Sunday, December 2, 2012

Kissing Jessica Stein



I found this to be a really powerful movie because unlike most movies centered around a gay or lesbian couple, this movie didn’t concentrate on the issue of coming out to family and friends so much as the inner struggle Jessica has over taking a big risk. Jessica doesn’t seem to feel the full weight of her relationship with Helen until she comes out to Joan, her friend at the newspaper, and almost immediately becomes hysterical over what she’s doing and the decisions she’s made. It’s almost as though she regrets it from that moment but decides to continue through it. from there, we watch her try to cover it up to her family and friends at work, lying here and there to dissuade them from figuring it out. By the end, her mother has picked up on it and she tells Josh outwardly about it. This is when she fully accepts that there’s been a change in what she’s looking for. I guess you could say that the theme of the movie was not about the gay community. It’s about experimenting to find the strength to decide on what you want out of life and who you want to share life with, no matter that person’s gender. And even a step further, that our friends and our significant others may overlap but if they’re worth keeping around, they can be both or choose one, but just because a relationship ends doesn’t mean a friendship has to too. Jessica manages to keep Josh as a friend after telling him about Helen and Jessica and Helen manage to maintain a close friendship even after their breakup and Helen finding a new girlfriend.

I loved that they portrayed the lesbian relationship going through things a straight couple would go through. There was the introduction to friends and family, people asking questions and speculating a lot. There’s the taking a date to a wedding, which in some families is a really big deal. They even tackle the issue of a couple with two different religious backgrounds and show how accepting Helen is of Jessica’s religion. They portrayed the fights in such a real way that you felt like you had an active investment in the argument. It was so relatable, even if you’d never been in a lesbian relationship. Their fights could have just as easily been between a straight couple. I even loved the ending, which is rare. I expected the breakup but I didn’t expect them to stay friends even after Helen got a new girlfriend.

Jessica actually reminded me a lot of a friend from high school. She’s picky but gets into things fast, not necessarily taking the right route to what she wants because she doesn’t really know what she wants. She’s jumpy and finicky and particular about things. She needs to know what happens next before she starts, she can’t just doing anything and see where it leads. She’s very planned and meticulous instead of spontaneous. In that way, she reminds me of myself. 

So basically, what I got out of this movie is that lesbian/gay couples juggle the same issues as a straight couple after the coming out process is over. There was a cultural aspect I liked about how easy it is to be accepted by society as a bisexual person now as opposed to a few decades ago. This movie made it look so easy to just be like “yup, I’m gonna try this out” and show the spontaneous side of just trying on a new hat, experimenting with who we are without the fear of letting go of who we were. Jessica eventually goes back to her old self but there are very clear aspects of things she’s brought back from her relationship with Helen. She lets her hair down without straightening it and wears clothes that are professional while artistic and he comes out of her artistic bubble and lets people see what’s going on in her life through her art.

Saturday, December 1, 2012

Kristeva and The New Yorker



Tales of Love – Kristeva 

“For what is psychoanalysis if not an infinite quest for rebirths through the experience of love, which is begun again only to be displaced, renewed, and, if not abreacted, at least collected and set up at the heart of the analysand’s ulterior life as an auspicious condition for his perpetual renewal, his non-death?”

What I got out of this section is that she’s arguing that love makes us live, it is life and embodies all of the trials and tribulations of life, but every time it ends, we feel as though we are near death for having given up something so profound and then discovering that we can find it again and be “reborn” through new love. At the same time, she reconciles that one must give up some of their independence and personal goals and aspirations in order to be at peace in a relationship even though these things we give up to be in a relationship may cause resentment and ultimately lead to an end. 

I really like how she put it “a risk of death, a chance of life.” Love is a collaboration between the ultimate in living and the ultimate in dying or feeling as though you are dying. Later she remarks that “love never dwells in us without burning us.” And one last one I really liked “would the symptoms of love be the symptoms of fear?”

