**SPOILER ALERT**

 

THE SIDEWAYS WORLD

 

The thing I latched on to the most in the sideways world was also the part that was the most relieving; the island was real. For everything that seemed too far-fetched to resemble anything we know in real life, there was something that almost every human could relate to in some way, shape or form. Sure, a huge column of angry black smoke wasn’t something that any of us could relate to in real life, but haven’t we all found ourselves in a situation similar to an island castaway at one point or another? Certainly these characters were ‘lost’ souls since we first met them and we learned that some of them were tortured in ways that we will hopefully never have to experience. However in every character’s story, their complex emotions which led to their reactions and motivations are certainly coming from a place that is easy for most people to understand or relate to. In television and film, characters and their traits and behaviors are often exaggerated to ensure that the point of their story is driven home. That being said, I have always felt that the behavior of these characters as they interacted with each other and dealt with the diverse and unpredictable variables that were thrown their way was executed to near realistic perfection. ‘Realism’ is not quite the word that most people think about when it comes to Lost. Which is why it is such an achievement that the writers were able to build an intricate and compelling character-based story around a fantasy environment that was beyond the realm of our comprehension. After all, none of us can say from experience that ‘this is how someone would act when confronting a monster made of smoke’. While time travel is something that is studied and researched, no one can claim that they are the authority on realism when it comes to traveling backwards or forward in time. But the combination of brilliant writing and (mostly) great acting, helped us to believe in this story despite the improbable and even impossible elements. I could even go on a tangent about what we think is impossible and what is actually possible even though humans may not be privileged enough to fully comprehend it.

 

When you think about it, all we ever cared about were these characters because it was the characters, not the island that we were so invested in all along. Sure, the island mysteries were compelling and intriguing and we desperately wanted answers! Just like we desperately seek answers to the questions that haunt us in real life. The fact of the matter is we simply won’t get the answers to some of the questions we seek in life. The real life that we know allows people to die without explaining themselves, it boggles the mind that our earth is merely a grain of sand on a gigantic beach known as the universe. We wish we could know the answers to life’s most inquisitive mysteries and we wish we could gain some sense of peace or closure even if it meant doing things that we know are not humanly possible. Many unanswered questions will be pondered in our lifetimes, but perhaps there is none greater than the meaning of life in general and what happens to us when we die. Everyone has their own interpretations and beliefs in regard to this query, which brings us back to Lost as a series and particularly, what the finale told us.

 

Season 6 used a ‘sideways world’ as a narrative device and I may be in the minority of people that feels it was completely unnecessary, but yet very satisfying at the same time. The last 15 minutes of the series was explaining what the sideways world was. It was telling us that everyone in this world was already dead, but hadn’t yet realized it in the context of that world. (Interesting sidenote: How do we know we aren’t waiting for that same awakening as we live the lives we currently live?)

 

That thought aside, the sideways world provided us with the stories of each characters’ supernatural journeys to the ultimate afterlife. In other words, while the stories in the sideways world were never actually happening in reality, they were still explaining the mindset of the characters had they been given the opportunity to craft their own existence independent of the variables of the human condition. I’m not even sure that makes the sense I want it to make, but imagine an existence where you could live your life as the person you wanted to be if you hadn’t made the mistakes and decisions you made in your actual life. It’s like a second chance. The second chance that none of us will ever have because it’s the chance to change the path that your life would have taken had you done things differently. That is not to say that the decisions and even mistakes that we make are things that we want to erase. Sometimes a mistake can lead you to happiness that you never would have achieved had you not made that decision. In fact, it is impossible to pin point one decision as the one that led you to a certain point or place, because every move we make is ultimately guiding us down our path. In the sideways world they are not trying to change their paths or erase past decisions or mistakes, but rather experiencing a different life based on the lessons they learned while they were alive. It’s kind of like the classic line ‘if I had it to do over again’. But they aren’t doing it over again in a real life as we know it, they are doing it in a stage between death and the final afterlife. And they aren’t doing it with the knowledge or memory of the things that they would have liked to change, they are doing it based on the person that they ultimately became when they were alive. In the finale, Jack talks about this sentiment with Desmond when he tells him that there are no shortcuts or resets. Jack tried to do that once (with the hydrogen bomb plan) and it didn’t work, but that very mistake (as well as countless other decisions he has made throughout his life) helped shape Jack and led him to where he is both physically and spiritually. Every decision that each of these individuals has made over the course of their entire lives not only led them to where they ended up, but it led them to each other, and in each others presence, they experienced their most important defining moments on the road to whatever person they would eventually become, even if it was only shortly before their end in some cases.

 

The awakenings are the characters remembering their mortal lives, and coming to an understanding of what got them to where they are, and what ultimately led them down their life’s path which would inevitably led to their deaths. Once that realization occurs, they are enlightened to the point where they can finally let go of their corporeal struggles that they experienced in their real lives. In other words, the length of time it takes for a soul to let go or move on from their earthly life, depends on what they were holding on to at the time of their death and how difficult it was for them to attempt to overcome it in real life. This after-death existence is meant to help cleanse the soul so that it can truly be free of all earthly burdens before finally passing into the afterlife.

