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When The Writers Botch The Protagonistsβ Internal Conflicts
A lesson in internal conflict and how overlooking it breaks both your main characters and your story, featuring Stranger Things
βοΈβ₯οΈπ
Every well-written main character goes on a journey in their narrative, and at the heart of this character arc is an internal conflict: the push and pull between what the character wants and the fears and lies stopping them from getting what they want.
Internal conflict, especially for multiple characters, can be tricky to pull off, but itβs what makes characters relatable. To everyone. We all have desires, fears, and misbeliefs about the world or ourselves that stop us from going after our desires.
Internal conflict is The Clash between desire & fear.
The average story is able to create payoff with the main characterβs conflict, having them (and in turn, the audience) learn something along the way.
But when you decenter the emotional arcs of your main characters, or steer those arcs off their trajectory, the entire story falls flat and the audience walks away learning nothing from your story.
What Is Internal Conflict & How Does It Work?
Internal conflict is made up of 3 ingredients:
Desire: What the character wants most at this point in their life
Fear: What the character is afraid of
Misbelief: The lie holding a character back, which they are often oblivious to until they confront their fear in their aha moment. It is then that they realize βIβve had it all wrong.β
The protagonistβs misbelief is, ideally, written as the opposite of the storyβs theme.
Why is that important?
Because when the main character has their βaha momentβ, the audience has an aha moment of their own. They identify their own misbeliefs and apply the moral of the story to their own lives.
So, letβs apply internal conflict to Buddy The Elf.
Desire: Buddy wants to find belonging, to find the place where he βfits inβ. When he finds out heβs not actually an elf, Buddy hopes to find his real family, where he belongs.
Fear: Buddy is afraid that his family will reject him.
Misbelief: βI am an oddball, there is no place where I belong, and my real family doesnβt want me.β
Buddy's misbelief is challenged during his "aha moment" when the real Santa arrives, and he realizes his Christmas cheer IS valuable after all. Once Buddy challenges his misbelief, his family accepts him. Buddy gets what heβs been shown to want the most over the course of the film. That's the payoff for overcoming his fears.
Now, letβs apply this to the protagonists of Stranger Things to show what happens when internal conflict is ignored and the audience is scammed out of an emotional payoff.
By protagonists, I mean these sweethearts:
Will Byers βοΈ
I think itβs safe to say that love defines the character of Will Byers more than anything. Love separates Will from Henry Creel, who he foils. Unlike Henry, Will has a loving family and friends, who are key to Will snapping out of possession in Season 2 and honing his powers in Season 5. Internal conflict arises for Will when romantic love enters the picture, something which *sigh* Henry has and Will doesnβt. Platonic love defeats romance, yay! Except Lumax, Lumax is the most powerful ever!!
Anyways, Willβs internal conflict in the later seasons is set up around romantic love, and the shame he has around it because of his queerness and trauma from (CSA coded) abuse. This shame around romance is something I expected Will to overcome, because he also has a desire for romance that is so pure and inseparable from his queerness arc. I explain how Will is written to be a romantic hero here.
Willβs Internal Conflict
Desire: To be loved by someone who doesnβt see him as fragile/weak or a mistake, to be loved for exactly who he is, and to find romantic love like his friends.
Fear: That he really is a freak, a mistake, and that nobody will love him if they knew the truth about his queerness. That he will never find love because he is gay and because of the trauma he experienced, because he is outcasted.
Misbelief: βIβm not gonna fall in love, I donβt deserve love, because of who I intrinsically am.β
Misbelief stated:
How Willβs misbelief should have been handled: Will shouldβve been shown that he is deserving of the romantic love he wants. And Will wants Mike up until the end.
Will shouldβve realized that his desire to fall in love was a GOOD thing, not a BAD thing. His love shouldβve overcome his fear and shame.
Willβs misbelief is that he doesnβt deserve Mike; he squashes his feelings for Mike down time after time. Will shouldβve been shown that he DOES deserve Mike, the boy who sees him for exactly who he is.
