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Coma Theory

This is the infamous Ash in a coma theory that has
become fairly widespread around the Internet and was originally
written by someone on 4chan. I must warn you, it's very long and
basically tl;dr, so you may only want to read it if you have plenty
of free time to spare and you can handle reading mass amounts of
text all at once.
"Did one ever know the reason why the pacing and
story development change after Ash was hit by lightning in the
beginning episodes? How Ash and his world were relatively normal
until after the incident? I have a theory. The accident with the
bike put Ash in a coma. Days later he was found and was hurried to
the hospital and treated with heavy medications. This is why Team
Rocket became less menacing. The medication took effect and
stabilized his coma dreams, instead of being terrifying, they became
idyllic, and he's able to live out his Pokémon master fantasies.
If one had noticed, the early episodes of Pokémon were of amazing
quality. The rest of the series is just the results of his
subconscious mind fulfilling his desires, as well as attempting to
escape them. Should Ash realize he's in a coma, he would wake up,
but suffer brain damage. So he has to take down all his mental
barriers one by one until he can come to grips with what he is and
escape his coma.
This explains why he doesn't change much physically. Also, the
worldwide socialism can be explained if you once again realize that
this is a dream world; he thought up a safe system of government
that would run smoothly and keeps the world going allowing his
adventures to work like they do. It also explains a few other
things, such as how a child can go off on his own in a world full of
dangerous untamed animals, and why every Pokémon center has the same
exact nurse. Joy and Jenny he knew from his hometown, and they act
as a safety net or anchor, allowing him to feel safe no matter where
he goes. The professors, like the Joy's and Jenny's represent
stability, and ash's ideals. This is why Gary became a professor.
It's also the reason that every time he enters a new region,
virtually no one has heard of him, despite his conquests, and why
Giovanni leads Team Rocket. How could Paul, the rival of the Sinnoh
area, not know of someone who has placed in at least the top 16 of
all three leagues and has destroyed the Orange league and Battle
Frontier?
Ash’s travelling partners are actually aspects of himself he can
enjoy, but doesn't like to associate with himself. Team Rocket are
his qualities that he deems "negative", but is coming to terms with.
Jesse and James want to appease Giovanni, Ash's Father. Meowth
especially wants to appease him because he remembers the good times
with Giovanni. This Places meowth in a category known as ash's
(corrupted) innocence, and another fragment of ash's humanity. If
you note that meowth can speak this quickly becomes apparrent. In
fact the whole reason for meowth's speech is so he can help Ash
accept Team rocket as part of himself eventually.
Brock is Ash's repressed sexuality. He fell into the coma a virgin
and needed an outlet for his growing sexual frustrations. Since he
can never experience sex, Brock must never succeed. Brock is a
projection of his sexuality, and is constantly shot down because Ash
could never “know” sex. Brock isn't just Ash's latent sexuality,
he's also his fatherly instincts, neither of which Ash can come to
terms with. Brock leaves his siblings to "journey" with Ash. because
Ash can't cope with having that much responsibility, much as his
foray with a real relationship ends on mysterious terms. Ash just
cannot handle commitment at his mental level. Brock's Stay with
professor Ivy was an.attempt to outright suppress his sexuality.
You'll notice that James got much more dialogue in this part of the
series, as well as getting more touchy feel-y with his pokemon and
getting most of his backstory. Ash didn't enjoy this much, hence the
reasons Brock comes back all horrified, and refuses to speak about
it. (ash's subconscious was repressing him at the time, so other
than a general feeling of dread he has no idea of what went on
then.) This is also why brock keeps coming back to the
series....Usually AFTER Ash meets a new girl aspect of himself.Misty
is an image that Ash had of a girl. This is why she plays so
prevalently in the series but is ultimately unattainable because he
never really knew her before the coma. Likely the one that helped
get him to a hospital. I have a theory in line with this: Since
Misty was his initial love interest (if only subconsciously), he
needed her to reach a level of womanhood. He felt that people could
only have relationships when they've matured. But in practice, it
turned out he couldn't cope with it and just wanted the normal,
pushy, arrogant Misty he knew, and wouldn't let her keep Togepi
anymore.
Misty is Ash's first attempt at a girl he could love, however, being
a girl from the real world, all he really he knew of her was her
anger, as a result she ended up quite hot headed in his mind.
