel
The relationship between Sauron and Galadriel in The Rings of Power transcends traditional notions of good versus evil. Itâs a complex interplay of shared experiences, mutual recognition, and a profound, albeit unsettling, connection that binds them across time
The connection between Sauron and Galadriel in The Rings of Power is not a romantic entanglementâit is a clash of titanic beings, bound by power, purpose, and paradox. As showrunner Patrick McKay stated, their relationship explores âthe idea of a non-romantic, cosmic connection,â one that is âpregnant with possibilities.â They are equals only in the sense that they are both otherânot ordinary, not bound by mortal limits, and burdened by destinies too large to carry alone.
Morfydd Clark, who portrays Galadriel, acknowledges this unique bond:
âTheyâre both magical, powerful beings, and I think there is something lonely to existing in that kind of sphere that they both are in. But yeah, there is some sort of cosmic connection.â
â Morfydd Clark
This âcosmic connectionâ is not rooted in romance but in a shared understanding of power, isolation, and the burdens they carry. Charlie Vickers, who plays Sauron, elaborates on this psychic link:
âI think theyâre connected, if not by proximity then by their psyche. Theyâre higher beings so Iâm sure it runs deeper than being in the same place together.â
â Charlie Vickers
Yet, this connection becomes a battlefield. Vickers explains that the final fight between Sauron and Galadriel in Season 2 is nothing less than an attempted executionâstripped of illusion, full of wrath:
âHe starts off very economical with his movements and itâs effortless, in deflecting, and then he requires to give more and more to the fight, in order to try and kill her.â
â Charlie Vickers
Their interactions are marked by a tension that oscillates between mutual respect and ideological opposition. Sauronâs offer to Galadriel to rule beside him is not a gesture of equality but a manipulation, an attempt to bind her to his will. Galadrielâs rejection of this offer is a pivotal moment, asserting her autonomy and moral compass.
In that moment, Sauron abandons even the façade of alliance. There is no âwe.â There is no âpartnership.â The door to any form of union has been slammed shutâand he knows it.
The psychological impact of their connection is profound. Galadriel is haunted by her association with Sauron, grappling with the realization that she was deceived by someone she considered an ally. This internal conflict adds depth to her character, highlighting the complexities of trust, betrayal, and resilience. ďżź
In Season 2, their dynamic culminates in a climactic confrontation. Director Charlotte BrändstrĂśm drew inspiration from iconic duels, such as those in The Duelists and Zorro films, to choreograph their intense sword fight. The battle is not just physical but psychological, with Sauron employing shape-shifting tactics to destabilize Galadriel. BrändstrĂśm explained that Sauronâs shapeshifting during the fight was a response to feeling weakened after Galadriel managed to knock him down, prompting him to reassert his power and destabilize her. (mocking)
This confrontation underscores the fundamental opposition between them. Galadriel embodies the light, resisting Sauronâs darkness and manipulation. Their relationship is a manifestation of the eternal struggle between good and evil, with Galadriel emerging as Sauronâs primary adversary, reflecting Tolkienâs portrayal of their roles in the broader narrative. ďżź
Final Note: The Severing of the Cosmic Bond
If their connection once held a strange, terrible allureâsomething that could have become an alliance, a merging of oppositesâthen that possibility dies the moment Galadriel jumps.
Charlie Vickers describes that exact moment of disillusionment for Sauron:
âHeâs convinced in that moment that sheâs giving [him the ring] â he canât see any alternative because heâs so arrogant and thinks heâs the man, and sheâs giving him the ring, and heâs like, âYouâre going to give it to me, youâre going to give it to me.â And then she resists him and jumps off the cliff. Itâs just like he could not fathom that was possible. So I think heâs dealing with that, and also he knows sheâs not going to die.â
â Charlie Vickers, interview
This isnât just rejection. This is repudiation. Itâs Galadriel choosing death over himânot metaphorical, not political, but literal. She refuses him in the most final, unforgiving way imaginable. And that breaks something.
Morfydd Clark confirms that interpretation from Galadrielâs perspective:
âI think it was her severing the tie between them, and her also choosing that itâs better to be part of Middle-earth, kind of dead, than be alive by his side.â
â Morfydd Clark, interview
This is the collapse of everything Sauron builtâthe illusion, the potential union, the fantasy of control. And that is where the hatred solidifies. That is where Galadriel becomes, not just an obstacle, but the incarnation of defiance. The living proof that his order is not irresistible. That his will can be defied.
He does not love her. Not even like her at all. But respect her in a deep way.
He cannot understand her. But he will remember her.
Because in choosing to jump, Galadriel did what no one else dared:
She said no to a demigod and meant it.
And that is how a connection born of power becomes a war born of rejection and deep hate.
IV. The Craftsman â Celebrimbor and the Rings
Celebrimbor, stands as a pivotal figure in the forging of the Rings of Power. His collaboration with Sauron, under the guise of Annatar, marks a significant turning point in Middle-earthâs history.
Sauronâs manipulation of Celebrimbor is a masterclass in deception. Presenting himself as a benevolent figure, Sauron appeals to Celebrimborâs desire for knowledge and legacy. This relationship is not merely transactional but deeply psychological, with Sauron exploiting Celebrimborâs vulnerabilities.
