"The Essence of the First Slayer's Power"

Sep 19, 2017 11:54




"THE ESSENCE OF THE FIRST SLAYER’S POWER"

One of the more controversial characters that had appeared on ”BUFFY THE VAMPIRE SLAYER” was the character known as the First Slayer, also known as Sineya. First introduced in the Season Four finale, (4.22) ”Restless”, the First Slayer’s presence had stirred a great deal of controversy among the series’ fans and critics. However, I am not really interested in the controversies that surrounded the character. I am more interested with the Slayer's role as a demon slayer and how this role related to Buffy Summers and other Slayers throughout history.

To clarify myself, I would have to start with the origins of the First Slayer. Thousands of years ago, three East African shamans had become wary of the increasing demonic activity plaguing their community. To deal with the matter, the trio came up with the idea to create a supernaturally enhanced warrior . . . a demon slayer. They kidnapped an adolescent girl named Sineya, staked her to one spot and implanted her with the essence of a demon. The possession entailed supernatural strength, stamina, a predatory instinct, fast reflexes, rapid healing, intuition and prophetic dreams . . . enough abilities for a Slayer to face vampires and other supernatural bad guys. In other words, the three shamans committed supernatural rape upon an innocent girl in order to create a weapon they could utilize and control. But this article is not about the moral ramifications of the shamans’ act. It is about how the essence of the First Slayer related to the series’ leading character, Buffy Anne Summers.

Buffy and the other Scoobies - Willow Rosenberg, Xander Harris and Watcher Rupert Giles - had spent most of Season Four dealing with the U.S. Army sponsored task force called the Initiative and the mess the latter had created in capturing and experimenting on demons. The organization’s biggest mistake turned out to be a human/demon Frankenstein-style hybrid created by the Initiative’s leading scientist, Dr. Maggie Walsh. After killing Dr. Walsh, this monster - named Adam - created more havoc throughout Sunnydale, California by killing innocents and recruiting other human/demon hybrids (read: vampires) to his cause for a new order. In the second-to-last episode, (4.21) “Primeval”, Buffy and the Scoobies finally managed to defeat the near invincible Adam. They did so by using a spell to invoke the powers of the First Slayer to be put into Buffy’s body. Each Scooby represented the main attributes of Sineya’s powers - the Spirit, the Heart, the Mind and the Hands - in the spell. Willow acted as symbol of the First Slayer’s Spirit, Xander as the Heart, Giles as the Mind and Buffy as the Hands. By invoking Sineya’s power through Buffy, the Scoobies created a formidable foe that led to Adam’s defeat and death.

Many Buffyverse fans had viewed the spell invoked in ”Primeval” as an argument for why Buffy should never separate from her friends and her Watcher. They saw the spell as an argument for the old saying - ”no man is an island”. But the spell had led me to wonder about Buffy’s role as a Slayer and her connection to the other Scoobies. If those African shamans had created a Slayer that possessed enough strength to defeat someone like Adam, did that same strength ever get passed on to the Slayers that followed Sineya? Slayers that included Kendra Young, Faith Lehane . . . or Buffy? Or did Buffy and the other Slayers that followed only inherited one particular attribute of Sineya - namely the Hands, which all Slayers used to kill their prey?

If the First Slayer did pass on all of the abilities of her power to her successors, why did Buffy need the Scoobies to represent her Heart, the Spirit and the Mind? Surely, the blond Slayer could have summoned all of those attributes within her to defeat Adam. Or perhaps Buffy’s problems in dealing with Adam had originated with her two Watchers - Rupert Giles and Merrick.

One of the aspects from the series' Season Seven that I had found interesting was Buffy’s transformation into a leader of adolescent girls with 'the Potential' to become the Slayer. Unfortunately, Buffy’s introduction as a leader nearly ended in disaster, when the Potentials, the Scoobies, Dawn and everyone else rejected her leadership and tossed her out of the Summers house in (7.19) “Empty Places”. The souled vampire Spike and Andrew Wells were in Gilroy, California on a mission for Giles and missed the big event. The Potentials and the Scoobies' rejection seemed understandable, considering that Buffy was on the road to becoming an ineffectual leader. And who was to blame? Buffy’s Watchers - Merrick and Giles. I found it ironic that Giles had literally dumped the Potentials into Buffy’s lap and told her that she needed to become a general. The problem was that neither Giles or Merrick had ever bothered to teach Buffy to be a leader. Instead, they taught her how to stalk and kill demons. They taught her how to utilize 'the Hands' of the First Slayer . . . and nothing more. To Giles, Merrick and the other Watchers that ever existed, being a Slayer only meant being a killer of demons. I can only wonder if other Slayers between Sineya and Buffy were given the same limited lessons.

But what did this say about the other Scoobies’ roles in the battle against Adam? More specifically, what did this say about their roles in Buffy’s life? I am not advocating the idea that Buffy should have ended her friendship with the other Scoobies. But was it really necessary to invoke the First Slayer’s other three traits - the Spirit, the Heart, and the Mind - through them? Personally, I believe that Buffy could have found a way to use all four of Sineya's traits as a Slayer on her own . . . if she had bothered to try. If she had inherited the power of Sineya like all of the other Slayers before her, I saw no reason why she or any other Slayer throughout history could not learn to embrace all four of the First Slayer’s attributes as their own.

Or perhaps Buffy had already began to embrace the full power of the First Slayer by late Season Seven. She had managed to prove that the old saying - ’no man is an island’ - is not always true. After being booted by the others in "Empty Places" and comforted by a returning Spike in (7.20) "Touched", Buffy set out on her own to retrieve a magical scythe from another formidable foe, namely a misogynist priest named Caleb, endowed with the strength of the First Evil. And she succeeded. On her own. After retrieving the scythe, Buffy went on to rescue a wounded Faith and a group of Potentials who had wandered into a trap set by Caleb and the First Evil. Again, she managed to achieve this on her own, using her Spirit, Heart, Mind and Hands.

Did this mean that Buffy should have seriously considered that she might not always need the Scoobies by her side? Frankly . . . yes. Perhaps no one man or woman is an island, but each and every one of us is always alone, no matter how many people we surround ourselves with. With the Buffy saga still continuing in comic books, perhaps Joss Whedon might considered a new lesson for his main character and the fans - there are times when we need our friends, family or some form of help; and there are times when we have to face the fact that each of us is alone and we have to set about on a task . . . by ourselves. If Buffy ever truly learn that lesson in the comics, she will truly learn to utilize the full power of the First Slayer’s essence on a regular basis.

nathan fillion, eliza dushku, nicholas brendon, television, donald sutherland, sarah michelle gellar, mythology, alyson hannigan, felicia day, religion, anthony stewart head, movies, d.b. woodside, michelle trachtenberg, joss whedon, james marsters, buffyverse

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