mouthporn.net
#claudia – @blue-peach14 on Tumblr
Avatar

BluePeach

@blue-peach14 / blue-peach14.tumblr.com

Might I suggest the “internet”,“tik tok”, “positivity” tags? I’m 22yrs old, she/her, (add more later)
Avatar
reblogged

What Callum’s relationships say about him

Callum always seems to gravitate towards people who share the same values and traits as him.

This was clear even back in S1—when he saw Rayla stand up to Runaan to do the right thing,

He decides to stand with her.

So, it’s no wonder that he ends up having traits that line up pretty closely to the girls he ends up falling for. First Claudia, then Rayla.

Initially, I thought that was just some neat attention to detail—Callum isn’t superficial about who he loves or cares about, so he has to feel some kind of connection or “affinity” to that person.

But now, I think there’s more to it than that. I think that, in many ways, Callum’s transition from pining on Claudia to loving Rayla also reflects and parallels his character development. From awkward sheltered prince to powerful mage.

Lemme break it down.

When we first see Claudia, she is so engrossed in her book that she was about to walk into a tree.

She’s described as always having her spellbook nearby (much like Callum has his sketchbook).

Claudia is a magic nerd, adorable awkwardness and all.

Much like a certain step-prince we all know and love, Claudia is pretty eccentric.

When it comes to fighting, Claudia prefers to keep her distance; her spells are long-ranged, and she’ll usually be on the sidelines while Soren does the physical fighting.

She loves magic, mainly for casting spells.

But she’s also capable of having an appreciation of magical things for their own sake.

However, for the most part, she keeps her feelings about magic at an arms-length. Claudia sees magic as largely an academic pursuit, a tool, or an outside resource that you can tap into (provided you know the spells).

For Claudia, magic is about what you can get out of it. Either a spell, or a ritual, or some kind of power just waiting to be unlocked.

Lastly, Claudia is ruthless. Like, really ruthless, willing to do almost anything to achieve a goal, even going through unethical means.

Particularly, she’ll “save” her family members through any means and regardless of how they might feel about what she did.

As a result, it leads her to justify all sorts of terrible actions that she probably would never have considered herself.

Claudia is ruthless pragmatism personified.

During the time that he crushes on Claudia, in S1 and S2, Callum has a lot of traits in common with Claudia.

For starters, he’s fairly bookish himself—the first time we see him, he’s drawing in his sketchbook.

We see him draw many times in the first two seasons, mostly for fun.

Or to calm down.

But even if he has only a few moments, you might see him sketching something—even here, on the Cursed Caldera when Rayla’s gone not five minutes just to check on a sound they heard.

He’s a nerd, just like Claudia—he’s eccentric, awkward, and adorkable (and thankfully, some things never change).

He’s also not action-oriented either, fighting from a safe distance or watching from the sidelines.

But most of all, he shares Claudia’s fascination with magic. Like her, this fascination is primarily with spells and not necessarily with magic as a phenomenon.

Here, while talking with Lujanne, she tells him all sorts of wonderful things about Primal Magic, focusing on how Primal Sources function as part of nature, but he steers the conversation back to what matters to him.

So, while he has an appreciation for magic as a natural marvel, and even though he has a distaste for Claudia’s brand of Dark Magic, he mainly sees Primal Magic as a means to an end.

For him, magic gives him something he can be good at. A way he can feel secure about himself. A way for him to feel right.

But as he learns about the Sky Primal, as he grows to understand the Sky Arcanum, he begins to move away from this.

By the time he wakes up from his coma and connects to the Sky, he no longer sees Primal Magic as just a source of spells and way to discover his self-worth—it becomes something much, much deeper to him.

It’s an experience, an intimate connection he now shares. His Primal Source is no longer an extension of his abilities as a mage, one that he can tap into for a wind or lightning spell. Now, he is an extension of it.

Callum expresses this change with just one line of dialogue.

I thought I had to find my wings, but that’s just it! I am the Wing!

It just so happens that this change in his way of thinking happened around the time he began to align himself more closely with Rayla. Ultimately, while Callum had already fallen out of love with Claudia by this point, it’s when the Sky Arcanum finally clicks with him that he starts to associate more with Rayla’s traits and values rather than Caludia’s.