 

The explanation of the sideways world satisfied me because it gave me an interpretation of a possible scenario for the soul after one dies. More importantly, the sideways world really satisfied me because it gave the characters an opportunity to reconcile, reminisce, explain, apologize and find the peace that they longed for after someone or something important to them was lost in their real lives. I absolutely loved the conversation between Ben and Locke outside of the church. Ben came to grips with his real life issues and admitted to himself and John Locke that he was jealous and selfish because Locke was everything that Ben wished he could be. I’d also like to think that at some point Jack told John that he was right about everything and should have believed him instead of vehemently and even violently opposing him. It’s a world where the castaways were able to be forgiven for the errors of their ways and reach redemption, while at the same time their souls can now be free by completing the puzzle to their hearts with those they loved the most. It’s the very idea that I think most people would like to believe exists. The idea that you can reunite and live happily ever after with your loved ones in an afterlife even if their times of death are decades apart. There was a point where I thought about how everyone met with their soul mate or true love in the church and felt bad that poor John wasn’t reunited with Helen, whom I believe he really loved. I guess the point was that she wasn’t there with John during his true defining moments of his life, which for everyone in there, happened on the island. That, as well as the fact that John’s enlightenment came courtesy of him remembering his connection with the island itself made it seem as if it was the island that was John’s soul mate. Jack had been semi-triggered to enlightenment by Kate, and ultimately we are meant to understand that Kate and Jack truly loved each other and their souls were meant to be together, but we also see that it was the empty coffin and Jack’s father that truly enlightened him because it was the unfinished business and guilt of his father’s death that Jack truly needed to let go of before he could move on.

 

All of that being said, I feel that the sideways world was unnecessary to the overall story of Lost especially because so many people I have talked to, are harping on the sideways world and how it was not the ending that they had hoped for. I have heard people call it a cop-out and a slapped together ending because the writers couldn’t think of anything better to do. I disagree completely. If anything, the writers created the sideways world and this afterlife ending as a gift to the fans who wanted to see their beloved characters have a happy ending, rather than just an unsatisfying and in some cases, a seemingly meaningless death. I am starting to believe that people think they would be happier with the finale and series as a whole if the sideways world and explanation of the afterlife was never included.

 

And to you people I say this: If you got more answers to the mysteries of the island instead of the sideways world, you would have been disappointed in the fact that you got no closure or happy ending for everyone you became attached to that perished throughout the series. The sideways world sort of doubled as a way to ‘resurrect’ these characters that have died without actually bringing them back to life. I know that for me personally, I would have been disappointed if I never got to hear another word out of the real John Locke’s mouth with recognition of his island life. Do you think you would have been happier if the Locke we all knew and loved died a confused and broken man? Not me, but I guess that’s just one man’s opinion. I admit that I too expected something slightly different, perhaps even something that would have been less realistic. I also think that my (and many others’) initial expectations for what the sideways world was or could be, was skewed by the fact that we were led to believe that the hydrogen bomb that Jack dropped in Dharmaville at the end of season 5 had something to do with its existence. But hey, that’s what we call a twist, and as Lost fans we ought to be used to them by now.

 

So the detonation of the hydrogen bomb (if it even blew up) had nothing to do with the sideways world. The incident was what it always was: an unplanned, chaotic reaction to drilling into the pocket of electromagnetic energy. Jack and company created a more chaotic situation and lives were lost that may not have been, but even had they not been there, Radzinsky still would have insisted on the drilling and that is why he was punished into the role of button pusher until he eventually killed himself in the swan hatch after Kelvin had shown up. As I eluded to earlier, I am not convinced that the bomb even detonated and it was actually the penetration of the drill into the pocket of energy that made everything fade to white and flash our characters back to the present time.

 

So yes, I was fooled into thinking the sideways world was something different, but I certainly don’t have a problem with what it turned out to be and it was not even remotely the point of Lost as a whole series. So for those that are disappointed with that aspect of this season or the finale, remember that it merely explains the writers’ interpretation of an afterlife experience. What’s that? You’re disappointed because you wanted to know more about the island? Read my analysis and interpretation of the island story below...

 

ISLAND WORLD

 

So you want to know more about the island, its origins, its history and the general mysteries that it has taunted you with for the better part of six years. I understand, I too long for certain answers that they did not provide us with, but if you read my ‘sideways world’ finale analysis, you have realized that I am on the side of the entire story being all about the characters. It always was, and so it ended as such. The most important part of the overall story was the journey and change that took place in these characters. It was the way they reacted to a multitude of challenges and obstacles and how each time they overcame something or fought for their cause or belief, it changed them and shaped them. The island tested these characters, but it was not a place where people went in order to prove themselves before they died.

 

The island was a real place that you or I can go to, we just don’t know how to get there or where it is exactly. Now that Hurley is running the show, the path one must take to get there and/or even leave the island might be different, but what remains the same is the fact that the island must be protected. Therefore it will continue to always be on-the-move, so that it is not easy to find and exploit. Only this time when people find it, they may encounter a different, less frightening experience especially since there is no more smoke monster. Perhaps if they want to leave, they will be granted access without nearly as many trials and tribulations, but that is up to Hurley now. And ‘the rules’ are now created and enforced by Hurley, rendering Jacob’s set of rules irrelevant. People will come, and eventually one of those people will replace Hurley as protector of the island. Perhaps this time though, Hurley will let fate bring people to the island, rather than guiding and influencing them towards it.

 

One thing we should take from the series and the finale especially, is that everything seems to be a cyclical pattern. Which unfortunately for Hurley may mean that he will be murdered, but that’s for us to decide in our ideal interpretation of how things pan out after Jack closes his eye. Maybe Christian’s explanation to Jack that some died before him and some died long after him is a way of implying that Hurley ran the island for another thousand some odd years. Or maybe ‘long time’ doesn’t imply thousands or even hundreds of years, but perhaps it implies 60 or 70 years because Hurley didn’t want to live a supernatural life as Jacob did. I am going with the theory that during Hurley’s tenure as island protector, Walt somehow manages to wash up on the island via shipwreck or plane crash and is groomed for the role of island protector for when Hurley needs to be replaced. The only thing we know for sure is that the island continues to exist and because of that, the rest of us can go on living our lives they way we do now.

