TMC
06-02-2026, 09:47 PM
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What if Rue's addiction was never the problem — but the only solution her mind could find?
Rue Bennett doesn't get high because she's reckless. She gets high because being sober means feeling everything — the grief, the self-hatred, the terror of connection — without any protection at all. In this deep-dive psychological analysis, we break down Rue from Euphoria through the Big Five personality model and attachment theory to understand why sobriety feels more dangerous to her than the drugs ever did.
From her disorganized attachment style rooted in her father's death, to a nervous system that generates suffering as its default setting, to the relationships she uses as replacement anesthetics — this is the psychology of a girl who chose oblivion because existence was unbearable.
This is Frankly Human — fictional characters, real psychology, and the patterns you'll recognize in people you know.
Who should I analyze next? Drop a character in the comments.
What if Rue's addiction was never the problem — but the only solution her mind could find?
Rue Bennett doesn't get high because she's reckless. She gets high because being sober means feeling everything — the grief, the self-hatred, the terror of connection — without any protection at all. In this deep-dive psychological analysis, we break down Rue from Euphoria through the Big Five personality model and attachment theory to understand why sobriety feels more dangerous to her than the drugs ever did.
From her disorganized attachment style rooted in her father's death, to a nervous system that generates suffering as its default setting, to the relationships she uses as replacement anesthetics — this is the psychology of a girl who chose oblivion because existence was unbearable.
This is Frankly Human — fictional characters, real psychology, and the patterns you'll recognize in people you know.
Who should I analyze next? Drop a character in the comments.