The main difference between how Claudia and Rayla see magic is as follows:

For Claudia, magic is a tool, a resource.

But for Rayla, magic is an ambience, a part of everything around them.

Even though she doesn’t have much of the technical understanding of magic that Claudia and Lujanne have, she still knows enough to express how she and the other elves view magic.

Now, it’s not a stretch to say that this isn’t the only thing that Claudia and Rayla don’t see eye to eye on.

Unlike Claudia, Rayla is very action-oriented, using her physical abilities for just about everything.

That’s not even limited to just fighting; here, she gracefully slides across the ice just to catch up with Callum.

Or she’ll climb up a tree to ride one of the giant helicopter seeds down the valley.

Or she’ll lay out some rope and jump off an Ambler.

Claudia has a plan for everything—her bag has a seemingly endless supply of problem-solvers.

But Rayla, instead, relies on her can-do attitude—she won’t second-guess whether she can do something, instead jumping right into the middle of things and figuring out the details on the way down.

Rayla also prefers to be right in the thick of things; if there’s a fight, or someone’s in danger, she’s there.

However, Rayla also places a high value on morals. Even though she’s not above using underhanded means or trickery when necessary (such as tricking Soren and Claudia in 2x03), she very much believes in doing things the right way.

This is why, for instance, Rayla is very angry with Callum when he uses Dark Magic, and it takes quite a bit for her to be able to look past it.

Like, Callum has a spell, one spell, that will save both Rayla and the dragon, literally solving all their problems in one fell swoop, and this is the look she gives him:

Oof.

So, needless to say, in the first two seasons Callum resembles Claudia more than Rayla. He prefers to take a back seat on the action, isn’t all that confident in his physical abilities, and spends most of the time avoiding fights, especially when he doesn’t have a plan.

And, even when he understood that Dark Magic was wrong, he was nevertheless willing to do something unethical to save Rayla regardless of how she felt about it. He shares that ruthless pragmatism with Claudia that Rayla doesn’t.

But once Season 3 rolls around, we see Callum start to move away from Claudia’s way of thinking as he begins to gravitate more toward Rayla’s.

Early on, Rayla shows Callum magic in Xadia. He begins to see magic and the world it inhabits the way Rayla does.

I’ve heard people wonder why Callum doesn’t learn that much magic in S3, and that’s because he’s learning magic less as spells and more as an experience.

And through that experience, not only does Callum learn a great deal about magic in Xadia, he learns about what the elves are fighting to protect. He learns why this kind of world is worth protecting.

And the more he spends in this world, the more we see him come around to Rayla’s way of thinking.

For starters, he’s much more action-oriented in S3—we see him follow Rayla up a tree, ride a difficult-to-tame mount, or climb a 70-foot Ambler’s leg while it’s walking.

I mean, he’s not as good as Rayla at these things…but baby steps.

Even though he may hesitate, he’s much less sure in his abilities than in S1 and S2. He doesn’t insist on taking an easier route. When Rayla gives him her sword, he simply follows her up the tree. He’s showing signs of that similar can-do attitude that Rayla wears on her sleeve.

  • As a side note, there may even be hints that his connection to the Sky Primal may be subtly affecting his range of physical abilities. We already know that the Moon Primal can increase the physical strength of the creatures connected to it (Viren notes that Moonshadow elves’ power increase depending on the phase of the moon, while Ez mentions that Phoe-Phoe drew her strength from the Moon Nexus). And it’s doubtful that he would have been able to scale trees or Amblers earlier in the series. Right now, that’s just a guess, but who knows?

He also comes around to Rayla’s values—there’s a right way to do things, and the ends do not justify the means.

Unlike in S2, where Callum was willing to use Dark Magic to save Rayla in spite knowing it’s something he shouldn’t be messing with, this season he takes a bit more principled approach.

After they fight over whether Rayla should stay, Callum uses a spell to discover that Rayla’s parents did not abandon the Dragon Egg, and in fact fought till the very end.

And the thing is…that actually gives him a solid argument for why this means Rayla should leave with them. They sacrificed themselves to protect the Dragon Prince, he could say. You should honor their memory by finishing what they started and protect Zym.

He could, just as he did with Dark Magic, use his powers to help save her life, and it wouldn’t even really be that unethical this time.