 

Everyone has some good within them, even those that seem to be bad people. This has proven to be the case with many of the characters that we have gotten to know. Some were more bad than good, some made complete transformations and some people were led into bad decisions that made them feel or seem like a bad person even if they were coming from a good place. Ben, Sayid, Kate, Sawyer, Michael, Tom, Ana Lucia, Mr. Eko, and Ethan are just some of the names that immediately come to mind.

 

The good within everybody is that little bit of light that ‘mother’ told her boys was within everyone. The same light that was located at the heart of the island. The light that was the literal source of the island’s existence and all good in the world, and if that light was put out on the island, it would be put out in everyone in the entire world. So when that light was temporarily out, it allowed the smoke monster to lose its immortality so that it could be killed, but the smoke monster himself was not the source of evil. So it was not enough to simply kill him despite the statement, ‘if he leaves the island it will unleash evil onto the entire world.’ It was the fact that in order for him to leave, the island had to be ‘uncorked’ first. The ‘uncorking’ was the real unleashing of the evil on to the world, which is why the cork needed to be put back so that the light can once again shine bright and the world as we know it could be saved. Jacob’s cork metaphor was actually more literal than we thought.

 

Desmond had to be the one to uncork it because nobody else would have been able to survive the electromagnetic energy long enough to get the job done. That being said, I don’t know why Desmond couldn’t have also been the one to put the cork back, thus saving the world and Jack without harming himself. But he did offer to do so, and Jack was determined to do it himself. Maybe it was Jack’s island protector knowledge that led him to the conclusion that Hurley was really the one destined for the job, and this was the only way for Jack to turn over the throne immediately. But why didn’t Jack also turn into a smoke monster? He was down in the same place and was seemingly hit with the same electromagnetic energy that the Man in Black experienced, but Jack had not murdered the protector of the island like the Man in Black just had, thus he was not overtaken and cursed or trapped by the evil as punishment for that sin. Also, there is evidence that the structure/cork apparatus down there was built after the Man in Black was turned into the Smoke Monster (more on that below) and thus, the Man in Black would have likely been subject to a different, more raw and volatile environment when he was thrown down there. Still, I believe that if this light is the source of all the good in the world, it would not have taken too kindly to what the Man in Black had just done to it’s protector. Jack was spit out of the cave and appeared to land in the same place that the body of the Man in Black landed, but unlike the Man in Black, Jack’s body and soul were still connected even though Jack was about to die because of his wounds and exposure to the electromagnetic energy (as indicated by his bloody nose).

 

Widmore knew that Desmond was a weapon to be used against the Smoke Monster, because he knew that ultimately the cork had to be pulled in order to kill the Smoke Monster. He was given this information by Jacob as a measure of last resort, but we did not see Jacob tell the remaining candidates exactly what needed to be done to slay the beast. This was because Jacob’s life’s work was trying to prove that people could make the right decision without intervention. Jacob embodied the innocence of blind faith, and ultimately wanted the new protector of the island to possess this quality as well. Jack had been going through this transformation of ‘man of science’ to ‘man of faith’ already, but he drank and fully swallowed that blind faith when he officially took on the role of island protector. Jack didn’t know for sure what would happen, but his faith led him to the conclusions he came to and he turned out to be right about the slaying of the monster and what needed to happen to save the island and the world. A victory for Jacob’s principles and beliefs.

 

So what about the cork and the structure that was clearly man-made down in the depths of that cave? We saw skeletons of those that perished in either their curiosity and pursuit of knowledge, or they died in the process of building the structure/cork apparatus that we saw in the finale. We also saw markings that appeared to be ancient Egyptian hieroglyphics on the cork. I believe that this is an indication that the structures built around that light were built by the next inhabitants on the island after ‘mother’ killed all of the Man in Black’s original group. That group was trying to build the donkey wheel system before ‘mother’ killed them. (Sidenote: I think that mother was able to kill everyone on the island with her protector powers, but I don’t necessarily think she was a smoke monster herself. My main reason for this, is that she was able to be killed and the smoke monster was not) I believe it is also safe to assume that the next people to come to the island were Egyptians based on the timeline we were given as well as the appearance of an ancient Egyptian game that washed up on the beach. The game that ‘mother’ clearly did not leave on the beach on purpose with the intention to be found, despite what she told the then Boy in Black. The truth is, the game washed up on shore because the Egyptians were close to the island and ‘mother’ wanted to keep the two boys sheltered from knowing that there was other land and other life beyond the island and across the sea.

 

So with the help of the smoke monster, (likely in the shape of his former body) the Egyptians finished the donkey wheel apparatus, hence why there is hieroglyphics and man-made structures down there. Unfortunately for the Man in Black, he was no longer a man anymore, so even though his donkey wheel creation did in fact work as he thought it would, he could not turn the wheel and teleport himself off the island because he was not actually human anymore and was bound to the island. This must have been the point at which he decided that Jacob needed to die in order to break the spell that was trapping him in the first place. Once Jacob was dead, it was the Smoke Monster’s intention to kill all potential candidates as well, in order to complete the elimination of an island protector, thus setting him free of this curse. It was only at the very end, with knowledge of the information that Charles Widmore gave him that Smokey came to the realization that he could destroy the entire island and finally do away with all potential candidates and new island protectors in one fell swoop.