Constantly berating his sexuality, but eventually mellowing out
until she had faded into the background. This was also traumatizing
to him, being attached to it. Since then, the thought of anyone
around him maturing to adulthood has been blocked, and anyone who
shows signs of it will quickly end up leaving for another, more
naive fill-in.
Max came with May, she played the Id with great aspirations, and he
played the sensible Ego that "Session". They worked for a little
while but Ash, being a teenager, eventually had his sexuality had to
come back into play. He kept reinventing himself and eventually
wrote new aspects, but his mind slowly brought back the old ones as
a crutch to make the transition easier.
Dawn is Ash giving himself a chance to love. since he already
established Misty as someone he's not likely to go anywhere with, he
created a new super female, one that was more like him, and less
violent all the time. (One will note that both May and Misty had no
tolerance for Brock whatsoever whereas dawn seems to try and shrug
it off.) .
Tracey, The Breeder was a possible future for Ash that he discarded.
It was one that he sent off to work with the Professor (the
professors being Ash's ultimate ideal of a father figure) when he
disrupted the dynamic Ash had with his other possibilities. Ash's
mind is fighting the coma and since Ash viewed this one as a
companion he was quickly replaced with a more threatening Rival.
Pikachu obviously represents Ash's Humanity, hence the episodes
where they get separated, and ash wants desperately to find him,
even to the point of working with the rockets ( aspects of himself
he woould never normally associate with) but for some reason cannot.
They want to steal Pikachu (Ash’s humanity) and hand it over to his
father, Giovanni. Jesse and James will always oppose ash because ash
is terrified of the thought of his humanity lying in the hands of
his father. However this is the same reason that he will work with
those aspects of himself in order to save his humanity from just
becoming flat out LOST. He couldn't evolve his Pikachu without
challenging his concept of who he was, something he wasn't
comfortable with while he was still working through his original
issues.
Another thing is the narrator. The narrator is Ash's higher mind,
recapping and explaining the progress he's made and the tribulations
he will face allowing itself insight into how best to awaken him.
Ash has issues With his Father; so he put him atop the evil
corporation, and demonized him. There may be an actual team rocket,
and I'm positive they're quite dastardly, but I doubt that ash's
father is their leader, in fact the head of the rockets wasn't
really identified as anyone until later on in the series. The split
between ash's parents was likely over ash's homosexuality and some
sort of incident as a catalyst, forcing his father to disown him and
his mother to move out of the city and down to pallet town. This is
why Giovanni runs the faceless Vile corporation, and Why he Berates
Jesse, James, and Meowth as much as he does, and why they keep
trying to please him. Another thing to notice is the difference in
uniform, The rockets Wear Black and Red, where Team Rocket wears
White....a symbol of their purity and naievete. They're willing to
please father despite his utter hatred of those parts of Ash .
Team rocket are aspects of Ash's personality that he has deemed
"bad" James implied homosexuality, and Jesse’s vanity. You'll
remember that Meowth has the potential for rehabilitation, and
doesn't want to be evil, so yet again this fits in with the
conflicting personalities and demonized self theory. Team rocket
started cross-dressing because ash had to come to terms with that
part of himself. It was something he was able to allow his gay/vain
side to experiment with (and by virtue of that himself) When he
found that it wasn't something for him, his "Free" side stopped
playing with it. Further, their methods of capture become more and
more ludicrous (and physically impossible) because Ash is just a kid
dreaming these things up. This is the reason Team Rocket's disguises
are always believed. He knows it's them (on some level), but chooses
to ignore it, so he can better himself, in a sense the Ash who wants
to escape is sabotaging the ash who wants to stay lost in his mind.
So that there can be more conflict, and hopefully an eventual
escape. The filler episodes that don't focus on Ash and the gang are
his mind working through, and humanizing the parts of himself that
he demonized. It's a way for him to deal with issues that Ash and
crew wouldn't touch, because it involves treading ground he himself
had sworn not to go near. As I said, Team Rocket and the episodes
they occupy are Ash dealing with ground he feels uncomfortable with
tackling on his own. Jessie is Ash's vanity and gullibility, she
will trick Ash's submissive homosexuality into doing her bidding so
she can please father. James' troubled childhood is his way of
justifying his latent homosexuality. Now James is Ash's latent
homosexuality, hence why he is constantly punished by Pokémon and
attacked by random attractive girls. I believe the split between
Ash's parents was caused by this part of Ash, maybe an incident at
school, bringing shame on the family and forcing them to move to the
small, country town of Pallet. Ash's motivations for his journey
were to escape mounting pressure at home.
