Keith and Kosmo (if Keith got Kosmo as a younger puppy). I actually made a decent looking puppy which I am happy about. Even though I havenât been practicing, I got surprisingly good at drawing animals.
Speedpaint will be posted soon.

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Keith and Kosmo (if Keith got Kosmo as a younger puppy). I actually made a decent looking puppy which I am happy about. Even though I havenât been practicing, I got surprisingly good at drawing animals.
Speedpaint will be posted soon.

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May explain why I was never really good at... connecting with people...
My crush on the creators of VLD continues- they understand relationship dynamics so well. There are so many things going on in this show that seem flighty or as if they are bending a character to suit a need that doesnât fit with who they are, but thatâs just not the case. We place our hopes and wishes for characters into these episodes and in the process ignore what canon is telling us. I want to talk about Keith x Team Voltron where this is concerned.
RE: At the Loss of Shiro
Keithâs relationship with the team has been touch and go for the entire show but throughout everything it seemed like things were going well until suddenly they werenât. The first two seasons are spent building this group into a unit that is able to achieve a great deal in a short amount of time. They find their niche and begin to flow well together so it feels like whiplash when the team turns on Keith in season 3.
Itâs implied a significant amount of time lapses between Shiroâs disappearance at the end of season 2 and the beginning of season 3. When we open to s3, the team has recovered from their battle with Zarkon, started gathering allies for the coalition, and have gone through the stages of grieving. Keith on the other hand refuses to accept the loss of Shiro; heâs continually searching for him and is frustrated that the rest of the team has given up. When the time comes to address how they move forward without Shiro, Keith fights it tooth and nail. And when the team finally does get Keith to admit they need a new paladin, itâs under extreme duress. Keith becomes the black paladin, only taking up the mantle because it is what Shiro and the Black Lion chose for him. And when Shiro returns, Keith gladly wants to hand the reins back to him.
While all of this is happening there is a lot of friction between Keith and the team that is upsetting to watch because of how little they trust him. From what Keith has demonstrated, we feel like the team should recognize he has a good head on his shoulders and gets results.
But you know what, this is the most logical scenario when we look at how Keith operates. The overlying problem is that Keith does not take the time to communicate. He thinks on his feet and acts intuitively, leaving everyone behind to follow if they want. âYou wanted me to lead Voltron? This is how I lead.â
It is difficult to build trust and respect for someone when they wonât communicate their reasoning and motives, even if the end goal is shared. The team knows Keith can be counted on in a pinch, but they arenât prepared to trust his instincts because the foundation has not been laid. In the first two seasons there are several instances of Keith seemingly acting brash while the team reals at his decisions when actually Keith is just thinking at a different pace. Off the top of my head:
01x10 where Keith trails a druid to learn about quintessenceÂ
01x11 when Keith speeds in to confront Zarkon and protect the Black LionÂ
02x06 where Keith abandons ship because he thinks Zarkon is tracking them through him
In all of these instances Keith is acting against team memberâs wishes, but itâs because he sees something they donât and wonât take the time to explain himself. During seasons 1 and 2, the team trusts Keith because Shiro does first and Shiro is easy to follow. But with Shiroâs disappearance Keith falls into wildly erratic behavior that catches everyone off guard. Keith is an intensely private person who does not expose his vulnerabilities easily, if at all. He acts brash for weeks while searching for Shiro without explaining why he is so upset so by the time s3 picks up the team is at the end of their rope with Keith. They are trying to move forward, like Shiro would want them to, but Keith wonât let them. So really itâs no surprise when the team questions leader!Keith at every turn. Keith is a good leader, yes, but heâs also a leader who demands trust when he rarely explains himself or gives trusts in return.
RE: Operation Kuron
The team absolutely should have noticed âShiroâ was acting weird right out the gate, but they didnât until he started lashing out at them specifically for two reasons:
Selfishness- Â Iâve said it before and this wonât be the last time I say it: Â the members of Team Voltron can be extremely self absorbed. Every. Last. One. Of. Them. Yes most of those âother thingsâ theyâre working on are vital to the war effort, but these people all suffer from extreme tunnel vision which means Kuroâs behavior and treatment of Keith slipped through the cracks.Â
Shiro is their steadfast, unquestioned leader. The team debates with each other a lot throughout the show and I say debate rather than argue because they communicate respectfully with one another. But I could probably count on my fingers the times someone who is not Keith was the first to question Shiroâs opinion- and remember that this crew has been in space for over a year by now.
The team expects Keith, Shiroâs right hand man, to hold him in check, and Keith does a good job of this- questioning Shiro and opening the floor for the rest of the team to chime in. So if Keith isnât calling Kuroâs strange behavior out, why would they?
Of course, Keith never mentioned this issue to anyone. Heâs an overly private person who prefers to deal with problems internally. As far as heâs concerned, the war comes first. What the team needs is a reliable leader; they need Shiro. Calling Shiro into question would be counterproductive; Keithâs job is to support and bolster Shiro because itâs what everyone needs.
Keith clearly knows something is wrong with Shiro and he reacts to it with more erratic behavior and mistrust. So even if the team did notice atypical behavior in this pair, they arenât going to comment because Shiro is their leader and Keith has been acting wildly for weeks or months- nothing new to see here. Keith is okay with this; he can handle the team turning on him- itâs nothing he hasnât dealt with before. But Shiro. Shiro is the best option for this universe- Shiro is someone strong and capable, intelligent and fearless, someone people will gladly follow into battle. From Keithâs view, the universe, the team, needs Shiro way more than they will ever need him.
