The Time: Bedtime.
The Place: All over the place.
The
Situation: Something under the bed is
drooling.
“Question: Why do we
talk out loud when we know we’re alone?
Conjecture: Because we
know we’re not.”
This
episode deals primarily with the idea of fear. The Doctor is always afraid: it
is fear that made him run away from Gallifrey, and what keeps him alive each
episode to run again.
But is fear
itself justified? Panic, anxiety, nervousness – are these things, which govern
so much of who we are, legitimate parts to recognise in ourselves? The Doctor
descends into paranoia, believing that he has discovered evidence of an
“Evolutionary Hider” that has only ever revealed itself to sleepers.
As he deals
with his fear of the unknown, Clara and Danny deal with their more horrifying
fear of dating (also known as the fear of discovery), and are initially
conquered by it. The Doctor picks up Clara and they hurry off to investigate
Fear, using the TARDIS’ psychic interface to pinpoint a moment in time when the
‘Hider’ appears. They find themselves at the orphanage where Danny Pink grew
up, and help him confront a night terror.
“Let me tell you about ‘scared’; your heart is
beating so hard I can feel it through your hands. There’s so much blood and
oxygen pumping through your brain, it’s like RrrrROCKET FUEL! Right now, you
could run faster and you can fight harder, you can jump higher than ever in
your life. And you are so alert it’s like you can slow down time. What’s wrong
with ‘scared’? Scared is a superpower. It’s your superpower. There is danger in
this room. And guess what? It’s you.”
~The Doctor to Rupert Danny
Pink
The Doctor
determines that the way to survive the night terror is to give it what it
wants; for it to be unknown. To surrender curiosity to the primeval, and walk
away without an answer. This is because to him, not knowing is the greatest
terror. And to let fear win, he must not know.
The Doctor
also respect the rights of living beings (well, mostly), and one of those rights is privacy. As much as he wants an
answer to his theories, he would no more get them against the will of a Hider
than we would vivisect a human being. He infers that a Hider does not want to
be seen, and is respectful of that right. An odd thing, for one so curious. But
it helps establish the hierarchy of the Doctor’s moral code. He places the
comfort of living beings above scientific curiosity.
Clara
returns to confront her own fear with Danny. And messes it up, again. The
lesson hasn’t been learned yet, or possibly the wrong lesson has been learned.
Connection to a person doesn’t just come from knowing them better, or even
admitting your own unknowing. There’s something else elusive still left to
realize about Fear.
The Doctor
and Clara go to the end of the universe (temporally or directionally unclear,
just on the ‘last’ planet) and meet a time traveller. They spend a night
listening to the clanking of his timeship, wondering if there is something moving
outside in the barrens of the planet, or if they are imagining things.
What’s that in the mirror
Or the corner of your eye?
What’s that footstep following, but never
passing by?
Perhaps they’re out there waiting
Perhaps when we’re all dead
Out they’ll come a-slithering
From underneath the bed.
When they
leave, The Doctor is out cold and Clara psychically links to his distant past,
where a young Doctor is crying in a barn on Gallifrey, afraid of the Time War,
alone and terrified of the unknown. Clara hides beneath his bed to avoid being
seen, and instinctively reaches out to grab his foot when he gets out of bed.
This fulfills the features of the dream that triggered the Doctor’s paranoia in
the first place.
But then
Clara repeats what the Doctor told a young Danny Pink, and adds:
“Fear doesn’t have to make you cruel or
cowardly. Fear can make you kind.
So listen. If you listen to nothing else,
listen to this: You’re always going to
be afraid. Even if you learn to hide it. Fear is like… a companion. A constant
companion, always there. But that’s okay. Because fear can bring us together.
Fear can bring you home.
Fear makes companions of us all.”
~ Clara Oswald
Which is
quite beautiful.
Ultimately,
there never was an ‘Evolutionary Hider’ existing outside of the conceptual
world. The Doctor has been driven by his fear of the unknown to discover the
unknown. It has helped him become the Time Lord that terrified him as a young
boy.
Clara
returns to Danny one last time, and confesses her nerves got the better of her.
She faces her fear of discovery, and snogs him.
The
ultimate lesson is that fear is entirely legitimate, if you work with it, and
confront it, and examine everything it clings to. It’s the best friend you’ll
ever have, if you don’t push it away.
The Materialised Id |
*
The episode
also compounds on the nature of the Doctor-Companion relationship. Not only
because it links the companion with the Doctor’s fear, and suggest that he is
afraid of loving and keeping something beautiful and temporary with him through
danger, but because it is becoming increasingly obvious that the Doctor is
engaged in a vital struggle between the part of him that is a soldier and the
part that is a Doctor. This exchange is particularly revealing:
“I don’t take orders, Clara.”