She talks about how difficult it is to communicate with your partner about what exactly your love means. We find it true, subjective and ethical and unethical simultaneously but it’s also confining. She brings up this idea that when you’re in love, that’s just about you. It doesn’t really matter if it’s mutual love or not because the feelings you as an individual possess cannot be mimicked in the life of your partner, no matter how much you share about it. In this way, love, or any emotion for that matter, is a distancing force that can make you separate you emotionally  from those around you. She believes that this is where God comes into play as an intermediary force that bonds people together but this only explains the relationship where faith is a contributing and uniting factor between two parties and that is not the case in all relationship. 

If you think about the concept of a relationship, you could argue that it comes down to two people who, while still possessing their individual characteristics, form almost a united identity which is recognizable by both people who are familiar with the relationship as well as the public. This factor plays a huge role in why breakups are debilitating to some people. It’s a loss of identity, a missing half leaving an unfulfilled or lacking person. When she says “in love “I” has been an “other”.” To me that means that we are completely different people when we are in love and out of love because we perceive the world through different lenses depending on whether or not we are temporarily traveling alone or have a shared identity that brings stability. 

Looking for Someone – The New Yorker

By page 3 of this article, I was so sold. This is right up my alley. I almost wish this had been my topic. I find it fascinating that everything about humans can basically be duplicated in numbers. I’m not saying it’s always correct or a good match or asks the right questions, I just think it’s really cool that someone was able to figure out how to get online match making to work. What really intrigues me about online dating, as mentioned in the article, is how dating websites use humans as both supply and demand. It’s almost like a slave trade…. But mutual!

Later, the website Ashley Madison was brought up which is a website for cheating spouses and what bothers me is not only did someone come up with that immoral idea, but there are enough people cheating to warrant its existence as a profit making company. That’s disgusting. It now makes sense that “the most valuable asset is attractive females. As soon as you get them, you get loads of creepy guys.” And that is the number one reason why I would not use an online dating website.

Tuesday, November 27, 2012

Desire and Passion 1 & 2



Desire – Chapter 12

I was kind of surprised that Romania was so strict about pregnancies that they even outlawed birth control. I understand that the population needed to increase to ensure the country’s survival but that’s so limiting on women’s sexual behavior. I wouldn’t have been surprised if they outlawed condoms too. That’s like resorting back to the 1600’s when you only had sex if you wanted to have a child.
I was really bothered by the characteristics used to describe a woman based on how she orgasms? The “What can I give” versus “what can I get” argument does make sense but isn’t that a little extreme? It’s not a choice, it’s a biological preference. 

Why is it that they thought that working class women would be able to cope with unintended pregnancies better than professional class women in Aberdeen? Wouldn’t a professional class woman have the resources and money to hire someone to raise her child? A working class woman would have to take off from work, thus decreasing the families income, while incurring an added expense of another mouth to feed. I think that would cause a lot more stress. Sounds like no one bothered to think that one through.

Passion 1

I thought it was interesting that she was told that if your lover kisses you with his eyes closed, he loves you and if his eyes are open, he doesn’t. This logic seems backwards. Wouldn’t someone who is in love not want to close their eyes? Not want to take their eyes off their lover for even a minute, to be completely aware of who they were kissing? You’d think someone who wasn’t in love would close their eyes so they could envision someone else. 

As she is counting the number of times she’s slept with him, I’d love to hear his side of the story. Does he remember her name? How many other women is he involved with? Does he love his wife? She’s completely obsessed with him, her life basically revolves around him. Meanwhile, he strolls through town with his wife, is engaged in his career and has hobbies. She has fantasies about the next time she’ll see him. That’s it. that’s pathetic. And we know she’s wrapped up in it because she mentions that she’s living her love life as though it’s a book or movie. There is literally nothing going on in her life other than waiting to see him. And she puts all this effort into looking good and wearing a different outfit each time and then every time he sees her, her clothes stay on for all of 3 minutes and then end up on the floor. From this piece of information, it becomes clear what his stance on the whole thing is. This isn’t a friends-with-benefits kind of thing. There is no friendship. They don’t see each other unless they’re planning to have sex. And it’s obviously not a relationship so that leaves mutual sex friends or in our disgusting language “fuck buddies.”