Willβs ideal aha moment would involve him realizing that Mike does love him, and that Mikeβs love gives him the courage to fight on, to stand up to the fear Vecna has been instilling in him.
The theme shown to the audience would be that love overcomes fear, and that queer kids, abused kids, too, can have the romantic love they desire.
If the point was to show that Mike made Will feel bad about himself, they didnβt give Will an alternative love interest who made him feel better about himself. This is what happens in The Holiday, where Kate Winsletβs character is in love with a man who strings her along, but then Jack Blackβs character is introduced as a better match for her.
Again, itβs fine if Mike wasnβt the right boy for Will, but there wasnβt another boy for Will.
You donβt just write a character to want romance andβ¦ not give them romance. In Willβs case, thatβs homophobic, actually.
What the writers did instead: They portrayed Willβs desire for romance as a weakness he had to overcome.
Characters can have misbelief-based desires (ex. a character who wants wealth or success), but if the protagonistβs desire is misbelief-driven, the pursuit of it is usually shown to hurt the characters around them.
For example, in A Christmas Carol, Scroogeβs desire for wealth is lamented by the townspeople, and his work partner Bob Marley warns him against it.
By contrast, Willβs pursuit of Mike is shown to be a net positive - for both Mike and Will. Willβs love, expressed through the painting he gives Mike, encourages Mike to be brave. It results in Mikeβs growth as a character, as well as Mike and Willβs bond repairing.
Desires that are portrayed as good should be achieved by the character in an emotional payoff.
What the writers did instead: They set Will on the exact character arc Robin has been on.
Why this doesnβt work:Β
Robin didnβt work at Scoops Ahoy with Tammy Thompson.
Romantic love has always been decentered from Robinβs character arc, which is about acceptance and community. Even when Robin pursues Vickie in season 4, a lot of focus is put on her friendship with Steve and how that gives her the confidence to show Vickie her interest.
βBut Steve was paired with Robin for all of Season 3, and he had a crush on her. They didnβt end up together.β
Steveβs crush on Robin was resolved by the end of the season.
If the California plot was supposed to be Scoops Troop 2.0, there was no bathroom scene.
If Byler was meant to be unrequited, it should have been a hard no by the end of Season 4.
Instead of addressing Willβs crush on Mike and βripping off the band-aidβ, the show set up Mike and Will to grow closer together in Season 5.
This is a very different approach to the other unrequited love plot lines in Stranger Things, which are resolved in one season.Β
Jane Hopper π
Jane/Elβs arc centers around finding family, connection, and belonging after being abused, as well as taking your power back (literally) from your abusers.
She finds the most solace in Hopper, her adoptive dad, Max, her best friend, and Kali, her lab βsisterβ.
I know some of yβall are going to say she finds solace in Mike, but he is shown to cause her more grief than happiness from Season 3 onwards. She explicitly tries to end the relationship twice because, in her own words, Mike 1. lies to her and 2. doesnβt understand her.
Mike is security, stability, the boy Jane falls back on because she grew attached to him first. Her internal conflict works best if it ends in her growing away from Mike.
Janeβs Internal Conflict
Desire: To find her family, learn about the world, and live a happy life free from the lab.
Fear: That she cannot break away from the lab or end the cycle of abuse she was subjected to. That she will never adapt or be accepted in the real world.
Misbelief: βI do not belong. Anywhere. I am a monster, and I am not cut out for a normal life.β
Also, βI need the validation of others, of men, to be worthy of love.β
And perhaps βI need to βadaptβ and live a normal life to be happy.β
Misbelief stated:
How Janeβs misbelief should have been handled: Janeβs arc in Season 4 shouldβve continued as it was set up when she stood up to Papa. She shouldβve been shown that external validation was never the answer.
Yes, this external validation she is misguidedly seeking includes asking Mike to tell her βI love youβ.
If Mike was supposed to be a good thing in Janeβs life, they should not have written him to use the same language as her abusers (ex. βWhat did you do?β), and he shouldβve made her happy instead of stressed.