So in a way, Ash IS Team Rocket. The rest of the whole organization
Including Butch and Cassidy is symbolic of his inability to escape
his father's machinations.
Mr. Mime is actually a stand in for Ash's father, one that can't
emotionally abuse him or his mom. He is a Pokémon, a peace loving
creature that's oddly humanoid, but that can never hurt a human.
Ash's was never really hurt by a Pokémon, so he sees them all as
harmless; whereas, in the real world they may be quite feral or
vicious (as seen in the early episodes). Again falling back to the
theory that the only real Pokémon are the ones from the first
season, and everything else is just further speculation coming from
his mind on what new species would look like.
The new teams ( magma, aqua, and galactic) are Ash attempting to
work out the problems he has with his father. to do that he first
needs a new "bad guy" to feel good about beating, and if Giovanni
isn't leading a criminal organization he can more easily relate to
him.
If one recalls, there were real animals early in the show and
references to animals in the game and show. For example, a clear
case to point out is the aquarium of fish in the Cerulean City Gym
or that by the Pokédex that Pikachu is a “rat-like” Pokémon. But
they don't matter to Ash's psyche so they don't come into play much.
If Ash had loved puppies, everything would be about different breeds
of dogs, and a dog fighting circuit. But, as the series goes on
longer, we've been seeing less realistic animals and more Pokémon.
This could be a sign of Ash’s mind deteriorating. As he's in this
coma, he's losing concepts of some animals and machinery and
replacing them with Pokémon. It could explain things like electric
Pokémon working as power generators. A sign that his memory of the
old world is slipping more and more as time goes by. The Pokémon
realm will be idealized continuously the longer he has no stimulus
from the real world. He may or may not be mentally deteriorating ,
but he is becoming more accustomed to his fake world's rules. The
wild Pokémon are his rationalizations of the functioning of the
world. It’s the "A wizard did it" Syndrome. If he doesn't know how
it works, his mind says Pokémon. He justifies anything he can't
explain with Pokémon, and real animals fall into the background
because he has no real interest in them.
The Pokémon in Ash's team are his issues, for example Charmander
represents his sex drive (not his sexuality like Brock) at first
it's a cute easy to control thing, but eventually becomes a raging
inferno of disobedience. Acquiring his team means getting at his
issues, but as he trains them, he works said issues out. Other
trainers are more direct forms of his issues, ones that he must
either come to terms with or outright supress. Gym leaders are more
primary aspects of his personality with each Pokémon being stronger
than the last, to display a level of skill he could be capable of if
only he gave into it. In effect, he is doing battle with a part of
him that he would rather not have in control. Bulbasaur was Ash's
unwillingness to change, this is reflectedwhen it declines to evolve
and how it almost decided to stay behind unless he battled it.
Squirtle was his willingness to follow the lead of others, as
evidenced by the gang it ran with, even though he ran the gang, they
were viewed as one group, and ash's subconscious just gave him the
strongest one. Butterfree was his crushing loneliness, which he
dealt with when he released it to join a flock. His bird types are
his recklessness, always willing to sacrifice something at a
moment's notice for the win. When Ash is trading Pokémon, it's an
attempt to push his own problems away on someone else; however, he
realizes this and usually trades back fairly quickly. Originally ash
had the battles, which evolved into team battles and contests. The
explanation for this is that his issues became more and more
complicated, and the means of dealing with them needed to become
more complex. the fact that he uses issues that he has already
dominated to win these are signs that he's growing stronger.
Not only are Ash’s Pokémon are a manifestation of different parts of
himself, so are Pokémon of other trainers as well. Koffing and Ekans
were symbolic of Team Rocket's willingness to change; hence, their
evolutions. Once his mind beat that roadblock down and allowed them
to change once, it gives him the chance to truly change. Pupitar is
a rationalization, a Pokémon that a rival caught before he met him.
Even Ash would become suspicious if everyone he met had no
carry-over from pervious places he had been to.