“parents and children are the last people able to accept freely the sexuality of those who are closest to them and so remain forever inaccessible.” So basically, parents don’t like to see their kids dating because they have trouble accepting it while kids feel the same way about their parent’s relationships and dating which causes them to have a void in communication and therefore a lack of understanding between them which can ultimately separate them. 

“all my mother’s lovers could do was to help her escape into her dreams.” Isn’t that why we look for relationships? We’re looking to escape into a world where we don’t know what it going to happen and our imaginations run wild while we are with another person. Escapism is the reason for love. you’re escaping from the world by being with this person who makes the world seem like a nicer place, even if it’s just while you’re with them. By saying that, this girl is basically saying that her mother doesn’t have the right to escape from her life with this person for a little while, like she’s not entitled to love and happiness.

Passion 2

Out of the first 3 pages, I see that she has become invested in him. She allows him to live his life like a single man, not trying to get involved in any other aspect of his life, acknowledging the fact that he’s probably sleeping with other women, but she’s altogether unhappy with the situation, realizing, finally, that they will never be together and he will never be as much a part of her life in reality, as he is in her fantasies. Logic half pulls her out when she says she wants to leave. Leaving would be freedom, tearing away from the hold he has on her happiness and constant mood changes based on when she sees him. 

Even when she goes away on vacation and attempts to do touristy cultural things, she ends up thinking about him and making superstitious wished all relating to him. Not wishing to find someone else who she might have a better future with. She truly is stuck on this married man. She even avoids communication with other men on her trip, feeling as though “A” is right by her side and wondering while other men don’t realize. She’s brought him with him on her escape from him. 

She’s glued to a concept of women waiting for men. This is so traditional it hurts. She waits by the phone for him to call, she waits for him to show up at their appointed time, she longs to wait on him as though they were in a relationship. In the Passion 1 she talks about how she gets food and flowers in preparation for his arrival in her apartment. 

I couldn’t believe her comment on getting screened for AIDs: “At least he would have left me that.” So leaving you with a life threatening incurable disease is better than him leaving you with nothing at all? What kind of person would wish for a disease to remind them of a lover who just moved out of their country with their wife and will never see you again?

It was interesting how she made bets with herself. She’d say if something specific, like him calling her by the end of the month, happened, she’d donate 500 francs to charity. There’s this weird theme going on with money like she feels the need to pay for her happiness/attention/love life accomplishments that are out of her control. it’s almost like saying maybe if she’s promises to complete an act of kindness, the universe will work in her favor and bring him back.

Sunday, November 18, 2012

Love Song Lyrics



I don't know if you could call this my favorite love song but I really like this song. I've known it most of my life so it kind of lost meaning until I sat down and actually thought about it again.

One Less Set Of Footsteps Lyrics
Songwriters: CROCE, JAMES
We been runnin' away from
Somethin' we both know
We've long run out of things to say
And I think I better go

So don't be getting excited
Oh when you hear that slammin' door
Cause there'll be one less set of footsteps
On your floor in the mornin'

And we've been hidin' from somethin'
That should have never gone this far
But after all it's what we've done
That makes us what we are

And you been talkin' in silence
But if it's silence you adore
There'll be one less set of footsteps
On your floor in the mornin'

Well baby one less set of footsteps on your floor
One less man to walk in
One less pair of jeans on your door
One less voice a-talkin'

But tomorrow's a dream away
Today has turned to dust
Your silver tongue has turned to clay
And your golden rule to rust

If that's the way that you want it
Oh that's the way I want it more
Well they'll be one less set of footsteps
On your floor in the mornin'