Kaliβs return gives Jane another option, taking her own life by choice, but this option is contrary to Janeβs desire for belonging.
In order for her misbelief to be proven wrong, Jane had to realize that she DOES belong, somewhere.
If Janeβs misbelief is βI have to adapt, to be a normal girlβ, she shouldβve been shown that she belongs and can be happy in spite of her powers and past. That these things, in fact, made her lovable.
Janeβs ideal aha moment could go one of two ways.
A. Jane realizes that she never needed Mike, that she was happiest broken up with him. Then, out of her own free will, she chooses to stay with the Party and Hopper instead of risking her own life, because they are her family. Or she chooses to leave the Party, because she wants to be independent.
B. Jane realizes she belongs with Kali, and she discourages Kali from taking her own life.
She chooses to live a happy, independent life with Kali (who understands her situation) and leave the Party behind, and they use their presence to break the cycle.
The theme shown to the audience would be that connection and making your own choices is the right way to heal from abuse. Not romantic attachment, and not ending your life.
What the writers did instead: They portrayed Janeβs desire as something unattainable. They also showed that her fear and misbelief were true, she was right about her inability to belong in the real world.
Janeβs character arc was filler for the Duffers, who ultimately saw her as a prop and symbol whose purpose had to be fulfilled by dying.
They fridged her, letting her fear and misbelief stop her from ever being able to pursue her desire.
They did that instead of having Jane confront her fear and misbelief so that she could pursue her desire.
As with Willβs internal conflict, this is just showing the audience that βsometimes, you never get what you desire most in lifeβ.
Mike Wheeler β₯οΈ
Mikeβs internal conflict is the hardest to pinpoint, because he doesnβt seem to have one at all. Mike Wheeler appears to be a cardboard, static character. In every season, he loves El, heβs Elβs boyfriend, and heβs loyal to his friends.
Until Season 3, where you start seeing the cracks in Mikeβs relationship with Jane, how it makes him insecure, how it causes him to push his friends away, especially Will.
Mikeβs arc then becomes one of identity and insecurity. He loses himself, his role as the heart of the Party, in his relationship with Jane. The relationship feeds into Mikeβs insecurities about himself, as he places Jane on a pedestal and reduces himself to a βnobodyβ.
Then Will comes around and tells him thatβs not trueβ¦ which WOULD be the perfect challenge to a misbelief that is barely explored at all.
Desire: To be a hero who can lead his friends to victory over the Upside Down; to hold his friend group together.
Fear: That growing up will tear his friend group apart; that he will lose the people he loves.
Misbelief: βIβm just some random nerd, a nobody. I canβt do anything to support my loved ones. In fact, Iβm not important to them at all.β
Misbelief stated:
How Mikeβs misbelief shouldβve been handled: Mike shouldβve realized that Will believed in the person he wanted to be all along; that Jane was holding him back from embracing his role as the βheart of the Party.β
Will told Mike that his value was in his words, his leadership, his heart, so he shouldβve used that to help his friends fight.
Mike shouldβve had to confront his fears and insecurities on his own. Instead, he barely lifted a finger in the supernatural plot.
Mikeβs ideal aha moment wouldβve happened after he feels like heβs lost both Jane and Will (disaster moment). This wouldβve forced Mike to realize that he himself has value, outside of his loved ones, even when he canβt save his loved ones. Even better if Mike surprised the audience with depths they didnβt expect - Mike could learn to love all of himself, even the parts of himself he was afraid of.
The theme shown to the audience would be that you are lovable just as you are - you donβt have to be a hero or savior. And/or that accepting yourself makes you strong, gives you the courage to inspire others and fight on. What better ending for a βshow about outcastsβ than the βeverymanβ character accepting that he himself is an outcast, and finding power in that?
What the writers did instead: They had Jane tell Mike that he indeed is valuable to her, when the narrative did nothing to support this. When, in fact, Jane hindered Mike's character growth.
We were never shown WHY Jane loves Mike. βYou understand me better than anyoneββ¦ point to three times in the show where thatβs true. Where Mike βgetsβ Jane more than Hopper, Max, or Kali do.
