konpeitoqueen: (why do you have porn here)
Saionji Hiyoko ([personal profile] konpeitoqueen) wrote2014-06-19 07:22 am

❀ 6th Konpeito ❀ [Anonymous Text]

let's say A is anyone and B is someone who treats A terribly by society's standards

which is dumb to follow but for the sake of argument

so B gets into trouble and by A's point of view they've done nothing but horrible things to them

and A still helps B out of trouble without any way of using the situation to make them 'owe one' or blackmail

what exactly could A be thinking?


[...Saionji is not very good at all this anonymous business.

What's up with all this, though?]
freshprints: (TURN ❈ later losers i got shit to do)

[personal profile] freshprints 2014-06-19 12:08 am (UTC)(link)
If that's how B thinks, then it's hardly a stretch to think that A might've enjoyed seeing them in need of help.

Quite possibly A felt a sort of karmic satisfaction to it — that the once-mighty B had at last gotten what was coming to them.
freshprints: (DEVICE ❈ sixty selfies and counting)

[personal profile] freshprints 2014-06-19 12:23 am (UTC)(link)
Indirect satisfaction. B's place in the favored majority wasn't nearly so secure as B thought it was; that sort of arrogance is what inspired the phrase, "pride goes before a fall."

A had the pleasure of watching B fall, even if A wasn't the one who caused it themselves. One doesn't have to orchestrate another person's misfortune in order to derive satisfaction from it.
freshprints: (DENIED ❈ nope uh-uh i don't think so)

[personal profile] freshprints 2014-06-19 02:24 am (UTC)(link)
And how humiliating it must be for the master, to have to accept that kind of assistance from someone so far below him.

Not of his authority, not of his power. In assisting him, the slave exercised power over him — what an unnatural state that must be, for a proud master.