Well there'll be one less set of footsteps on your floor
One less man to walk in
One less pair of jeans on your door
One less voice a-talkin'

But tomorrow's a dream away
And today has turned to dust
Your silver tongue has turned to clay
And your golden rule to rust

If that's the way that you want it
Oh that's the way I want it more
Cause baby one less set of footsteps
On your floor in the mornin'

Oh baby one less set of footsteps
On your floor in the mornin'
[ Lyrics from: http://www.lyricsfreak.com/j/jim+croce/one+less+set+of+footsteps_20071480.html ]
One Less Set Of Footsteps lyrics © EMI Music Publishing


Application to Class:

We been runnin' away from
Somethin' we both know
We've long run out of things to say
And I think I better go
And we've been hidin' from somethin'
That should have never gone this far

Indicative of when a couple has an issue and neither partner is willing to confront the other about it so instead of solving it, then end up running away from the problem, knowing that this reaction causes a larger problem that can ultimately lead to separation

But after all it's what we've done
That makes us what we are

Kind of like we are who we pretend to be. We become what we’ve done and were we’ve been and what we’ve seen (experiences) shape who we become and change into over time.

And you been talkin' in silence
But if it's silence you adore
There'll be one less set of footsteps
On your floor in the mornin'

I really appreciate how he uses “talkin’ in silence” because most couples do that at some point. Your silence can mean a number of things, usually that something is wrong.

But tomorrow's a dream away
Today has turned to dust

This is relatable to how this relationship is over and done with, there’s no going back now but what’s to come is unpredictable and all of his dreams could be met once he moves on dirt left behind for this relationship.

Your silver tongue has turned to clay
And your golden rule to rust

Kind of like saying that there’s no way to talk your way out of this. The relationship is so over that there’s nothing anyone can say to save it. The golden rule didn’t prevail and one partner did not treat the other the way they should have, which is how many relationships end.

If that's the way that you want it
Oh that's the way I want it more

A classic one-upsmanship tactic in an argument.

I guess what I liked so much about this song is that it is so relatable. It’s an old song and Jim Croce died before he ever got really famous for that song because he died in a plane crash very early in his musical career. I liked acoustic aspect of it which gave it this sort of simple “this sucks but I’m moving on anyway” kind of a feeling. It’s almost stating that he’s happy to leave and his departure is the best thing for everyone and he’s off to find something better. I don’t really know how to explain it better than that but I feel as though the music itself fits the song meaning pretty well.