We were, however, clearly told why Will loves Mike.
They reduced Mike to the boy Jane and Will love, when he should have faced his fears and misbelief independent of them.
They proved Mikeβs fear, being separated from the Party and his loved ones, right. Thatβs exactly what happens at the very end when he loses Jane, with no arc of him learning to accept loss. Heβs just miserable.
I think you can tell what I'm getting at here. Fear and misbelief win, because the "lesson" is "sometimes, things just don't work out."
Why Does This Matter?
Internal conflict isnβt just putting your characters on a journey, itβs the tool writers use to teach their audiences the themes of their story.
Letting a characterβs fears and misbelief win is exactly how you βassassinateβ that character.
By shooting down the emotional payoff of three main character arcs in Stranger Things, the audience does not learn anything about themselves by the time the credits roll.
Itβs soulless and designed for passive viewing; happiness and comfort to weakly charm the masses. And the worst part is, Stranger Things had the potential to be a story that challenges what the audience thinks about themselves and about others.
It's bitter men sacrificing good storytelling in lieu of "you get what you get, and you don't pitch a fit."
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What will you do now that it's all over? Will you still want to create art for ST? Are there other horror projects you'll want to work on outside of ST?
Also, thank you for all of your awesome analysis and theories. I don't care what the creators say, your stuff is canon to me.
[Deep weary sigh.] Right now I don't feel like I want to make ST art ever again; I'm too pissed off by the condescending "Who knows what really happened? Write your own ending π₯°" note they decided to end on after having the audacity to use queerbait as a storytelling device.
But I'll probably get over that eventually. I'm not embarrassed for thinking gay love was going to save the world or for having fun trying to guess how it was going to happen; this whole blog has been an exercise in learning to have hope and self-confidence again, and I refuse to reject the beautiful gay love story that inspired me to stop wallowing in misery -- even if its writers were too chickenshit to do the same.
do u think the duffers just chickened out last minute or netflix pushed against it or something bc i can't wrap my head around this big of a fandom simply 'reading too much into things'. i just can't because once you notice byler it just starts looking like the best and most obvious route. i don't know anything anymore
We were just queerbaited, anon.
It feels different from normal queerbait because it is different: where normal queerbait tends to be very shallow because the writers are just trying to make money, the Duffers wove queerness deeply into their story because they're in it for the love of the game.
In other words: Byler truly is a part of this story, but the "subversion of expectations" they were leading up to this whole time wasn't that Mike loved Will back, but that all the signs of reciprocation we were picking up on were symbolic of what's going on in Will's head.
I don't think they were being malicious, per se. I think they're just morons who wanted to tell the story of their own unrequited crushes by appropriating a queer experience, and don't care enough about what our experiences actually look like to realize how offensive their approach is.
ST5 finale in just a few hours! I'm feeling remarkably chill about it. I made so much progress with my art over the last couple of years that I just wouldn't have otherwise bothered to do if it wasn't for the Byler hyperfixation -- so no matter how the story shakes out, I'm sure I'll still be having lots of fun drawing fancomics!
Final predictions:
Gay love saves the world
Mike POV. I'm begging. Please let that nothingburger performance in Vol. 2 be worth it πππ
Flashback of young Henry's traumatic visit to the Abyss?
It's not too late for a predestination loop reveal, just saying
Will the Wise casting fireball (i.e., something dramatic involving the ball of exotic matter)
No idea how El and Kali are gonna escape their suicide pact but I have faith they will
Epilogue set in a gay bar so Byler can be affectionate in public :)
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I promised I wouldn't indulge in criticism until after Stranger Things was finished and I'd had time to reflect on it, so... I'm not going to write down all of my thoughts about how Byler was handled in Vol. 2. :p
But I'm not worried about Byler. Will's queer arc still perfectly aligns with what I've been saying about him for years: he can't fully self-actualize so long as he refuses to address his sexuality -- (not his identity, his sexuality) -- and keeps buying into the narrative that all queers look like him and are doomed to be miserable, because his status as a visible queer means he has the power to help hidden queers like Mike realize they aren't doomed to be miserable either.