 

Did Ajira 316 make it off the island and land safely? I think it did, but that question is very unimportant to me because regardless of their story, the island still exists and people from the main lands still know about it, will try to find it and will most likely try to exploit it eventually. After all, we don’t know when Eloise passed away and she had a method for locating it. We don’t know who Ben’s butcher friends are, but it’s safe to assume they know about the island and will at some point try to access it for some reason. I think it’s also safe to assume that people will accidentally stumble upon the island. I know it’s almost blasphemous to claim that anything happens by accident when it comes to Lost and the island, but instead of accident, let’s call it fate. As indicated by Ben when Hurley was first coming to grips with his new position, there was Jacob’s way and there will be Hurley’s way, which might be a better way. So I don’t think Hurley will call out to people and bring or push them towards the island like Jacob did, but when they come, they will fight, corrupt and destroy. How Hurley deals with those situations is up to him, but amongst the new visitors there will be candidates to become the new protector of the island, and when destiny somehow brings Walt back to the island, he will eventually be ushered in as the new protector.

 

The only thing left to ponder in my mind is why there were fertility and pregnancy issues on the island from the late 1970’s to the present. (Assuming that Ethan’s birth is an indication that pregnancy was not a problem on the island before the late 1970’s) That being the case, I think that it is safe to assume that it was the incident of drilling into the electromagnetic energy at the building site of the swan station that was causing the fertility/pregnancy issues. ‘The Others’ probably realized that this unstable electromagnetic radiation was a potential cause for the pregnancy problems, which is why they recruited Juliet to the island since through her work and research she had been able to successfully impregnate her sister, who had previously not been able to conceive because of her radiation cancer treatment. So to truly tie it up in a nice, neat little package, let’s assume that women can now conceive and give birth on the island without complications since the pocket of energy below the swan station was fully released and is no longer a threat after Desmond turned the failsafe key below the hatch. Unless of course there were always pregnancy problems on the island for those that conceived and tried to give birth on the island, but that would mean that Horace and Amy had to have traveled off the island to conceive Ethan. I am cool with either scenario being the truth.

 

So that’s that! I am at peace with it all. I have the answers to the questions that I wanted, even the ones that I had to piece together on my own. The clues were there and I am sure there are more of them planted in places that we didn’t realize before. With each time we watch the series, we pick up on something, or even more importantly learn something new. Lost was such an amazing show because it was not just a thorough and entertaining piece of writing, it was an experience. The psychological and spiritual journey that Lost takes the viewer on is unlike any show I have ever seen before. Shows before Lost and shows after Lost will certainly exercise your brain, but Lost begs you to ask questions about faith, love, purpose and the development of the character and person that we are now and will become. Throughout the course of the series, the characters, relationships, hardships, situations, decisions, reactions, reconciliations and redemptions were all a metaphor for real life. That is why a large majority, if not all of their fan base (myself included) can find a way to relate or become inspired by Lost, which is also why I am happy that the writers didn’t give us all the answers, because in life we can never have all the answers to all of our questions, and it is our imagination, creativity and blind faith that keeps us going despite our unanswered questions that we’ll never get the answers to. Or at least not until we find each other and that enlightenment in our ‘sideways world’.

 

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Season 6, Episodes 1-5

I know we are only a few weeks into the final season and clearly there is much more to come. With this being the final season, we are getting answers every single week. Sometimes we get real significance and sometimes we get tiny clues. At first I was a little surprised that there continues to be so much mystery even with some major answers revealed, but I shouldn’t have expected anything less from the brilliance of the Lost writers. Of course they’re going to make you think about it before they wrap it up! That being said, let’s go through some of the things we know for sure (or at least what we’re meant to believe) and see if we can come to any solid conclusions or theories of what is to come.

So we know that numbers have corresponding people attached to them, people who are listed not only on a wall that Jacob wrote on, but also on the lighthouse compass or wheel that Hurley brought Jack to. When your number is being pointed at in the lighthouse, the mirror shows where said person lives so that they can be watched. So now we sort of understand some of the significance of Hurley’s numbers:

4 – Locke

8 – Reyes

15 – Ford

16 – Jarrah 

23 – Shepherd

42 – Kwon

But we still have no idea why they surface in various other places, most prominently on the hatch wall and inside the hatch as the set of numbers that needed to be entered every 108 minutes.

Might these numbers and corresponding names also have something to do with the compass bearing that one must follow for coming and going to the island? Maybe knowing who number 305 is would help shed light on that. Could it be Hume? Jacob indicated that the point of Hurley’s journey to the lighthouse was to force Jack to see the imagery that he ended up seeing, but he also asked Hurley to turn the wheel to 108. We know that 108 is the sum of the infamous ‘numbers’ and was also the amount of minutes that the hatch computer resets to after the button was pushed. Of course 108 was also the amount of days that the 815 survivors were on the island before the Oceanic 6 went home. So clearly this number is important, but the name corresponding with 108 is someone named Wallace. Whoever Wallace is, I am guessing that he is important, but not necessarily the person that Jacob wants to find the island. Also, I am sure I need not even mention to the hard-core losties of the connection between the lighthouse being the place where Hurley was sent to help someone find the island, and the DHARMA lamppost station (which Hawking told us is the only place where the island can be found from the mainland) is a logo of a lighthouse. 

Locke monster told Sawyer that the people written on the wall (and we now know on the lighthouse wheel) were potential candidates to take over Jacob’s role as protector of the island. If this is true, does that mean all names that are crossed out are dead? (like Locke’s name) Or can potential candidates be crossed off for other reasons?