Saturday, November 10, 2012

The Bad Girl Part 2



Lily and Ricardo’s relationship
Where we left off, Ricardo is giving up on love again and “at the age of forty-seven, I had verified that a man could lead a perfectly normal life without making love.” Lily calls 4 times after the Japan episode and each time, he hangs up as if he’s actually trying to be rid of her. When he agrees to see her, he decides that he “would talk to her like a distant friend, and my coldness would be the best proof that I was truly free of her” which of course we know he is not. He concludes that she must be back because he “must be one of the few stable things in her intense life, the faithful idiot in love who was always there, waiting for the call that would make her feel she was still what she no doubt was beginning not to be anymore, what she soon would not be again: young, beautiful, loved, desirable.” But at the same time, he knows that if he lets her come back, “it would be the same old story all over again. We’d talk, I’d submit again to the power she always had over me, we’d have a brief false idyll, I’d have all kinds of illusions, and when least expected she would disappear and I’d be left battered and bewildered, licking my wounds as I had in Tokyo. Until the next chapter!” She even admits that “I don’t enjoy anything as much as making you suffer. Haven’t you realized that?” She continues on that “I’ve done nothing but make problems for you.” But he says “ever since I’ve known you, you’ve done nothing but make problems for me. It’s my destiny. And there’s nothing you can do to fight destiny.” So he realizes that he’s never going to break free of her and he doesn’t.
When she reveals that she’s sick from an STD and he agrees to take her in, he gives her his bed and he sleeps on the sofa bed as though he is reminding her that she’s not being invited in as a sexual partner but as a friend, but of course this act doesn’t hold up for very long. He once tells her “the time has come for me to impose my authority over you, bad girl” about getting her medical treatment. This is the only time in the whole novel that he has an influence over any of her actions. He tells Elena that she’s the only one great love of his life, “the only woman I’ve loved, ever since she was a girl. I’ve done the impossible to forget her, but the truth is it’s useless. I’ll always love her, life wouldn’t have meaning for me if she died.” Well, I guess getting over her was successful as a permanent fix…
When Lily has surgery and can’t have sex for a very long time, and later when she can, he has to be very gentle, he is compliant.  It kind of relates to how girls worry that if they refuse to have sex, can’t have sex or don’t want to have sex, it will be hard to hold onto their boyfriends/lovers because the boyfriends/lovers will feel the need to cheat because they see sex as necessary in their lives, Ricardo proves that’s not true. He’s content loving her without sex, just being around her, which makes him rare as a man or lover in the eyes of a woman. That’s probably why she stuck around over time. That’s kind of a big deal because she says “if you were Fukuda, you’d make love to me all night and not give a damn if I gushed blood or died.” The fact that he is compliant with the doctor’s orders allows her to use him for stability by the end. Someone to make her feel protected and safe but at the same time, not have to worry about fending him off sexually. At the same time, “to her, though you may not believe it, you’re a kind of saint.” “how could she not think the imbecile who had just gone into debt so she would be cured, so that after a while she could move on to someone richer or more interesting than the little pissant, was a saint.”

Acts of Love on Lily’s Part
They do have a sweet spot in their relationship from when she goes to the clinic until  his trip to London, when she leaves one day and then comes back saying she changed her mind, and again between when she comes back right after and a little after he gets back from Peru. First, when he leaves her at the clinic, she clings onto him as though she’s either terrified of going or she actually loves him but when he mentions that she might be falling in love with him, she rejects it saying “I’ll bet whatever you want that I never will [fall in love with you], Ricardito.” And she’s right, she never does. She admitted to missing him when he went to visiting hours at the clinic, something she never admitted to in the past during their years of separation.  When she returns, he’s perfectly aware that “the illusion [of domestic tranquility] would last only as long as her convalescence. You knew the mediocre, boring life she had with you would weary her, and once she recovered her health and self-confidence, and remorse or her fear of Fukuda had vanished, she would arrange to meet someone more interesting, richer, less a creature of habit than you, and undertake a new escapade.” When she leaves and then changes her mind, he comes home to see that she took the only cash he kept in the house. When she comes back, he smacks her across the face, causing the only intentional harm in their relationship and instead of crying, she responds that he’s finally learning how to treat women, as if it were acceptable.  Then they make love (to reward him for smacking her? What?)and she tells him she has no intention of leaving him ever, (which she does anyway) and that she’ll never tell him she loves him even if she does, which she maintains. When he comes back from Peru, at first she’s happy to see him and says that “now I know that you’re happiness for me,” which seems strange and it’s not necessarily true considering she leaves again. When she leaves for the last time, she says it’s because she’s not happy but Ricardo later finds out that she has run off with her boss’s husband.