Sidebar: Iâve seen loads of complaints that VLD never gives up emotional moments. Letâs correct this statement- VLD isnât giving the emotional moments you want to see in your specific pair. Look at Pidge x her family reunions. Keith x long-hair!Shiro. Lance x Allura- when these two are assaulted with Kuroâs aggression they have an open conversation about it between the two of them. Weâre not likely to get an emotionally charged, cathartic scene between Keith and anyone and itâs not because they would rather show big robot fights. Itâs because 98% of the time, those conversations with Keith do no exist. Itâs just not in his character to talk when he could be moving, taking action.
RE: Keith as a Blade of Marmora Member
Back to Keith as the Black Paladin, this is a storyline that I see coming full circle. The first time Keith piloted Black was to save Shiro- a willful hero. The second time was to replace Shiro- a reluctant hero. The third time is likely going to be of his own volition and probably to save Shiro again because Kuro is eliminated and theyâve got to get the real Shiro back.
The team struggling to accept Keith as the head of Voltron is understandable because as I said, Keith acts on instincts and rarely explains his decisions. Trusting and following someone like that is extremely difficult. Itâs hard to give something that hasnât been earned or isnât even mutual. Additionally, Keith never fully embraced his role as Black Paladin. Keith inherited this mantle at a time of extreme loss, something that has happened to him twice now, and he rejects it. Then when he does lean into it, heâs doing it for Shiro but still not owning his new role.
Keith as Black Paladin is an ongoing story and we have yet to hit the point where Keith welcomes the role. So it absolutely makes sense that he would willfully step down from the position on Shiroâs return even if Shiro was acting really strange. Keith rejects the role continuously, not for lack of skill, but because he hasnât accepted himself for who he is and what he has to offer, yet.
His time with the BoM is serving him well because itâs giving him that sense of action and agency he needs to feel value. We are seeing him grow into himself, take on more responsibility, going on more solo missions, making more quick decisions that have huge effect. We are seeing him grow into a leader by doing- the best way Keith can learn.
This works well for Keith because he doesnât have people constantly questioning him, people he feels he has to babysit. Itâs him, out in space alone, figuring things out- with the bonus of Kolivan personally grooming him (no pun intended). Keith has proven heâs okay if he comes into harm so long as others are preserved. So removing others from the equation while he learns to be a decision maker and a leader absolutely makes sense.
People who say Keith as a Blade member is a waste of storyline frustrate me.
So yes, the team doesnât trust Keith and his instincts enough and yes it shouldnât have taken this long for them to realize something is up with Kuro. But flipside, Keith never took the time to explain anything and had a lot of growing to do.
Summoning @akaiikowrites because she demands this.Â
In light of recent statements, I feel the need to clarify- Keithâs motivations for entering the Trials of Marmora and knowing the Blade of Marmora (BoM) were selfish. But Keithâs motivations to leave Team Voltron (TmV) were not; it was something he felt obligated to do.Â
Keith did the Trials of Marmora for the express purpose of finding out who he was, where he came from, and how he relates to the rest of the universe. These are entirely selfish motivations, and they are a part of what makes Keith a relatable, compelling character to Lance and to viewers. Keith most certainly has flaws he needs to work through. No question there.Â
But Keith did not step down from his post as Black Paladin for these same reasons, nor to go on a personal quest to find the family that left him. Family he was genuinely shocked to see when he did find them. (Unlike the fandom who recognized Krolia for who she was on first sight because we had been actively searching for her through the show.) Keith left Team Voltron because he prioritizes the war as much as he prioritizes people.Â
First, Keith never truly owned the position of Black Paladin. As the head of Voltron, his leadership was consistently and constantly questioned, and he always behaved as a placeholder for Shiro. And once Shiro returned, Keith immediately tried to hand the reins back over to him. In his mind, Keith was expected to step down from this role.Â
Further, Keith considered himself the outlier of this team, in part because of his default personality, but also because he is the only Galra team member. Everyone else is either human or Altean. And like the team, Keith struggled to accept his Galra heritage and considered it to be something which could compromise himself and the greater mission. So it makes sense Keithâs instinct would be to remove that threat from the equation for the betterment of the team.Â
But mostly, Keith left Team Voltron because his sense of duty is too damn high.
Keith does not say he wants to leave. He says he has to, he needs to. Implying that, for Keith, this is not a choice but an obligation. Keith is a knight and a soldier throughout his being and has an active credo so save everyone. So he left Team Voltron, only after he was sure they could function without him, to be where he believed he could affect the most change for the betterment of the universe.
If anything, leaving his team, his found family, was a heart wrenching act of selflessness for Keith. Because Keith truly has come to regard this group as his family. So for Keith, who was abandoned by his own family, to himself abandon is new family IS A BIG DEAL. Something he internally grappled with throughout 04x01 Code of Honor.
This is not the face of someone who wanted to leave the team. This is the face of someone who was, and likely still is, in deep inner-turmoil, troubled by the options laid in front of him. For Keith, leaving was not an option but an obligation and of course in the end he chose duty over his own desires because Keith is duty-bound, honor-bound, a hero.
Okay but like Altean!Lance who lived through Lotorâs genocide of the colony and somehow is found by Blade of Marmora Keith and Shiro and is happy and safe and they go back and save everyone!

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