Ash releases his Pokémon because his mind is forcing him to let go
of them. The second he raises an overpowered team, a tournament
comes up, and after fighting his way through it he has to go to a
new land for new challenges, but with an overpowered team, there
won't be any challenges, and no way to motivate him further, part of
Ash wants to stay in the coma, and keep journeying.
Ash's travelling also never really nets him any fame, no matter what
he does, or where he goes, and the answer for that is simple. Ash
just can't picture himself as famous, so he essentially adopts a new
identity every few months.
The reason he never truly becomes a master is because that would
mean he'd have nothing left to dream, and would wake up from his
coma. Ash’s dual personality is one that wants to maintain his
fantasy world and slowly sort his thoughts out carefully. The other
part wants freedom, and to return to his real life, to finally
become a real Pokémon master. However if he's allowed to keep his
powerful team there's no reason to meet and tame new Pokémon(Issues),
he'll lose interest, and the chance of becoming self-aware comes
around again. So it's not that he gives them up, it's that he loses
them, and unless he's desperate (such as with Charizard) he can't
get them back. It’s basically his mind forcing him to deal with his
issues. It would also be a good reason why Paul has shown up at this
point, and Ash has been forced to work with him on at least one
occasion: It's his mind's last ditch efforts to snap him out of
this, to force Ash to actually come to terms that this perfect world
is not the best option and he needs to wake up. Paul is Ash's dark
side, one that wants to push on even harder and harder, and the part
of him that will stop at nothing to escape this coma world.
Ash’s rivals and the Elite four are ultimately the strongest part of
this cycle. Having Pokémon that are essentially godlike, they
represent both what can be attained and what is unattainable. Gary
Oak is what Ash wants to be. He is wish fulfillment. He succeeded,
and settled down to a normal life. Ash needs someone to succeed in
his world or he won't be able to validate it and will start
questioning why he's where he is. It’s a subconscious trap to keep
him from becoming too aware of his situation. His mind must have
figured out that awareness of the coma would snap him out of it, but
it would cause major brain damage, so it took something the boy
already loved and built a way out for him with it. However Ash is
too complacent to finally fight his way out of it, and cannot
escape. This is why he keeps encountering Legendary Pokémon, they're
his mind's way of showing him he can do great things if he tries,
and it's a way to encourage him to push forwards. The Legendary
Pokémon are Ash's mind telling him that he has greatness in him and
thus, can escape his happy–go–lucky reality.
Ash's Rivals are all possible futures he envisions for himself (note
that they are all older than him). This originated with Gary Oak,
someone Ash knew from real life, and built up into a sort of god
within his mind. Gary however progressed and changed to suit Ash's
vision of himself and ultimate desire, eventually settling down into
a professor after beating the Elite Four. With Gary in retirement
his mind needed a new rival for him Thus the births of Richie (the
Good aspect of his rivalry) and Paul (as the darker aspect, a
cut-throat Ash, willing to do anything to escape the coma world).
Richie and his Pikachu were another success story for Ash, but he
wanted one he could be closer with. One nearly identical to him. One
that even used a similar roster to him. Paul and his Chimchar are
the polar opposite of Richie, Paul wants nothing to do with any kind
of weakness, and is almost aware of his situation. He's always
pushing for something more.
The reason he discarded his original hat and the elements of
japanese culture so prevalent in the first season is simple. He
wanted to travel and broaden his horizons, every time he reinvented
himself to do so; he lost touch with his original self. If he ever
does escape the coma he'll likely have achieved a sort of Zen state.
Considering the amount of personal issues he deals with inside his
head, it's entirely likely that he was the next Buddha of the
Pokémon world, and that the lightning strike and subsequent coma are
a way for him to realize his true self, and destiny.
Mewtwo was a new form of treatment, done with electric impulses and
a machine to knock Ash out of it, taking down every last one of his
mental guards (the original Pokémon in the movie). In Ash's mind,
Mewtwo and his clones were the treatment for the mental safe guards
that were protecting Ash and keeping him comatose; the Pokémon of
his world. The clones were counters to Ash's mental safeties, and so
each appeared to Ash as the exact copy of his defense, intended to
take it down by Force. The clones didn't play by the rules of Ash's
world, they didn't use any special Pokémon attacks or moves – they
just beat down their counterpart by brute strength. The treatment
was working, but there were side effects. The electric jolts were
beginning to affect Ash's nervous system, and if the treatment
continued, he would be paralyzed. His mind realized this and
manifested it to Ash by petrifying him in his dream. Were it not for
the end of the treatment by Ash's mother (knowing her son would
never want to live in a world he couldn’t explore) Ash would have
remained as stone in his dream. After this, Ash needed to recover
from the damage of the electric therapy. Obviously it was greatly
dangerous to him, and in order to reduce the danger Ash's
consciousness felt from it, Ash's subconscious began downplaying the
effects of electricity in Ash's world, which is why Pikachu’s
electric attacks -once noted for their strength by Team Rocket – no
longer have any effect on Ash, other than comic relief.