Jealousy
When Ricardo goes to Peru, she says “we’ll see if you love me even more or leave me for one of those mischievous Peruvian girls, good boy.” This is like a test that she knows the outcome of. It was flipped and she was the one going to Peru, this would be a valid concern for Ricardo to have. Also, on the note of Peru, I thought it was devastating that all of the physical evidence of his memories were erased and everything was worse and it left him wondering where he belonged because he’ll never be French despite the citizenship and he’ll never be able to be a Peruvian again. In Peru, Ricardo meets Lily’s father who says that she is estranged and stopped caring about her family financially even when she had money. The truth was that she had no way of receiving the mail after all of her moves and a tie to her parents would be a potentially compromising relationship, especially when pretending to be Japanese. He also says she was ashamed of her family for being poor. But he alludes to the fact that she’s always known how to survive in different worlds and adapt to new situations in order to advance in society, so we know that this had been her plan from the very beginning. Even from a young age, “she already had made the rash decision to move forward and do whatever she had to do to no longer be Otilita, daughter of the cook and the builder of breakwaters, to flee the trap, the prison, the curse that Peru meant for her, and go far away and become rich – that above all: rich, very rich – though to accomplish this she would have to engage in the worst escapades, run the most awful risks, do anything at all until she became a cold, unloving, calculating, and cruel woman.”
When Lily finds Ricardo in Madrid after months of searching for him, she finds that he is in a relationship with a hippie artist but when she talks to him for the first time, in a cafĂ©, she doesn’t realize that they are in the process of a breakup. She exhibits some extreme (for her) jealousy, first, by criticizing his decision to date her because of her age (he is old enough to be her father, in fact he is older than her father) and he tries to make her even more jealous by lying and saying that he doesn’t think he ever loved her.  When she says she wants to come back, he knows it’s because she always turns up between lovers and assumes that her boss’s husband threw her out and she came back to him temporarily until she finds the next guy. He tells her “I want you to leave. Once and for all, forever and ever, to disappear from my life.” And the only way that can happen is for her to die. And that’s exactly what he gets. Eventually he takes her back and she exhibits another sign of jealousy when she says “but if that foul-smelling hippie shows up, I’ll scratch her eyes out,” as if she’s capable of hurting anyone in her state.

The final stay at Ricardo’s apartment
In order to come back, she does a lot of lying to him. “I came looking for you because I love you. Because I need you. Because I can’t live with anybody except you. Though you may think it’s a little late, I know this now.” Once he lets her at least come into his apartment, she wants him to sign documentation that would allow him to inherit a house that her boss’s husband had purchased for her as a gift. She then tries to force him into loving her again even though he says he won’t but ultimately does. Then he takes her in again, knowing they can never again have sex and knowing that she’s going to die and not only is he going to have to deal with saying goodbye to her again but this time permanently, he will have to deal with her cremation as he thought he’d have to in the past. Before her death, she tells him the whole story as if telling him will allow her to die in peace, almost as if he was a priest. After all, she did consider him to be almost a saint. This is actually kind of romantic and adorable, especially how she almost requests he write a novel about their 40+ year on and off relationship.

The name “Good Boy”
Early on in the second half, after hearing Ricardo’s story, top to bottom, Simon says “the nickname fits you like a glove. Not in the pejorative but in the literal sense. That’s what you are, mon vieux, though you don’t like it: a good boy.”This is true because Lily says “you’re the best thing that ever happened to me, good boy.” In this case, he was literally the good boy that happened to her, and from what we can tell, the only good one she ever encountered. It was almost like Lily wanted to be mistreated on her way up the social ladder but at the end of the day, she couldn’t trust any of her other lovers to help her when she was most in need. It was always Ricardo she came running back to for help. He was the one who took her in when she was in financial ruins and homeless, had his friend help get her medical care despite having no legal identification, pays for her psychological treatment, asks his uncle to get her real identifying documentation and even marries her to get her French citizenship. Even though she says she only marries for love, she’s been married many times and loved no one. It seems like she was relatively eager to get into all of the marriages she was in except for her marriage to Ricardo. He had to literally get on his knees and beg her to marry him because she said she wouldn’t if he didn’t make a huge deal out of it. it was nearly abuse how much she made him work for it. Additionally, I thought it was interesting how she maintains perpetual desire. “You’ll never live quietly with me, I warn you. Because I don’t want you to get tired of me, to get used to me. And even if we marry to straighten out my papers, I’ll never be your wife. I always want to be your lover, your lapdog, your whore. Like tonight. Because then I’ll always keep you crazy about me.” And it works and she sticks to every part of that statement.


