Quote
@ Queen Cersei 1
I think you are confusing me with someone else.The above is what I said about the issue of Cersei abusing Jaime.
No, I'm pretty sure I have the right person. I was referring to the following myself, part of the quote you've already posted:
Quote
It was Cersei who led Jaime in sexual experimentation - she is the one who dared him to kiss her when they were children. She obviously had a stronger sexual identity early on. She dreamed of marriage to Rhaegar, and when that failed, she convinced Jaime to come to that infamous inn where she initiated him into the pleasures of sex. She wanted to be married to Rhaegar. She wanted to be queen. She wasn't "in love" with Jaime, IMO, she needed a substitute for Rhaegar. She convinces him to join the Kingsguard so that they will be in King's Landing together, and he does. Look what he gives up. Why? Why would he be so enamoured of his sister?
Now, unless there are two fragile birds, I am pretty sure I have the right person.

"
Anyway, I was referring to the arguments that you rehash in the following post... I'll just refer to the first one, since they seem basically the same (I.M.O.)
Quote
It was Cersei who led Jaime in sexual experimentation - she is the one who dared him to kiss her when they were children.She obviously had a stronger sexual identity early on. She dreamed of marriage to Rhaegar, and when that failed, she convinced Jaime to come to that infamous inn where she initiated him into the pleasures of sex. She wanted to be married to Rhaegar. She wanted to be queen. She wasn't "in love" with Jaime, IMO, she needed a substitute for Rhaegar. She convinces him to join the Kingsguard so that they will be in King's Landing together, and he does. Look what he gives up. Why? Why would he be so enamoured of his sister?
These theories about gender and testosterone levels are certainly interesting, however, what you say here is starkly contradicted by the text itself in various places. A few issues:
1. "It was Cersei who led Jaime in sexual experimentation" - this does not go along with anything we see in the text itself. The claims of Fire&blood and others that Cersei somehow seductively brainwashed Jaime into thinking that "incest was not really wrong" have no basis in the text. Cersei tells Ned that her and Jaime have "been as one" since childhood, and the text itself bears it out. The sexual attraction between the two seems to have been something that has been in place from the womb. (If you'll excuse how ridiculous that sounds.)
Jaime thinks on how they have been sexually "experimenting" and imitating that animals since they were children. There is no indication that there was any one ringleader, or that Cersei ever at any point pressured Jaime to do anything sexually that he didn't already fully want to do. Nor is there even much evidence at all that she was the initiator of most of their activities. All indicators point to their connection being innate, early formed, and utterly mutual. They considered themselves as "two people in the same body" until fairly recently.
2. "She obviously had a stronger sexual identity early on." There is really nothing to back this up. Again, the sexual attraction (perhaps obsession) is portrayed as intense and mutual.
3. "She dreamed of marriage to Rhaegar, and when that failed, she convinced Jaime to come to that infamous inn where she initiated him into the pleasures of sex." They initiate each other into the pleasures of sex. Cersei comes to Jaime dressed as a serving maid. (He notes that that only served to inflame his passion.) The sex they have is fully consensual. Besides the fact that she came to him, there is no evidence whatsoever that Cersei was the primary instigator. There is no evidence that Jaime was pressured, coerced; he remembers the night as one of pure pleasure and passion."
4. "She dreamed of marriage to Rhaegar, and when that failed, she convinced Jaime to come to that infamous inn where she initiated him into the pleasures of sex.
She wanted to be married to Rhaegar. She wanted to be queen. She wasn't "in love" with Jaime, IMO, she needed a substitute for Rhaegar."
She was clearly in love with Jaime. She was also clearly "in love" with Rhaegar in the childish, silly way Sansa was "in love" with Joffrey. It was a childish, puppy love that Cersei idealizes later for the same reason Robert idealizes his dreams of Lyanna-- for the sake of telling herself that it all could have been different, better, if she'd been given to a deserving man.
She wants to be queen from the very beginning, to mary Rhaegar and be his queen. She also clearly and undeniably loves Jaime. She is afraid of hurting his feelings when he asks her about the picture of her and Rhaegar at age 10.
The idea that she is using him as a "Rhaegar substitute" is also fairly ridiculous. The two have been sexually experimenting together since early childhood, years and years before Cersei met Rhaegar at age 10. The consumation of their relationship at age 15 is merely the logical conclusion of their lifelong sexual experimentation.
5."She wanted to be married to Rhaegar.[/i] She wanted to be queen. She wasn't "in love"; with Jaime, IMO, she needed a substitute for Rhaegar. She convinces him to join the Kingsguard so that they will be in King's Landing together, and he does." And also: "In that sense, yes Cersei abused Jaime. The beloved sister took him sexually and convinced him to abandon his birth rights."
Yes. But I'm still not sure how this equals sexual abuse or an abusive relationship. Furthermore, Cersei is trying to convince Jaime to join the kingsguard so they can be together. Something she shows every indication of wanting, as does he. Evil manipulation? Cersei is certainly capable of that, but I can't see this case as one such instance, sorry.
As for the truly shocking sacrifice Cersei "makes" Jaime make... I don't see that either. His entire life, Jaime has drempt of knights and knighthood. He has always been infatuated with heroes like Arthur Danyne and the kingsguard. Meanwhile, he has shown little to no interest (or capacity) for being a highborn lord. When Cersei "makes" him join the kingsguard, she really only encourages him to take the career/ life path he has always wanted, rather than the one that has clearly never interested him. His proclamation that "he'd done everything for Cersei" and given up all for her in AFFC does not really jive with everything we've learned of him in earlier books. He may have sacrificed" Casterly Rock for her, but it must be said that up until his breakthrough he had never shown any sign whatsoever of wanting it.
Did Jaime "love Cersei more than she loved him?" Perhaps. But that does not mean that Cersei ever abused Jaime, sexually or otherwise. Nor does that mean that the relationship itself was abusive. Sad for Jaime, certainly, but not abusive. It is hard to be with someone and find that they do not love you as you love them, that they have been unfaithful, that they have desired others, or a combination of all of these things. But that does not equal abuse.
Quote
To equate the fact that one partner in a sexual relationship does not love the other as much as the other with abuse is nonsense.
I agree. But that appeared to be what you were doing here:
Quote
- did Cersei abuse Jaime? Yes and no. I think of the traditional sense of abuse, where someone in a position of trust takes advantage of you. In that sense, yes Cersei abused Jaime. The beloved sister took him sexually and convinced him to abandon his birth rights. As time goes by, no, because he loves her and is doing what he does willingly. But over my lifetime I've seen many couples where one spouse shamelessly uses the other, and we their friends shake our heads and say why do they let themselves be abused by their spouse like that.
Or so it seemed to me.
Quote
To suggest that I have never been physically or sexually abused is also nonsense - you have no idea who I am or what I have been through, and it is a personal attack that is not only baseless but totally out of place in these threads, which are opinions readers of the books have about imaginary characters.
I never made a personal attack. I merely implied that your frequent implications that Cersei somehow abused Jaime were ridiculous, and seemed based on a very tenuous understanding of what sexual abuse entailed.
Quote
People get so serious about these books.Really, we're all lovers of GRRM

"
I am certainly not upset.
Edited by Queen Cersei I, 03 March 2012 - 01:42 AM.