Also, if any of this is true, what will determine the new protector? Is it the last man standing? Which brings me to my next point…what if it’s not a man? The others mentioned in season 3 that Jack was not on Jacob’s list. If this is in fact Jacob’s list, many (including myself) believed that the ‘Shephard’ name refers to Jack’s father, Christian. This theory was basically solidified for me when Jack saw his old house in the mirror in the lighthouse. Jack even said that he ‘hasn’t lived there for many years’ indicating that whoever is watching Shephard probably wasn’t trying to keep an eye on Jack as he has not lived there for a long time. That being said, by the time Jack sees the lighthouse, Christian has been dead (and on the island) for 3 years – leading me to the theory that perhaps the ‘Shephard’ indicated on the cave wall and Lighthouse wheel is actually Jack’s mother. Perhaps this is the mysterious person that Jacob was asking Hurley to help find the island.

 


Taking all this into account and assuming Locke Monster was telling the truth about the meaning of the names being potential candidates, is he also telling the truth about it not making a difference? And wanting to go home? So far it seems like he was a real man at some point, but then somehow became entrapped on the island bound by the mysterious rules. He may in fact want to go home (whatever that may mean) but it seems like the impending war that we keep hearing about has to happen first, hence why Locke Monster is ‘recruiting’, according to Ilana. Last we saw Locke Monster, Sawyer agreed to go with him because he too wanted to go home or leave the island. We now see that Locke Monster is ‘with’ Claire, and in more ways than one. Not only is he now geographically in the same place, but Claire told Jin that she was ‘not alone’ when Jin asked her about where she had been and what she was doing on the island for the past 3 years. This implies that Locke Monster was protecting her and on her side presumably right after she died and was claimed. She also mentions that both ‘her friend’ (whom we now know is Smoke Locke) and her father (whom we know is Christian) told her that ‘the others’ have her baby. We remember that Claire was seen in the cabin along side Christian, who I assumed to have been Smokey at that time, and Claire said ‘I’m with him.’ That line in conjunction with what Claire said about not being alone in the most recent episode seems like it would solidify the theory that despite Smokey being stuck as Locke now, he was able to change forms at will before Jacob died. Appearing at certain times as Christian, Yemi, Alex, Boone and possibly Walt, all in an effort to manipulate and lead people in a certain direction. The reasons behind this theory seemed simple. I mean, how many entities on this island can just shift shapes? I guess that might remain to be seen, but it all seemed so perfect for it to have all been Smokey every time. One can definitely make the argument that the appearance of dead people were showing up so that they can influence, manipulate and move players into position (and you can even argue that these entities were moving pieces with Smokey’s interests in mind). But since Claire referred to her father and her friend as seemingly different people or entities, it really becomes even more confusing and sort of dispels the theory that it was Smokey each time we’ve seen a ‘ghost’. But on the other hand, Claire may remember seeing and talking to her father before she was completely overtaken by infection, not to mention she probably had never realized that her father was dead, therefore she wouldn’t have found it any weirder than just coincidence that Christian was alive on the island.



Though, while that theory may still somewhat be a possibility, I am definitely beginning to think that there is another explanation for the appearance of Christian, Yemi, Alex, etc. after they’re dead. Why? Because there’s a small blonde kid that seems to appear and disappear to Smoke Locke in a similar fashion to these other ‘ghost’ people and Smoke Locke seems surprised that Sawyer can see him, but I’ll touch on that in just a minute.

So knowing what we know, it certainly seems like Locke Monster’s army is shaping up to be Claire, (which now allows us to assume that eventually Sayid will be a part of the Smoke team as well) and Sawyer (if he continues to go along with it) Now, Claire being with Smoke Locke also begs some other interesting questions. We know from Dogen that Claire was ‘infected’ and overtaken by darkness. He is claiming that the same thing is happening to Sayid. Sayid, we know was pronounced dead and then came back to life as this supposed ‘infected’ being. Which safely leads me to believe that my assumptions from the last 2 seasons are correct in that Claire is in fact dead. As mentioned in my last post, I think she may have died when the freighter people blew up her house in season 4, and was then quickly ‘claimed’ by this ‘infection’ which we now know has much (if not everything) to do with the Smoke Monster. So the question is: Is the Smoke Monster building an army of only dead people? If so, does Sawyer have to die? Is Sawyer already dead and claimed? After all, Sawyer saw the young blonde child in the jungle much to Smoke Locke’s surprise. Or maybe Sawyer is alive and he is the one that the young blonde child is referring to when he tells Smoke Locke that he ‘can’t kill him’ – Maybe Smokey can’t kill with the intent to recruit? Or maybe Sawyer is just much more important than any of us imagined. After all, Dogen really wanted him to stay at the temple. 



Other thoughts: I don’t think Jack’s son’s mother is Sarah. I believe the mother may be Libby as there is a connection there with the son being named David, and Libby’s dead husband being named David as well. Seeing as how this is an alternate universe, one never knows if Libby and David even met and were married in the first place. I am not ruling out the chance that it is someone other than Libby, but right now I am assuming we have met them before. But even if the marriage went bad, its curious as to why Jack has had no involvement in his son’s life until recently. And why wasn’t David’s mother at his recital? Is she still alive? Either way it sounds sort of similar to Michael’s situation with Walt before getting on Oceanic 815.