“Do as you’re told.”
Clara is,
from the moment we meet her and in several incarnations to follow, a Governess,
put in charge of other people – frequently naughty children. It is her
responsibility to command, officiate, and give orders.
As such she
(and many other companions) act as the Doctor’s commanding officer, as someone
who he respects being in command. In
his war against soldiers, he has identified the true reason he dislikes them: they
follow bad orders. Military orders.
The doctrine of destruction, over the doctrine of investigation.
So he
determines that for the part of him that is a soldier to be a good soldier, it
needs a good officer: a companion/commander who negates the doctrine of war he
learned under the Time Lords with a directive to be as the rest of him is; a
scientist.
His second
companion, Fear, is not an executive officer. It gives two orders whenever it
appears: Discover, or Shut Your Eyes. Understand, or Destroy. 12/13th’s
of him know the right answer. The part that is a soldier doesn’t, and needs a
human companion to enforce the correct directive.
The Psychoanalytical Model:
This
episode really lends itself to psychoanalysis, particularly the fundamental
Id–Ego–Superego model that plays such a huge role in that framework. The
episode uses Time to establish a ‘ladder’ of sorts on which to place these
mental personas, in typical fashion with the Super-Ego on the ‘top’ of Time
(the future) and the Id at the ‘bottom’ of Time (the childhood past).
At the
bottom of the ladder is the Id, the unconscious realm of unexplored desires,
anxieties and impulses. This realm is a place of fluctuation and whim, not yet
settled into a structure of established rules or contextual understanding. It
is seen as being most active in a child, who has not yet gained the experience
of reality necessary to grow a healthy skeletal frame to flesh with percepts.
In Listen we are told that it is in
childhood we are most open to the evolutionary Hider, and that it is from
childhood that we dredge up the memory of its hand grasping an ankle. The episode
takes us into the lives of two children, Danny and Doctor Who, both plagued by
anxiety over this invisible monster.
The natural assumption is that because
fear arises from the Id, the 'monster' must originate from the Id, too. But
Clara’s metamorphosis into the monster proves otherwise – a child’s fear is of not
knowing, and while fear originates from
the Id what it does not know is actually the Super-Ego, the elaborate ‘Governess’ of contextual ideas that
resides on the other side of the mental spectrum.
The Materialised Super-Ego |
We approach
the Super-Ego at the end of the temporal universe, where the ultimate consequences
of the framework of material things comes to light. The destination is bleak
and fatalistic – there is no life, no apparent governing order or promise of
continuity. Just an endless desert, and death. But faced with the demolition of
the idea that ‘life succeeds’, The Doctor is not convinced. He still holds to
the idea that there is life Hiding, waiting until it has outlasted all others
so that it might claim the universe and assert its supremacy. In a way he needs
the 'Hider' at the end of time more than anything, because it will justify his
own support of life, his hatred of the Daleks, and his immortal explorations,
by asserting that there is a universal will and not simply an atheistic
disintegration of the universe. He is willing to face his fear to confirm this,
needing this hidden companion, his Super-Ego, to justify the actions fear has
driven him to. Fear is what makes him seek out the unknown.
The Doctor
is knocked out before there is a definite answer to the nature of the Super-Ego
and the story returns to the Id so Clara can play her part, filling in for the
fact that the Super-Ego is absent. The lesson we learn in the barn is that
while the Super-Ego may never be known, the Ego will perpetuate its own
hierarchical one-upmanship over the Id, demanding that the response to fear can
be courage and investigation. In something of a twist, this asserts the
importance of a subjective attitude to objectives. Egos must continue to fight
the flux of nightmares and anxieties even should the Super-Ego at least
superficially appear to act against them, because in the course of narrative it
may come to pass that the actions of the Ego create the Super-Ego.
Clara Super-imposed as the Super-Ego |
Following on
from the discovery that there is no Super-Ego, Clara attempts to hide it, fulfilling
the final requirement for the establishment of a False Doctrine. Clara
commands, “Do as you are told”, which can be rephrased as “Have Faith”, hiding
the truth about the Evolutionary Hider from The Doctor and creating the schism
between transcendence and discovery which resigns him to his place of perpetual
Ego. In this sense it becomes a profoundly religious episode, featuring the
classic narrative creation of an Ideology:
- The personality of a young boy is forever shaped during a childhood nativity – born in a barn, if you will – when he as an Idiot is visited by a higher power, becoming aware of the Super-Ego and ascending to the Ego median.