And yet he doesn’t, because this time he realizes it’s whether he can use magic to fix a problem. He’s not going to use magic to get Rayla to agree with him, or to support his argument for leaving.

Instead, he uses magic entirely for her. He does it to give Rayla the closure she needs, letting see her parents and showing her that they were in fact heroes.

And when she’s at a loss as to what to do next, Callum just gently reminds her it’s ultimately her choice. And he’ll respect that choice, provided she’s making it willingly.

He empowers her, reminding her that she gets to choose who she wants to be, much like he discovered for himself:

This is diametrically opposed to what Claudia would do in this situation. We’ve seen her take the Primal Energy from a living creature to cure her brother, even when he’s accepted his situation. She does something similar, or perhaps even worse, to save her father.

Claudia would use magic to save people through any means, even if those people might disapprove.

Callum used to think this way, but now he doesn’t, using his magic instead to empower the people around him, such as Rayla.

All of this shows just how much he’s changed. How much she has changed him.

As a last point, I’ve noticed something else that had changed in Callum, though it’s a lot more subtle. Before I mentioned that Callum would always draw in his sketchbook, largely for his own enjoyment.

Yet in S3, we don’t see any of that.

Sure, he carries his sketchbook around with him at all times, even during the Battle of the Storm Spire for some reason!

(like, did you think you’d have time to sketch while people are fighting and dying, Callum what are you even—)

But even when keeping the sketchbook around, we don’t see Callum drawing recreationally anymore—the one time he draws in it, he does it specifically for Rayla, both proving that he saw them in his spell, and giving her a change to see her parents’ faces again.

The reason for this is because he’s become far more preoccupied with the world that Rayla introduced him too. He’s not sitting down to draw what he sees in Xadia. He’s going to experience it himself.

This all culminates in one final moment in S3:

Callum lays down his sketchbook one final time.

And leaps off the pinnacle to save Rayla.

After this moment, we never see the sketchbook around him again.

I mean, sure, I definitely think we’ll see him drawing again in S4, but the sketchbook is no longer inseparable from Callum. The symbolism here is clear—Callum has been transformed.

And just to drive the symbolism even further, his blue jacket is torn to shreds, leaving Callum with just his sleeveless red shirt, scarf, and fingerless gloves. Not to get too bogged down into color motifs here, but this change was big, since red is typically more associated with “action” while blue with “calmness.”

But symbolism aside, he looks less like a young Merlin and more like a young Goku.

He’s no longer someone who will wait on the sidelines hoping everything works out. Callum is now someone who will jump right into thick of things, against all odds and with a determination to save the day himself.

In short, he’s become someone like Rayla now.

Avatar
reblogged
Avatar
raayllum

cute braid though! :: a claudia meta

“Cute braid though!”

Ah, the line that set sail to a hundred Rayla/Claudia fanarts post-s1, and the soft-girl uwu characterization of Claudia that s1, and particularly s2, smashed thoroughly to pieces. So you know what? Let’s talk about it. Let’s talk about Claudia. 

Claudia is the second born child of Viren, and Soren’s younger sister. She grew up alongside Callum and Ezran and has a particular fondness and closeness to the former. While perhaps not returning his feelings for her, she does hold some semblance of affection for him. Claudia is incredibly loyal to her family and an out of the box thinker, coming up with a solution for Harrow’s predicament in the first few episodes that even her father could not. She’s also a talented mage, seemingly with both primal (sky) magic and Dark Magic, with the latter more so being her area of expertise. She seems to have a good memory, able to remember the various ingredients needed for Dark Magic, although she does carry an instructive tome with her. She isn’t squeamish and has a genuine sense of humour and love for history and learning about magic.

Despite the divorce of her parents, Claudia feels secure within her family, and far more secure than Soren “I don’t know what Dad will do to me,” certainly does. She doesn’t seem to have a lot of insecurity either, and can be quite smug when it comes down to it (her smirk when saying ‘trust,’ etc).

Claudia is by no means a Bad person… but that doesn’t make her a good one.

And the main reason I say this is due to what I perceive as Claudia’s fatal flaw: she disregards the feelings of others as less important than her own goals

This does not mean that Claudia is selfish or callous — although she certainly can be — but she does have a great capacity for dehumanizing others, disregarding their feelings, and flat out using people, too. And for an example of each, let’s look at some of her primary relationships. 