One thing that seems to be certain about the alternate timeline is that everything that happens is somehow similar to the events that took place in the original timeline and on the island. Island people are ‘randomly’ meeting each other left and right in the alternate timeline and there will definitely be more to come. Of course, not everything has or will happen in exactly the same way. It’s like the game is panning out slightly different, but the players are the same and most likely, the game will end the same as well. So having had this realization, it got me thinking about what may be to come. Here are a few potential storylines that may unfold in the alternate timeline:

 

  • Kate winds up with or taking care of Aaron again – maybe Kate is hiding from the law with Claire – maybe Claire gets wrongfully accused for Kate’s crime and goes to jail, once again losing her baby and perhaps meeting up with Charlie in jail since her relationship with Charlie was so prevalent when they were on the island.
  • Locke’s spine and paralysis is fixed by Jack. This allows him to once again walk and he will regain faith, as he currently seems as though he is not a man of faith in the alternate timeline. Perhaps that faith will be short-lived though because if Helen died in the original timeline, I think there’s a good chance she’ll die in the alternate one.
  • That being said about Helen’s possible fate, I think there is also a decent chance that other Lostees that died on the island will also die in the alternate timeline, just in different ways. i.e. Boone, Shannon, Ana Lucia, Charlie, Arzt, etc.
  • Seems like Locke is close with his father, yet he’s still paralyzed. Safe to assume his father didn’t do it to him, so then how did it happen? Well, I have a sneaky suspicion that it might have been the Man in Black that crippled Locke in the alternate timeline. We are seeing all kinds of island inhabitants appearing in the alternate timeline, so why not the Man in Black? (a.k.a. the Smoke Monster before he became the Smoke)
  • Perhaps we’ll see Michael Dawson involved with Sun and Jin’s story. Will Sun develop a relationship with Michael when Jin is detained or in jail? Maybe Michael will be a security guard or police officer that will assist in the Kwon investigation at the airport.
  • Even though we haven’t seen Charles Widmore this season, it feels to me like he is on the side of Smokey – based on the fact that he was willing to do anything he could to get Locke back to the island, and told Locke that if he didn’t go back, the wrong side was going to win the upcoming war.
  • Just for the heck of it, I forgot to mention this in my last post so I figure I’ll add it here since I think it’s at the very least, worth mentioning. Desmond told Charlie that he had to die in order to secure rescue for everyone else, but especially Claire and her baby. Desmonds flashes of the future have thus far been proven to pan out accurately except for the vision that convinced Charlie to allow himself to die. Desmond said that he saw Claire and Aaron getting on a chopper and leaving the island. I know Aaron left in a chopper, but Claire obviously did not. Is this a case of Desmond’s visions being foggy? Did Desmond lie to Charlie about his vision because he knew he had to die anyway, but perhaps for some other reason? Or what I consider one of the more exciting possibilities is that Claire and Aaron are yet to get on a helicopter together. Maybe they will need to for some reason and when they do, Desmond will be there to see it happen.

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Adam posted on February 4, 2010 09:50

Frequent readers of this blog know of the Triforce Battle of TV Shows, Sarah with NCIS, myself with Heroes and Anthony with Lost. We have all used numbers and theories and strongly worded blogs to defend our shows. I will be honest with everyone here though, the biggest reason I disliked Lost was due to....jealousy. That's right, I admit it, after not getting into Lost at the beginning I wanted Heroes to be "the next Lost" desperately, I clung to that and parts of me still do. I knew I had missed out on something good in Lost and I hated it. Well my friends, while I still have not watched NCIS (though I do now watch Bones) last night I took a nice little island vacation to a tv show called Lost. Thanks to the help of Anthony Zuaro's complete collection of Lost DVDs myself and my girlfriend Sara began Season 1 last night, and well, we loved it. I had heard that episodes of Lost on DVD is like a can of Pringles, once you pop you can't stop. We couldn't, we said we would watch one episode, one turned into two turned into four. We have made our Friday night plans Friday night Lost. It's bad people, its addictive. Now I won't lie, I've read some of Anthony's blogs about the show on this very blog, I have heard some bits and pieces about the story line, but to me its like reading a book before the movie and still enjoying it. So wish me luck on my journey, if I happen to hear how the show ends this season so be it, I will continue to truck on.I will continue to watch Heroes though (Season Finale this Monday) and for those yet to be Losties, spoiler alert, it's okay to watch Heroes and Lost because the man who flew the plane was none other than Greg Grunberg/Matt Parkman. I will refrain from making jokes about the parallels between him crashing a plane and the fate that Heroes has endured.

 

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Anthony posted on February 2, 2010 09:59

Wow, it’s finally here and I almost can’t believe it. For a while there it seemed like this day would never come, but it finally has and I couldn’t be more excited! This one is for all the marbles and the hype surrounding this season of Lost has to be the biggest ever. The reason: We expect to get plenty of answers in this season because we know that it is the last one. That being said, the show is so dense and filled with detail and mystery that there is no way that all of our questions can be answered. So in preparation for season 6, I have re-watched the entire series rapid-fire style. Many thought it couldn’t be done, but a few episodes each night was hardly a chore and I finished re-watching the season 5 finale last night, just in time.

 

So, like an observant Lostee I took down a few notes, observations, questions and predictions. I am sure there are plenty of areas I am forgetting to cover as well but the following is my random list for your enjoyment, for your recollection and for my sanity because if I didn’t write these things down, they’d be floating around in my head trying to distract me from real life. ** By the way here is your SPOILER ALERT! If you are not caught up to season 6 of Lost yet, you may not want to read on. **

 

*QUESTIONS THAT MAY NEVER BE ANSWERED (in no particular order) – with some predictions attached

 

-Who are the corpses known as ‘Adam and Eve’? maybe Rose and Bernard?

 

- What or Who is Vincent? I know it’s the dog, but I am not convinced that he is just a dog.

 

- What is Walt’s connection to the island? How is he special?

 

- Will Aaron grow to be evil without Claire raising him? Does he have a special connection with the island?

 

- Is Claire actually dead? If so, could she have died when the freighter people blew up her house?