Part of the reason I was disappointed with the ending of Vol. 1 is because even though it supports the idea that Will's "innate power" is inspiring to Mike--
--Will's self-actualization just seemed so premature. Why did it only take a single encounter with Vecna to get to this point? Why was this happening in the middle of the season instead of the end? Why were we supposed to buy that this bodes well for Will's arc in Volume 2?
Then I watched his coming out scene and I understood: Will hasn't self-actualized yet. He finally admits out loud that he doesn't like girls, but that's hardly some massive new breakthrough for him -- Will's been defiantly raising his middle finger to comphet since S3.
All he's really accepted about himself so far is that his stubborn authenticity in the face of pressure to date girls is a strength and not a flaw. Which is very important progress, don't get me wrong! He's come a long way since he was a desperately insecure 14 year-old who beat the shit out of himself because not liking girls was deemed cringe by his friends.
But it's not enough.
What Will has really been struggling to accept this whole time is that he's equally entitled to like boys.
[Oh, you know that, do you Byers? Do you also know that Robin's current gf likes men?]
Will might be personally immune to comphet, but he's fallen victim to the homophobic propaganda that sustains it and is struggling not to interpret Robin's advice through the lens of his own confirmation bias:
This Is Just How Growing Up Gay Works: you stupidly fall for a straight person and then you have to get over it. But don't worry, things will get better so long as you learn your lesson and don't bother anyone normal with your shameful preferences again!
For three seasons now, Will has been trapped in this cycle of wanting to be with Mike, hating himself for it, and trying to convince himself that he can get over it by "accepting" that he "shouldn't" feel that way about a seemingly-straight boy.
And the only way to break out of this cycle is to realize that he's not committing some crime by being attracted to Mike and wanting to make out with him.
Will thought that his innocent childhood memories of loving Mike as a friend could defeat Vecna as easily as they defeated the Demos. But it didn't work: Vecna is the source of his sexual shame--
--and his fear of hurting others with it--
--which means Will cannot defeat Vecna unless he stops pretending that the sex part of his sexuality doesn't exist.
Will's power -- the part that's innate to him, the part that Mike admires -- lies in his freedom to choose whether he lets his internalized homophobia control him, or whether he takes control of it and leads by example as a confident gay man.
Vecna tried to scare Will into staying closeted because he sees that Will has been inching closer and closer to true self-acceptance with each pass of his Cycle of Failing to Get Over Mike Wheeler. I know it may not look that way right now, but the end of Vol. 2 is just as important a moment of progress for Will in gaining control over his powers as the end of Vol. 1: he's no longer a glass closet gay who's helplessly subjected to the mortifying ordeal of Being Known in 80s Hawkins -- he's openly gay because of a brave decision HE made on HIS terms to let everyone know that he's not ashamed of who he is.
There's just one more episode to go now -- and just one more step for Will to take before he can unleash his full potential against Vecna.
Dear Santa, I've been very good this year so please can I have a Byler kiss for Christmas?
PS. If it's not too much trouble could you also crack Mike Wheeler's head open like a walnut so I can see inside? Thank you Santaβ€οΈ
Spooky fanart ideas have not been very forthcoming as of Vol. 1, but maybe the creative horror juices will flow better once I have a clearer picture of what's going on regarding the Upside Down and Vecna's plans for Will.
I'm still rooting for my predestination loop theory. I don't think the odds are in its favor, but I do think it remains plausible -- the only thing I've definitely gotten wrong so far is that Will is going to sacrifice himself because he's a self-loathing mess. (Boy learned to accept himself way faster than I was expecting.) But it's looking pretty likely that Will is going to get plugged into the center of that fleshy TARDIS-looking thing Vecna's been slotting the children into, so... there's that.
I'm reaching now, but I think it'd be cool if the above turns out to be the origin of the Upside Down: Vecna tries to use Will's powers to step outside time and space and summon his idealized 50s mindscape into reality, but he fucks up and manifests Will's traumatic memories of the UD instead.
