Guardians of the Galaxy
Richard has had something of a rough decade. After going from teen superhero, to twenty-something burnout, to space messiah, he died. He came back as superheroes generally do. But he came back to a world that had changed without him and was struggling to find his place in it. This led to more trauma including the death of his father while he was gone, and the loss of his brother who had followed his example as a Nova Corps member. Richard’s status as the perpetually rundown superhero/cop finally hitting a wall with the loss of family members, the Nova Corps, and his own mental stability presented a fascinating choice. So much of Richard’s arc in this run of Guardians builds on the wear and tear he’s gone through after his death. The build up finally takes its toll on him after he gets savagely beaten by Zeus in the first arc of the run, which leads to frankly one of my favorite single issues of a comic in years.
The long and the short of it is Richard goes to therapy. Ostensibly because he got beaten to a pulp by the king of gods Zeus. But the issue goes into a deeper introspection about everything Richard has suffered over the years and how it exacerbated his emotional issues from childhood when his father drilled a pretty simple idea into him: that he shouldn’t need help, that if it needs doing it gets done.
This issue hit me right in the heart for a number of reasons. That it connected to me on a personal level is the most obvious one, but why is more key. It approaches the idea of therapy and mental health with the same sensitivity and empathy that Ewing’s Immortal Hulk
As the book goes on, the scale of the problems the Guardians face get bigger after Star-Lord returns. The Guardians undergo a rebirth going from a ragtag team to a full on superhero team with over a dozen members guarding a depleted galaxy. Richard continuously grows through this time. While we don’t follow his therapy sessions, we get to observe how he’s changed. He’s able to take out godlike aliens called the Progenitors with astonishing ease and send them home with a warning. But more importantly, we also see how he responds to stumbles. He’s still having trouble dealing with his guilt over Star-Lord’s death and how he’s changed, including having had a family and a kid. It’s also where he’s struggling to cope with the fact that Peter isn’t emotionally open to him or to anyone which is complicated given the aforementioned love issues involved. He’s confident but still having trouble dealing with everything that’s happening.
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One of the key issues in that regard has Richard returning to Earth for the Hellfire Gala while stewing over the deals he’s had to cut for the greater good. Deals with people he’s fought in the past like Annihilus who he killed and now Doctor Doom who’s a member of their team. The thought of continually having to compromise his ethics for survival hits him really hard when he finds he’s having to shake hands with one of the biggest supervillains on the planet: Magneto. And his patience has run out.
While the fight itself is funny (Richard and Magneto scrap over a very old crime Magneto committed causing some aliens to die in a Kirby Captain America comic), what follows is actually fairly meaningful. Magneto points out that mutants and the Guardians are in a fairly similar position of moving from simpler times into more complex sociopolitical arenas. Both of them admit that their instincts propel them to want to return to those simpler times and in Richard’s case, he wants to find sense back when the world was simply black and white as a superhero.
The next and most recent event that happens immediately after all of this is Last Annihilation. A big cosmic donnybrook with Dormammu and the rest of the universe he’s invaded. The fight itself isn’t of major importance, but Richard is forced to push himself harder than he’s had to in awhile and even reconnects with Gamora after saving her life. Which leads to the climax with Star-Lord and Gamora admitting their love for each other and for Richard who reciprocates that love just before he gets fired out of a giant gun to push a giant magic-infused bullet through the evil space wizard and win the day.
That’s the magic of Richard’s character arc under Ewing in Guardians of the Galaxy. There’s no magic moment where he’s cured or gets better. He has bumps along the way, he slides downward and even starts fights. But he’s allowed an overall level of growth that isn’t usually there in a book like this. It also says in a straightforward way something that can be difficult to understand even when you rationally know it to be true: you deserve to be loved for who you are and you deserve the help to feel that way about yourself. There’s neither shame nor criticism, that growth is encouraged and respected which given the shall we say backward attitude of mental health in my home country is great to have realized. That his confidence is allowed to grow is sweet. That he’s also able to reach out of his shell and actually decide on his own that he deserves to be happy and even admit his love for the people he cares about is even better. From that aspirational desire to see yourself reflected in comics… Having a guy who has trouble accepting himself, accepting that he can be better than he is, that he deserves to be loved goes through a transformation where he can start to heal? It’s a pretty priceless story to me. And during a time when it’s difficult to be your broken and beautiful self, or to get help at all, it’s nice to see something aspirational in that complicated arena.