 

- Was it really Walt typing to Michael via the Swan Station computer?

 

- What is the Hurley bird?

 

- What knocked down the huge statue?

 

- How did the Black Rock get into the center of the island? Who was on it? – maybe Richard was on it, but perhaps Smokey dragged or threw the ship into the center of the island. Could that even be how the statue came down?

 

- Does the statue have anything to do with the island’s fertility problems? If not, what does?

 

- Aside from sponsoring the race, did Widmore have something to do with Desmond’s arrival on the island? – Perhaps a long con intended to result in the exiling of Desmond to keep him away from Penny

 

- Is Malkin (the psychic) a fraud as he claims he is to Mr. Eko? Or is he legit as per his visions / instructions for Claire and her baby?

 

- The Smoke monster is a judge of some kind, but what is the criteria for letting someone live or die? Is the criteria whether or not said someone has or will have the island’s best interests in mind? Was Smokey taking pictures of Juliet when she was hiding from it with Kate in season 3? Does Ben know how to control it or can he just summon it? How come Smokey cannot rise above the Sonic fence surrounding the barracks?

 

- Was the DHARMA food drop from another time or does DHARMA continue to get food drops in present day?

 

- Did Radsinsky really kill himself in the Swan Station or was he murdered?

 

-What were ‘the others’ watching, when Cindy told Jack that everyone had gathered outside of his cage to watch?

 

-Will we ever find out who programmed the jamming device in the Looking Glass station? (supposedly a musician)

 

-Who asks Locke for help from within Jacob’s cabin when he first visits it with Ben?

 

-Who is in Jacob’s cabin when Hurley finds it? There are two people. One appears likely to be Christian, the other comes to the window and shows only his eye.

 

-What will come of Desmond being Farraday’s constant?

 

-Why is Richard mad at young Locke for choosing the knife as one of his possessions when he visits him as a child?

 

- Richard said to Sun that he remembered meeting the DHARMA crew from the 70’s because he watched them all die. Not simply that he watched them, but met them. I wonder what/if there is any significance to that statement?

 

-According to ‘the others’, Jack and Kate were not on Jacob’s list. Who is on Jacob’s list? Are the lists lies to help Jacob manipulate the islands leader? If the lists are real, why did he interact with those people off the island if they were not on his list? Are the people he touched off the island the people he wants on his side for the war or was he just setting everyone’s course in motion?

 

-Who was the ‘smart man’ that Hawking refers to that figured out that the island was always moving?

 

-Will the war involve living vs. the dead?

 

-Why were all the DHARMA notebooks from the Pearl Station unclaimed?

 

-Why can dead people appear as living people? -  Is this the ‘Man in Black’ posing as other dead people? for example the version of Yemi that speaks to Eko on the island says ‘you talk to me as if I am your brother!’ (indicating that he is in fact not) – How does the new inhabitant of the dead have knowledge of all of their memories and personality?

 

- What is Lapidus a candidate for?

 

-Why is the 815 survivors’ former camp wrecked when it is found during the time jumping?

 

-Why do the barracks in ‘present day’ (after Ajira 316 crashed) look like the DHARMA Initiative was just recently eliminated?

 

*SOME SMALL PREDICTIONS and a few BOLD FACED BIG PREDICTIONS

 

-Hurley is the origin of the first transmission to be heard with the numbers in it.

 

-Libby is in the psych ward because she was dealing with her husband’s death.

 

-We will find out who was in the car(s) that crashed on the bridge when Jack was about to commit suicide in season 3. Perhaps Ilana and Bram from Ajira 316.

 

- The series will end with Jack’s eye.

 

-Kate is pregnant – There had to be a pregnant woman on flight 316 as a proxy for Claire

 

-Oceanic Characters involved in the incident will get to see/live their lives over again in an alternate or parallel universe, ala Desmond after he turned the failsafe key on the hatch.(Much like the episode ‘Flashes Before Your Eyes’) – this alternate or parallel universe may be the new narrative device instead of flash forwards and flashbacks.

 

-Somehow Penny or young Charlie dies (perhaps because of Ben) and Desmond will be able to travel back in time and change the past.

 

*Jacob is the villain, MIB is the hero. Jacob enjoys the fighting, the killing, the chaos, corruption, etc. – He brings people to the island to manipulate them into these bad situations.*

 

 

*REPEATED THEMES:

 

Lists

 

Board Games – Backgammon, RISK, Chess, Mouse Trap, Operation

 

Octagons (DHARMA shape)

 

Songs repeated

 

Car crashes

 

Death

 

Losing something or someone

 

Lying / Conning / Manipulation

 

Redemption

 

 

*Quotes repeated (from different characters): “Don’t tell me what I cant do” – “Don’t mistake coincidence for fate” – “We have to go back” – “This is our destiny”

 

*Names repeated: Mary, Emily, Annie, Tom, Sarah, Daniel, Richard, Dave (David), Charlie (Charles), Charlotte, Nadia, Amy

 

*Lost is about: redemption, inner demons, overcoming old bad habits, making the same mistakes over again, lying, manipulation, conning, trust, interconnectivity, a small world, fate, destiny, decision-making, blind faith, realization, hope

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Anthony posted on December 30, 2009 07:55

Yet another great episode title here. Most of them are, but I love the ones that can be interpreted in more ways than one. ‘Raised by Another’ refers of course to Claire’s psychic telling her in her flashback that she cannot let her unborn child be raised by anyone other than herself.