Avatar
reblogged
Avatar
raayllum

claudia/callum and rayllum parallels

There’s no denying that Claudia and Rayla are both very important people in Callum’s life. Callum considers them both good friends of his, enjoys spending time with them, will defend them, and has his relationship with both change drastically in S2. So while this isn’t a “which relationship is better,” type of post, my username probably makes it clear I do have a bias, but really I just have an interest in exploring the similarities and differences, so without further ado, here we go.

Sketches

Other people have commented very eloquently on the significance and differences between Callum’s sketches of Claudia and Rayla, so yet again I’d like to talk about the narrative significance of the drawing scene in 2x07. I’ve written a larger piece about this myself, but I also want to talk about the interesting way the information in this scene is relayed. Mostly, that we learn Callum has drawn Claudia seconds after we learn he’s drawing Rayla. Before this scene, we didn’t know that Callum had drawn Claudia

The fact we see Callum drawing Rayla, while his sketches of Claudia are put in the past, imparts two very important pieces of information. The first is that Rayla is the one currently on his mind, to the extent that randomly happening upon an old sketch of Claudia only makes Callum think about what he can do to help Rayla, instead. The second is to foreshadow future romantic interest, for reasons expanded upon in my meta enclosed above.

Then there are also the differences between the sketches of each girl. Claudia’s are softer, perhaps through a more rose tinted hue - or at least, a different side of Claudia than the one that revels in squeezing magic out of innocent creatures - whereas Rayla is more fully herself: serious, strong, her blades at the ready. I have no doubt that Callum is sketching them both from real life references, but the fact we see different portrayals of Rayla - one where she’s smiling, etc. - whereas both pictures of Claudia paint a very similar picture is also worthwhile, as well.

Then, there’s the way each relationship differs on physical intimacy.

Avatar
reblogged
Avatar
mystic-deep

It really kills me that people turn Viren in such a one dimensional character when he’s so much more than that. I especially enjoyed this season because the writers drew such clear parallels between him and Callum but also showed how much he actually has in common with Soren.

I mean we can all agree that it was devastating to see Soren in the hospital scene being happy that he couldn’t move because that means he can’t hurt anybody, but what trully broke me was this part:

It shows not only that Soren has really low self-esteem but also that he loves his dad and looks up to him, so much so that he wouldn’t even question murder because he thinks Viren must have a good reason. It’s also confirmed by Claudia when she tells Ez that Soren chose their dad when their parents split up. 

Now, you’re probably gonna ask me, what exactly can this sweet adorable goof have in common with lord Viren. Well, let’s get to this scene then:

So you’re probably thinking Viren is having a nervous breakdown and yelling at a mirror but I think this monolog has a much deeper meaning.

Viren is not talking about the mirror, HE’S TALKING ABOUT HIMSELF! He is nothing, he’s powerless and useless and he was the one that was supposed to be someone special and important. His frustration at not being able to decipher the mirror’s secret is just another drop in his glass filled with failures. He’s outburst sounds to me like the words he was forced to hear about himself maybe as a child or maybe even from his ex-wife.

What I like about him as a character is that he’s not really villainous, he’s more pragmatic. He also doesn’t have that self-preservation trait that most evil characters have. Viren was ready to sacrifice himself to save King Harrow, he was ready to sacrifice himself for the Queens of Duren and he went on what was probably a suicide mission in order to save hundreds of thousands.

I mean it really shows that he imprinted his view of the world, and of himself, on both his children. While Harrow and Sarai are there playing the great and supportive parents, raising their sons in believing in love and equality and forgiveness, Soren and Claudia have a more…realistic view of the world. 

I know he’s not a very likeable character, he’s not hot (because, if he was, we could forgive murder, right?), and he’s a shitty dad but I think that the writers have shown that he’s so much more than your typical bad guy. I know I’m not going to end up being disappointed with his character, whether the show runners have planned a redeeming arc for him or one of self destruction, I know it’s gonna be great.

You are using an unsupported browser and things might not work as intended. Please make sure you're using the latest version of Chrome, Firefox, Safari, or Edge.
mouthporn.net