Anyway, I'll be happy enough regardless of how the supernatural plot shakes out; it's all just a vehicle for Will's self-actualization at this point!
More psychological Wiseone horror would be nice tho.
More flashbacks of Will's week in the UD would be nice too. Let's see him figuring out the lights from his POV!
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do u consider the first 5 minutes/all of henry's weird behavior toward will as a metaphor for sa? ive seen some takes abt that, curious what ur thoughts are
CW: discussion of child abuse and exploitation, suicide.
Thanks for this, anon. I've been meaning to discuss this topic further, outside of just pointing out visual storytelling and subtext.
Well, I'll start by stating it's both figurative and literal in my opinion.
The vine isn't metaphorical because it was not like assault, it was assault. Prior to that scene, we didn't understand how exactly Will ended up with the vine inside him, so it was a matter of interpretation. The imagery was all we had to go off, but now we have the context, and it's about as obvious as the Alien facehuggers.
What could be allegorical is the idea that Will had previously suffered from a similar kind of abuse from a living person (namely Lonnie). This is plausible, because amplifying the triumphant story of a male abuse victim seems to be the kind of thing a show about outcasts in a conservative 1980s society would do. It's one thing to be gay in the 1980s, and another thing to be gay and a survivor of abuse β especially with the added context of the AIDs crisis (the framing of gay men as diseased predators), and the belief that childhood abuse "turned" boys gay.
Rant incoming, because I find this topic very fascinating, and I think a lot of people misunderstand or simplify the meaning behind why Stranger Things focusses on "outcasts" in the 1980s.
I mentioned it very briefly in my analysis here but I think it's important to consider just how many "sex scandals" gripped and shocked America in the 1980s. The 80's saw the rise of "purity culture" which framed teen sexuality as something dangerous. On the other hand, child exploitation was still rampant in both the church and Hollywood β I think the Brooke Shields biopic explained it really well, especially with how this may have been conservative "pushback" to the sexual liberation movement (60s and 70s).
This frames 1980s cultural conservatism as a double-edged sword: Something which both admonished, and upheld child exploitation. It was a confusing time for young people.
Couple this with societal pressure to maintain the image of the "perfect" family life (something which keeps victims silent out of shame) and Gen X's complicated relationship with substance abuse and mental health (indicating unresolved issues)...
It paints a much clearer picture of what Stranger Things is really about: It's not just about people who are outcasts because they are deemed "weird" β a bit uninspiring if that were the case.
It's about children of the 80s who are outcasts because their suffering highlights the problem with a conservative, purity-based, post-sex lib America which wishes not to examine itself. Their pain, differences, and experiences are dismissed because America refuses to acknowledge how cultural conservatism both enabled and hid their exploitation.
tldr: Conservative 1980s attitudes regarding sex, sexual identity, gender, and politics was really F*cked Upβ’ and "sex scandals" framed sexual violence and exploitation as entertainment and media fodder, which F*cked Upβ’ the kids aka Gen X who are still dealing with the trauma to this day, hence why they're the cohort most likely to have substance abuse issues or commit suicide.
This is why our two leading characters are both surviors of child abuse and exploitation, with one being a girl who plays a non-traditionally feminine role (El Hopper), and a boy who is queer (Will Byers).
Rant over β the point of that was to clarify why Will being portrayed as a potential survivor of CSA is not a "reach" and is actually extremely relevant to the context.
So, yes, I do think there is an ongoing allegory in this show which explores this theme. Will is possibly representing a survivor of CSA, whereas El likely represents a different kind of exploitation β that of child soldiers. Not surprising when we consider the writer's very apparent fascination with military history and WWII.
And the thing is, you don't really make these kinds of inferences unless it's supposed to lead to some kind of explanation or catharsis. In Alien there was catharsis because the sole survivor was the female protagonist, aboard a ship of men. The commentary was largely concerning the intentional eroticism of women's pain and sufferring in the horror genre. (Half-dressed women moaning in agony from the first person POV in a slasher film, for example).