 

When Charlie hears of Claire’s back story and how the psychic (Malkin) changed his mind from originally insisting that she raise the child herself, to then suddenly setting her up with a foster family in L.A. under the condition that she had to be on Oceanic flight 815, he theorizes that somehow Malkin knew that Oceanic flight 815 was going to crash on the island, therefore leaving Claire no choice but to raise the child herself. This plan of Malkin’s would make it so that the baby could not be ‘raised by another’. 

 



That being said, we will later find out that ‘the others’ are very interested in Claire’s baby and intend on convincing Claire to live amongst them with her child. Though we wont find this out until much later in the series, we’ll learn that Ethan is ‘the other’ that will eventually pursue Claire and her baby, and the end of this episode is the first time that it is implied that Ethan is definitively one of ‘the others’. So you could interpret ‘Raised by Another’ as ‘Raised By An Other’. I love when the writers do stuff like that!

 

I’m kind of going in reverse of the actual order of the episode, but it’ll work since I am not trying to avoid spoiling anyone who is not current with the show. Ethan is officially revealed as an ‘other’ when he appears in front of Claire and Charlie creepy-looking and alone when Charlie and Claire had been expecting Ethan to get Jack to come to Claire’s aid. This happens near simultaneously with Hurley coming to the conclusion that Ethan’s name was not on the flight manifest that Hurley was using to cross reference his census that he was making.

 





Fun other little sidenote, perhaps common knowledge to many ‘Losties’ but Ethan Rom can rearrange the letters in his name to create the words ‘other man’. hmmm



Hurley created the census because of Claire’s claims that she was attacked in her sleep. The first incident seemed like a nightmare, but Claire awoke with bloody palms because she dug her own fingernails deep into her own hands out of fear of her nightmare.

 

However, Claire isn’t convinced that it was completely a nightmare. In her dream sequence she experiences the feeling of having lost her baby. She was not pregnant anymore and heard it screaming in the jungle. When attempting to find her child, she stumbled upon Locke who was sitting at a desk that appears to be the same as her psychic’s desk. This ‘dream-version’ of Locke has one eye that is completely white with no pupil and one that is completely black with no pupil. This is the recurring theme of black vs. white / dark vs. light / perhaps good vs. evil that we have seen many times before and will see again. Locke also says in the dream that Claire had been warned, and that this all happened because she didn’t raise the baby herself. 





**THEORY ALERT**

 

This dream sequence as well as Malkin’s warning to Claire actually triggered a theory for me. I just couldn’t help thinking that Aaron is going to grow up to be an evil person. It seems reasonable. After all, you would think there would be repercussions for Aaron being raised by another, otherwise why was it of such importance that the baby’s development be influenced by Claire’s kindness and goodness? Perhaps Aaron is a new dictator or evil leader for the islands future? Perhaps it is setting up a battle between Aaron and Walt over the future of the island? I definitely believe Aaron will be important to the overall plot, but that makes it even more curious that he was not on Ajira flight 316.

 

Back to Claire’s dream, her claim that it could have been real may have been false, but she did see the Oceanic plane mobile during her dream state, which she will see for the first time several days later when she is kidnapped. This isn’t the first or last time that premonition has come to a character via dream. 





Fate is most certainly a major theme in this episode, especially as it pertains to Claire and her pregnancy, but really this episode is just an example of how fate has had its impact on just one of the survivors on 815. It has its impact on everyone at some point, but this is a prime example because of how directly connected actions or events coincide with the idea of someone’s destiny.





If Claire doesn’t get pregnant her encounter with Malkin never happens. Not to mention, if her boyfriend didn’t leave her during the pregnancy there wouldn’t have been a question as to who is going to raise the baby. She only wants to put it up for adoption because she feels that she cannot handle being a single mother. Claire wanting to put the baby up for adoption may also be a result of her ‘daddy abandonment’ issues as her compassionate boyfriend so kindly refers to it. Which at the time we may not have thought too deeply into, but now know that the daddy that abandoned her is in fact Jack’s daddy too!

 




Perhaps the biggest sign of destiny and fate comes at the hands of one of our very favorite promotional products: the promotional pen. When Claire is trying to sign the contract to officially give up her baby, the first pen she tries to use does not work. Have no fear, lawyers always carry promotional pens on them. Even if they’re fancy executive pens, I’d be willing to bet that if it is coming from a lawyer, it has an elegant looking imprint on it with their firm’s name and contact information. Alas, this lawyer must have gotten his custom printed pens from a place other than Motivators because this one doesn’t work either. This was enough to deter Claire from giving up the baby and she returned to Malkin to hear him out. Next thing you know she is on a plane to the island and the rest is history.

The funny thing about fate as it specifically pertains to Claire, is that despite these very convincing examples, Claire herself says that ‘there is no such thing as fate’ when she is talking to Sun and Shannon in ‘Exodus’, the finale episode of season one. 

Part of the problem with going backwards in this post is that I feel it necessary to explain that Claire’s ‘attacks’ come in the beginning of the episode. This may seem somewhat irrelevant, but it allows there to be a big build-up to what is a really great cliffhanger ending. So to recap, throughout the duration of the episode Jack maintains that Claire is experiencing stress induced hallucinations and not actually being attacked. However, to be safe Hurley creates a census so that they can keep track of what has turned into their little island society. The end of the episode is an exciting culmination of Hurley discovering that Ethan is not on the census, Sayid stumbling back into camp disoriented and assuredly claiming that the survivors are not alone on the island, meanwhile the mysterious Ethan has positioned himself to kidnap Claire and her baby.

 





Questions answered but plenty of new ones have arisen. I think the real question is: Is it possible for anyone that’s been watching every episode so far, to not be completely hooked in at this time? I remember knowing that I needed to go to bed because I had to get up in a few hours, but watched the next episode anyway!



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