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Do you remember the first ever time
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you truly felt a connection to something in an anime?
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Was it a whole show, a character, a scene,
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or perhaps it was just a single line?
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One moment I remember vividly,
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was when my grandmother passed away.
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It was the first time in my life I really had to grieve,
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and there were so many emotions I didn't quite know how to process it all.
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It was then a few months later that I got to see "Summer Wars" for the first time...
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and it was only then that it truly hit me.
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Seeing the way this enormous family functioned together,
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laughed together, cried together under the caring watch of a loving grandma
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with such an eerie reflection of my family that I held dear...
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it resonated with me so deeply that it actually brought out
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the emotions I didn't quite know how to process before.
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That was the moment for me.
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The moment when you weren't just watching someone else's story on screen.
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You were living it. He had lived it. You wanted to live it.
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Part of it resonated with a fiber of your being,
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and for a moment you felt a personal connection not to some person,
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for something intangible that you were watching.
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After I felt that for the first time, anime sees being something that could just entertain me,
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but something that could also connect with me on an unspoken level that no person had ever done before.
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*cute anime sound that I don't understand because there's no subtitles*
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;-;
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What got me thinking about this recently was when I got to see "A Silent Voice" in cinemas,
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which I absolutely adored.
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It's rare to see something that feels so intimate and familiar,
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yet tackling very difficult issues in such a grounded and personal fashion:
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suicide, social anxiety, bullying, disabilities, depression,
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none of these are played as anything overly dark, dramatic, or tragic.
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It's just portrayed as real. Which they are.
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As while touching on these tough themes,
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it manages to convey some of the most tender hearts warming moments in life
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you get from finding the close friendship and reconnecting with people from your past,
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because that's just the way life is.
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Some days are fine, some days are not and
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there's no on/off switch for these kinds of things.
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You don't have to experience a tragic loss to feel like your world is falling apart,
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you don't have to be in the middle of an epic story to feel like life is crashing at your feet.
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Sometimes you wear a mask because you're not ready to let the world know that you're not doing okay.
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And the people in your life you can seem the most fine,
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are sometimes the furthest thing from it.
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It was such a raw, delicate depiction of the most joyful and cruelest moments a person can go through,
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and the amazing thing I felt while watching this film is that you realize
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the smallest tragedies can come if you just let life play itself out.
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Seeing something like this always leaves me feeling warm,
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even if the topics explored weren't exactly pleasant.
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It's like a cathartic realization that someone else out there gets it (gets you),
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and it doesn't have to be any big emotional moment...
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sometimes it's just a mood,
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an atmosphere that has a familiar scent to it.
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I left the movie with this heartfelt nostalgic feeling,
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like coming home after a long trip and tasting mom's home cooking for the first time in forever.
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It's this feeling, this connection that I managed to experience more so in anime than I do anywhere else,
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and it's not just the shows or movies that come out, but also the people surrounding it.
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I can't tell you the amount of times I've met a person in this community
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he deals with similar issues that these characters have to live with on a daily basis.
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No, it's not always dramatic, and no it's not always the people you think it's going to be...
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but it is always so very real, and you'd be surprised how a medium can
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attract so many people with similar issues, thought processes and experiences growing up
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that goes beyond just a general interests of animation that comes from Japan.
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It's like there is something quite different about anime that's hard to put into words,
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but its appeal managed to attract certain people
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and while I can't put down exactly what this is in a few sentences,
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I will say that no matter how different our tastes are, or varied we are as people,
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in order to like and appreciate some of the stuff we see coming out of this medium,
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we all have to be at least a little bit weird.
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Whatever that means.
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If someone were to ask me what my ultimate goals are with the videos I put out,
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people may think it's to entertain or to be funny.
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But, in all honesty, is to connect.
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Connect with a friend, connect with a stranger,
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connect with someone I know, connect with someone I want to know.
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Connect with all sorts of people from all walks of life in places I would never be able to reach in my lifetime.
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Connect with you, and sometimes even connect with myself.
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Because that's the biggest thing that draws me to anime.
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Of course when I talk about connection, it's not always something you can relate to.
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A series can just as easily speak to the person you want to be,
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rather than the person you are now.
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Put thoughts you've had on screen like you've never quite vocalize correctly,
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or taken a subject and made you think about it in a totally different light.
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How many people have related to the mental anguish of the Evangelion cast,
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how many have been inspired by Simon's actions on his hero's journey
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or gotten lost in the world of a Ghibli film.
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The worst thing is, if we were to admit how intimately we hold some of these moments,
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some people's first reaction would be to ridicule.
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Like being real as a weakness that makes you an easy target.
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How stupid is it for these dumb cartoons to actually have a personal effect on our lives.
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How sad and detached from reality we must be...
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but that's just it.
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Some of us wanted that brief break from reality, and there's nothing wrong in that.
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We built walls to protect ourselves from getting hurt,
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shut the gate and threw away the key because it's safer to stay closed,
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protected from the cruel words of a fellow human being.
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But that's why it was easier to connect to a story or a character or an idea,
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even if it's cheesy and childlike.
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I always thought it was embarrassing when I looked back at my teenage self,
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connected to a character like Naruto in a simple adolescence when I could cheer for the underdog,
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because we saw ourselves as the quiet underdog.
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But now it's not just a character who was there when I was a kid, but a character I've actually grown up with.
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And as we grew older and learned that the world wasn't just a simple battle of good and evil,
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geniuses versus hard workers, I never stopped yearning for this same connection I felt as a kid.
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The more people I've met in this community,
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the more I realized that we've all found something that resonated on a deep personal level.
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And in doing so it's given us an opportunity to connect with each other,
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which I couldn't be more thankful for now that I found the friends I never did in my teenage years,
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when these animations were my closest connection.
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We complain and joke about the common trends and cliche we see all the times,
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but if you stop and think about it, this is one of the most varied mediums out there.
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Which is why if anyone explores it enough, they are sure to find something that speaks for them.
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There are the grand epic stories and bombastic gripping shows that grab the spotlight,
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but there are also very personal tales and crazy artistic ideas being thrown around.
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I mean where else can you say in one season you could be watching a show about gay ice skaters,
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or historic royal battle, witches is in World War two, butt wrestling,
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and a down to earth drama about dictionary making?
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It's not always about writing the perfect story, or getting critical recognition.
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Everything has his own voice, its own story to tell,
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which could easily say something to you, because it's easy to forget that behind the screen,
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behind every screen, isn't a callous machine producing stories, producing animation, producing content.
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But it's a person. Someone with their own thoughts,
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ideas and emotions they want to express.
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Like you. Like me.
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So look, if I had to sum up whatever points I was trying to make,
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we all go through this strange love-hate relationship with anime as fans,
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but beyond that, anime hasn't only been there as entertainment.
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It's given me the friends I could never find growing up, kept me company when I needed a distraction from life.
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Gotten me through some of my hardest times, resonated with all sorts of aspects of myself,
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brought a community together that I genuinely love, and it continually gives me the chance to meet
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and connect with new and amazing people that I never would have met otherwise.
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And when I think about it like that, it's quite amazing really,
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and I hope to God it's done something similar for you too,
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as you shouldn't be ashamed to admit that.
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Because for me at least,
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that really is.
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*music*