âYou want to set (Celebrimbor) up so that heâs ready to receive what Annatar brings, as in heâs got to be at a particular stage of vulnerability or uncertainty to be a juicy bit of prey for the predator.â
â Charles Edwards
The forging of the Rings, particularly the Nine for Men and the Seven for Dwarves, is a testament to Sauronâs cunning. While the Elven rings were crafted without his direct influence, the others bear his mark, designed to ensnare and corrupt.
âThe rings that were created for Elves⌠were not influenced by Sauron⌠However, new rings that are now created in Celebrimborâs forge⌠are slowly poisoning the minds of the individuals who carry them.â
â JD Payne & Patrick McKay
Celebrimborâs tragic arc culminates in his realization of Sauronâs true identity and intentions. This revelation is not only a personal betrayal but also a catastrophic event for the Elves and Middle-earth at large.
âThe way that Celebrimbor fights back is great. Thereâs an episode towards the end, the way Celebrimbor starts to see what has been done to him.â
â Charles Edwards
The dynamic between Sauron and Celebrimbor serves as a cautionary tale about the perils of unchecked ambition and the seductive nature of power. Their relationship, built on manipulation and deceit, underscores the central themes of corruption and the loss of innocence in Tolkienâs legendarium.
In a poignant moment, after Sauron kills Celebrimbor, he sheds a tear. This act is not born out of remorse for Celebrimborâs death but rather a reflection of Sauronâs own internal conflict and recognition of his descent into darkness. As Charlie Vickers explains:
âI donât think he wanted to kill him in that moment, but he lost control, which is very Sauron⌠the tear (he cries) is probably more about his own reflection on himself, what he has become, and his history with Morgoth.â
â Charlie Vickers
This moment underscores the complexity of Sauronâs characterâa being torn between his desire for order and the destructive path he has chosen. The tear signifies a fleeting glimpse of self-awareness, a recognition of the cost of his actions, and the irreversible path he has embarked upon.
The Parallels: Celebrimbor and Galadriel â the Price of Wanting More
In the end, both Celebrimbor and Galadriel are not simply victims of deception â they are the perfect targets. Not because they are weak, but because they desire. Because they long for more.
Sauron doesnât dominate with brute force â not yet. He infiltrates through dreams.
Celebrimbor wants to craft something immortal. Something beyond even FĂŤanor. A creation that would outlast time.
Galadriel wants to end evil. Having her own realm in a way. To create peace. Her peace. Even if that peace demands conquest.
And Sauron? He offers both exactly what they long for.
To Celebrimbor, he whispers: âWith my help, you could craft the greatest work the world has ever known.â
To Galadriel, he promises: âTogether, we can make a realm of our own.â
He knows precisely where to press.
âThey could have done really great things together. Celebrimbor could have been an amazing tool, but he killed him. And I donât think he wanted to kill him in that moment, but he lost control, which is very Sauron.â
â Charlie Vickers
âHeâs convinced in that moment that sheâs giving [him the ring] â he canât see any alternative because heâs so arrogant⌠And then she resists him. He could not fathom that was possible.â
â Charlie Vickers
In both cases, his downfall begins not with brute defeat, but resistance. When Galadriel refuses. When Celebrimbor sees through the illusion.
But the true horror lies not only in what Sauron does â but in how easily he gets in.
He does not kick in the doors. He walks through them, invited.
No one is safe.
Not the wisest.
Not the proudest.
Not even the best.
Because Sauron doesnât corrupt the wicked â he seduces the noble.
Afterword: Yes, Iâm Still Thinking About Him. No, Iâm Not Okay.
So. If you made it this far: congratulations. You now know more about Sauronâs emotional damage, tactical manipulation skills, and god-tier self-denial than most of NĂşmenor ever did.
(And look how they turned out.)
Weâve cried with him (well, watched him cry and immediately questioned it), yelled at him through our screens, side-eyed him in Eregion, and maybe â just maybe â found ourselves whispering âokay but the Annatar aesthetic was kinda perfect.â
But letâs be serious for a hot second:
This was never about redeeming Sauron. Or feeling sorry for him. Because there is nothing to feel sorry for.
This was about understanding what makes him terrifying.
Not his power. Not his armies.
But his ability to walk into your city, your forge, your trauma â and offer you exactly what you didnât know you were desperate for.
He doesnât take control.
You give it to him.
Thatâs what makes him dangerous.
He doesnât want to be loved.
He wants to be right.
And if the world has to burn for that to happen â
well. Thatâs just unfortunate logistics.
So yeah. Iâm not okay.
I overanalyzed a god with a superiority complex, projection issues, and weaponized charisma.
I saw myself in him and then had to go sit in a field for three hours.
And Iâll probably do it again.
Because thatâs the thing about Sauron.
He gets in your head.
Even when he loses.
Especially when he loses.
Thanks for reading
PS:
If youâve made it to the end (first of all: youâre a champion), Iâd genuinely love to hear your thoughts!
Did something resonate with you? Do you disagree with something? Want to add your own spicy Sauron theory or just scream about Annatarâs hair with me?
My ask box is open, my reblogs are sacred, and my brain is permanently occupied by one manipulative Maia with boundary issues. Feel free to add things as well!
Letâs talk.



