Even the world Ash lives in evidences this. The sprawling forests
and eco friendly cities are all his childish innocence. He never
travels on a bike despite the distance due to the accident having
given him a phobia of them.
As one could see, it is very likely that Ash is trapped in his
world. But like every dream, everything, there is a beginning and an
end. What would happen if Ash could fully recover? What would happen
if he never does? There are infinite branches of possibilities that
spiral upwards and intertwine towards the top at a single point,
both in his “world” and the real world. In his hospital room, we see
Delia, obviously distraught talking to a doctor with a grim look in
his eye. He's saying that their insurance is up, and the boy has had
no change in brain activity for seven years. That a shock like this
may awaken him. She tearfully agrees.
Professor Oak is there to comfort her as they take Ash off life
support.
In Ash’s “world”.
Ash has finally defeated the elite four, and one by one the people
around him start disappearing. eventually everything is black.
Pikachu comes dashing towards him glowing brighter and brighter in
the darkness. Eventually Pikachu reaches ash and the two embrace one
last time.
Back in his room, as his life signs fade, Ash mutters his genuine,
final words.
I...Want...To...Be,
The...Very...Best.
The image of his gaunt, tube-fed, ten-some-year bed ridden body on
the bed. His head appears bulbous from atrophy. As he utters his
last words, he barely opens his eyes, seeing a silhouette of the
figure at the center of his turbulent emotions, his mother, her face
obstructed by her hands wiping away tears. He makes contact with her
eyes and lets out one last tear before losing all strength. She
breaks down in hysterics.
The worst part of all this is that Ash will die, never having
experienced actual love, imagine if you will, having lived in a
world like his, completely shut off from all things but yourself,
and your perception of yourself, with nothing but better yourself.
No other people to interact with and issues to solve with no guiding
hand.
The boy will die, never having known his dream, except as naught but
a dream. The second he gets out into reality for that last moment,
part of him knows it was all a lie, his faithful Pikachu? His
friends? All his imagination, and maybe, he could have fought and
clung to life, maybe even made a full recovery. But knowing that his
efforts and ambitions had all been for naught, he just gave up and
let the motion carry him away, just so he could be with Pikachu, in
a place where his friends were waiting.
I would like to think that he'll realize that his mother loved him
and was holding out hope that he'd recover all that time. On the
flip side, though, when he sees her he knows that the hope she had
is totally broken and she'd come to the crushing realization that
the worst thing that can befall a parent has happened to her:
outliving her only child. At once he knows he is loved and that it
means that the one closest to him is utterly crushed.
Still, there are other possibilities. The fountain of time flows in
mysterious ways. One could not go back, against the current such as
Gatsby; but, one could never see what is waiting for him downstream.
Ash finally defeats Lance, only to be confronted by not Gary Oak,
but a mute, mirror image of himself.
The voice of the narrator speaks to him, telling him that now he can
finally escape the prison of his own mind. One by one, his friends
appear and melt away into more copies of him, all cheering him on.
After a long tough battle against himself with the assistance of all
of his Pokémon he had ever befriended, he jolts awake.
In his hospital room he sees his parents asleep; he finds himself
unable to speak.
Ash pushes forward towards his recovery. Going through physical
therapy, training harder and harder with rehabilitative Pokémon,
until he can walk on his own again. This time, an older and wiser
ash sets out on a journey. Just like last time, he's late getting to
Professor Oak's laboratory. And when there's only one Pokémon
left....He suddenly recalls all his memories of his "life" and
realizes that all his friends are gone forever.
As he sets out with his new companion, he finds the world is darker
than he imagined. More “real”, Pokémon and people die; he too has
aged.
He vows to become the Master he dreamed he was. He vows to himself.
He vows to “them”.
I WILL be the very best!"
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