- The higher power then commits to a false doctrine in order to ensure the obeisance of its follower. (“Do as you are told.”/ There is a God.)
- The higher power thus establishes a conditional rule which is unachievable, and must be broken in order to experience subjective freedoms (to exist).
- A moment comes when it is impossible to identify the existence or validity of the higher power and, forsaken by God, the character of the narrative must either turn to blind faith or become an atheist.
Accepting
or denying the Higher Power at the end of the narrative is a crucial point in
the story. In the case of subjugation to faith, a religious doctrine is formed.
In the case of atheistic denial, a personal doctrine is formed around the idea
that there is nothing provably greater than the Ego. The Doctor does as he is
told and can be seen therefore to be accepting subjugation – but it is important
to stress this is only subjugation in 1/13th of his personality, the
part he knows to be a soldier. The rest of him has its own God Complex,
asserting itself as a righteous universal dictator (It has a dominant Ego). In
short he believes in ‘God’, or in his companion, who he elevates to the level
of a ‘God’ by marking them out as his equal.
Harkening
back to the part about The Soldier needing a good Officer, this means The
Doctor is only willing to follow a good religious doctrine. But he also has his
personal Doctrine, which might be viewed as equally important. In terms of the
psychoanalytic model this means the episode concludes on middle ground,
speaking out both for the benefits of Ideology and for the liberation of the
Ego, and suggests they are not mutually exclusive.
Fear as the Companion
It is
interesting that Clara is the one who inspires this ideology, and then compares
the fear to a companion and by extension to herself*.
*I do
sometimes wonder if the companions see The Doctor as their companion. That they
never mention it seems to accept that The Doctor is the central figure of the
story, which is a decidedly unhuman thing to do – we generally see ourselves as
the central character in our own lives.
What do
Fear and other Companions have in common?
Another
implication is that fear is relatively constant, rather than a fleeting emotion
that only exists for the extent of a situation. Placed in these terms it is
something that can have a relationship built with it, even be understood,
predicted, and directed. It becomes less of a liability and more of an asset
when viewed in this way, as it gains narrative continuity. It can be seen as a
relationship that gains strength and complexity over time. This is a
particularly interesting quality because it allows Fear to gain a kind of personality,
but forces us to recognize that the personality is purely based on our
responses to its presence, not to its actual nature. Fear becomes a Hider
because we hide it. Fear becomes a monster because we feel inferior to it. Fear
can thus become a companion because we choose to accept and trust it.
How often
do we really make up a person’s personality based on our reactions to their mere
presence? We see people as brave because we ourselves are timid. We see them as
vain, and enforce that belief by refusing to learn more about something that
appears to reveal all of its qualities immediately. We see people as
flirtatious because we ourselves desire them, and want their actions to have
deeper, romantic meanings. In the end that’s all us, broadcast onto others to
make them something we can more readily comprehend.
This is something
particularly evident over the course of Clara and Pink’s date. They keep clashing
because of the assumptions they have made in order to deal with the fact that
they are strangers. Clara immediately boots up Pink in her assumptions about soldiers.
Pink in return coats her in his assumptions about civilians. Both Clara & Pink
cloak the date itself with the ‘personality’ of dating, and what it’s ‘supposed’
to be. They struggle with the idea of secrets and honesty, when the time comes
to probe those false personalities. Clara makes the fatal assumption that Danny
will not be able to understand the complex truth of her time-travelling double
life. It is only at the very end, when they choose to combat their own
assumptions and accept that they are strangers that they stand any chance of
becoming each other’s companions.
Fear is a lot like that. You have to abandon
denial and delusion and fear intensely before there can be any hope in
understanding it.
The Psychic Interface
Aside from
being a convenient plot device, the TARDIS’ Psychic Interface is a metaphoric
symbol for the slightly yucky task of delving into the Id. Oddly foamy,
presumably slimy and squelchy, the interface is immediately identified in the
mind as something disgusting that could be dangerous to touch, like the body of
a jelloid sea-creature washed up on a beach. This is an important association
often made with the Id, something usually suppressed, ‘pushed down’ or flushed away
on account of it holding those associations with the uncivilized and unclean.
Clara has to touch the Id in order to find the answers the Doctor is looking
for. The interface then proves its danger by latching on to Clara’s unconscious
desires and bringing them out in the open. As is often the case when delving
into the Id, there is no control and usually embarrassment or shame attached to
that lack of control.
The deep and lovely
Dark. We’d never see the stars without it.
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