There needs to be a similar kind of catharsis in Stranger Things, and I believe (and hope) this will be done by elevating Will's story from the subtext to the text. I think the same may be done for Henry, and his relationship to Dr. Brenner or the Mind Flayer.
And if we're getting technical, everything that has been done to Will has been done by Vecna and/ or the Mind Flayer, not Henry to be exact. I do see them as two separate entities, even moreso since s5 as it appears that Henry is unable to enter the "cave" or "hub" whereas Vecna likely can, if that's indeed the same place where he's keeping the children. (I believe it's the same space due to the imagery of the wall and the infinity symbol shape).
(I ramble about it a bit here, and I think I'll keep thinking on what this cave represents in the coming weeks until we get Volume II).
But basically, I want to clarify that although I think Vecna, the Mind Flayer/ shadow monster, and possibly even the demogorgons all play a role in this allegory, I do not think Henry is a paedophile.
Not that you implied this anon, because you didn't, but it is a take I see around here. I understand why people interpret it this way, but intention behind abuse does matter in this context, as does the subtle separation between Henry and Vecna.
To me, Henry is a perpetual child who is frozen in time (ghost-like) because he not ready to confront his darkness, his trauma β almost like a traumatized spirit who cannot cross over to the other side.
Vecna is his undead shadow (In D&D he is a lich, which is an undead wizard) that has consumed what was left of the shell of Henry.
Vecna is the child abuser here, as is the Mind Flayer that influences him. And the behviour of the Mind Flayer? It seems to resemble that of a domineering father or patriarch: controlling, manipulative, bigger and more powerful than the children it exploits.
The "real" villain here is the Father or Patriarch β "Papa" and Lonnie.
The Mind Flayer's motivations are to dominate, possess, control, and spread. (At least, as far as we're aware). This lines up with the D&D lore and The Illithid Empire, as well as the motivation behind an abusive patriarch who wishes to control his children and family β particularly within the context of 1980s conservatism discussed above ^
So, there are no motivations regarding attraction or sexual fixation of any kind here. Therefore, if this allegory is about Lonnie, we must ask ourselves what Lonnie could have possibly been trying to control or conserve within the Byers family.
Lonnie wanted to conserve a traditional, heterosexual, masculine ideal in both Will and Jonathan.
His attempts to "butch" them up involved sports such as hunting and baseball. Jonathan eventually met these expectations β at least to some extent β which could explain why Lonnie seemed proud when Jonathan shoved him back, and noted that he was "stronger."
Heck, he even follows this reunion up by suggesting Jonathan move to the city so he can see him more. Lonnie may be a deadbeat abuser, but he genuinely likes the "improved" Jonathan he sees before him because he's now become a "man."
Will was a more difficult case for Lonnie, because he was likely more effeminate, and possibly already began showing signs of attraction to other boys. I mean, Will gifted Mike his drawings for who knows how many years, and that definitely seems like the kind of thing a kid with a crush would do.
This is likely why Lonnie's visitations with Will continued after he left, whereas it appears he never had visitations with Jonathan. Lonnie felt his "job" was unfinished with Will β this is why I think the baseball field was a site of trauma for him. (Hence it being the site of his possession, and a site of Billy's trauma as shown in s3).
So, Lonnie's abuse was motivated by a desire to punish Will for being effeminate, in the hopes that it would put him on a "straighter path", and have him associate queerness with pain.
Luckily, Will seems to have realized that queer romance and queer joy exists through his friendship with Robin. His powers reveal accompanied his self-acceptance β particularly the love and acceptance of his uninhibited childhood self. This was the version of Will who was unapologetically himself, before Lonnie (and society at large) told him who he was is wrong.
So, I'm interested to see where Will goes in Volume II, and if there will be any exploration of his relationship with Lonnie. Noah's repeated mentions of Will's "abusive father" make me believe this will be the case. I think confronting his childhood trauma might be the final frontier in his character arc.