She will undoubtedly seek a resolution to the problem
You give Nodoka fanon levels of credit. She wouldn't.
She will undoubtedly seek a resolution to the problem


bissek wrote:In regards to the Kuonji agreement being at best an arrangement for a marriage meeting, then Genma by rights should not have taken the yattai until after the meeting - IF the meeting resulted in an engagement. The "Ukyo or Okonomiyaki" conversation does not count. I think marriage meetings have to be done at an age when the parties theoretically getting married are old enough to know what's going on.
bissek wrote:As such, it could be that all the Saotomes owe the Kuonjis is money to replace the yattai, which could be countered by a bill for Ukyo's share of the damage to the dojo during the aborted wedding.
bissek wrote:As for trying to settle the engagement mess with marriage meetings: I'm not too solid on the requirements, but I think the components needed for one to occur are



DBHay wrote:I didn't know just how powerful a hold Japanese mothers had over their sons.
Could be another reason for Genma to take Ranma away, he didn't want Nodoka having more control over Ranma than he did, plus if they'd stayed Genma would be expected to get a job.


DBHay wrote:I think Nodoka would try to help, if she saw that the only way Ranma could keep his honor were Seppuku or renouncing the family name.
That destroys her dreams of grandbabies so she'd have some motivation to try and find a solution.
Given her obsessions would her 'help' be any use though?
If Nodoka doesn't see anything wrong with the situation that means Genma will probably see it as permission to just continue adding to Ranma's burdens.


Eris wrote:To be honest, I cannot see this ending well for Ranma. He's very much a victim of his circumstances, and beyond that he allows himself to be. He's stubborn and socially inept enough that he can't manage to extricate himself from the situation he's been thrown into. Given his mixed feelings about Akane and the influence from all the people closest to him (location-wise that is--so the Tendos and his parents) I'm guessing that eventually he'll marry her. Given the events of the late manga and extra-manga information from Takahashi et al, it's clear that by then they really do love each other, or at least think they do. They just don't like each other.
That, of course, is more than a slightly dangerous mix, especially with Akane's tendency to speak with her fists (or whatever's handy really). I'm definately that Ranma someday pulls a Genma and takes his heir off on an extended training trip. (Honestly, it makes me wonder what Genma's parents were like...)
I don't seem him fleeing before then though, not without something that seriously shakes his world at the very least. He's trapped in Nerima and doesn't possess the initiative to leave without something on the order of someone dying to get out.
I think the real tragedy of the Ranma series is that it's a vicious cycle. The status quo never really changes, and things keep on as they always have with no one really happy. It's not only Ranma either--everyone seems to be stuck in the dystopia of Nerima, trapped in Ranma's orbit, and by virtue of that trapping him in the centre of them.
That was perhaps a bit too poetic, but I think the essence of it is correct. Nerima is a large mesh of people each trapping everyone else there. It's going to keep gnawing at everyone until they start collapsing from a thousand small injuries--physical and otherwise--picked up along the way.
Although to be quite honest, it gives me something of a morbid pleasure. Dystopias amuse me--it's like 1984, but not quite as awesome.

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