Lily’s physical appearance
The first time Lily reappears in the second half of the book, Ricardo is pretty disgusted with the way she looks and is kind of brutally honest about it. He describes her as “she had become a skeleton of a woman” which is indicative of how she is as a person, not just physically, nevertheless, this is a very strong description that you wouldn’t normally use if you didn’t have emotions tied to that person. This is from when she’s homeless and he describes her with “hair [that] was disheveled, and on her very thing fingers the nails seemed badly cut, unfiled, as if she bit them. The bones of her forehead, cheeks, and chin were prominent, stretching her very pale skin and accentuating its greenish cast. Her eyes had lost their light, and there was something fearful in them that recalled certain timid animals. She didn’t have on a single adornment or any trace of makeup.” She looks like this because she is homeless and broke. It’s also why, at the end of the meeting, she wouldn’t give Ricardo her address or phone number, because she didn’t have an address or a phone. She later goes to get her things to move into his apartment without him despite being very weak because she’s embarrassed to let him see the dirty hole she’d been living in. This whole circumstance is proof that “’by doing these things, [she] lives more intensely.’ Well, whoever plays with fire sooner or later gets burned” and her burn was the physical damage she endured that ultimately killed her. The reason for her reappearance on this occasion is to ask him to be the one to bury her, which he presumably eventually does. I guess this is understandable considering she has no other ties, but this seems like a strange request to ask him to cremate her when she dies because she’s basically asking him to absorb all of the sadness of her loss. It’s touching in a way but at the same time he thinks that she asked him of all people because “she had never loved me but did feel confidence in me, the affection awakened by a loyal servant.” Which is true, he basically is her servant by bailing her out of things, paying for her health care, getting her papers in order, nursing her back to health, providing a place to live and die but it still kind of sucks that the last memory he’s going to have of her is of watching her die painfully from cancer.
                Skipping back because I got ahead of myself, After obtaining more details about her current predicament (the rape), he wants her to get medical treatment so that “you’ll be attractive again, and we’ll see if you can get me to fall in love with you again.” This seems to be a strange thing to pay attention to when the real issue is her survival, not her attractiveness and the real aim is to get her well so she can live, not so that he’ll fall in love with her again. It almost seemed a little bit arrogant on his part, like he thinks she wants to get well to please him and make him love her when the goal is really for her to get well enough to go back to cheating on him. When they drop her off at the clinic, he tells her “they’ll take care of you, fatten you up, put an end to these attacks of fear. They’ll make you pretty and you can turn back into the devil you’ve always been.” So he’s basically admitting that he thinks she’s ugly right now. That’s nice. She actually confronts him about that: “I’ve become that ugly?” and he says “Awful. Forgive me, but you’ve turned into a real horror of a woman.” If someone I was dating ever said that to me, I’d never see them again. Even if he was joking, that’s so not okay to say, especially to someone who is as psychologically damaged as she is. That’s like playing with fire in and of itself.
The very last time she comes back, ultimately to die, she asks that “if you think I’ve become very skinny, very ugly, and very old, please don’t tell me.”

References to Money
There were a couple low blows here and there about finances. My personal favorite was “he’s the exact opposite of you. That’s why Fukuda is rich and powerful and you are and always will be a little pissant.” Which is definitely what you call somebody after asking them to take care of your cremation. He says he’s going to pay for her treatment and she thanks him by saying “you’re not rich, you’re a poor little puissant… if you weren’t, I wouldn’t have gone to Cuba, or London, or Japan. I would have stayed with you after that time when you showed me around Paris and took me to those horrible restaurants for beggars. I’ve always left you for rich men who turned out to be trash. And this is how I’ve ended up, a ruin. Are you happy that I acknowledge it? do you like to hear it? Are you doing this to show me how superior you are to all of them, and what I lost in you?” Can’t she just say thank you? The last time Lily leaves, she promises Ricardo, “I won’t ask for any of what I’m entitled to as your wife. Not a cent.” And for once she’s telling the truth.