
1 Dream a Little Dream of Me 3 Here Comes the Flood 4 Brave New World 5 There's No 'I' in Team 6 Life During Wartime 7 Rise Up 8 These Ties That Bind 9 In the Midnight Hour 10 All By Myself 11 Wish You Were Here 12 Sympathy for the Devil 13 Stairway to Heaven 14 Beat Your Heart Out 15 Before and After 16 An Honest Mistake 17 I Will Follow You Into the Dark 18 Stand By Me 19 Elevator Love Letter 20 Sweet Surrender 21 No Good at Saying Sorry (One More Chance) 22 What a Difference a Day Makes 23 Here's to the Future 24 Now or Never
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Hi.
It’s Krista. I’m saying, It’s Krista because it’s been a
loooooong time since you’ve heard from me. The last time I wrote you
was the second episode of the season, and now here we are, three to the
end. Crazy, that’s what that is. It’s not that I don’t love
you, really. It’s just that we have this staggeringly good staff now
who write really, really good TV. I love this staff because they make
my life and my job so much easier. Also, because they make me laugh
really hard every single day. It makes me happy to have a life
where people are nice and kind and funny and smart and no one is
getting drunk and screaming and throwing things at my head. My
life was not always this good.
Which is why I love the episode you just saw, why I’m so, so proud of
it.
What I just got to say to everyone watching was, “Advocate for the
children in your life.” I didn’t start out with that agenda. I
started out with the theme of Making Amends – can’t remember who
pitched it, but I loved it. It started out with an idea about
Thatcher finally getting sober and coming to make his amends. But
then one of the brilliant writers pitched this story he’d read about a
kid who emptied a gun into his Dad. And the episode started to take
shape. And it turned into an opportunity for me to say to millions of
viewers, “Advocate for the children in your life.” And that makes me
really, deeply happy. Because I was a kid who could have
used an advocate. And I don’t wanna get all over-sharey and
uncomfortable and make you feel like you have to avert your eyes cause
you came here for some bantery writer blather and ended up in an unshot
episode of In Treatment, so that’s all I’m gonna say. I was a kid who
could’ve used an advocate. And as an adult, I have never
understood when other adults stand idly by, looking away and making
excuses while people hurt children.
I LOVE what Richard says to Meredith. I wrote it, so, y’know, I should
love it – but I don’t always love everything I write – and man, do I
LOVE that scene. I sat on set while the brilliant Tom Verica shot that
scene and while the luminous Ellen Pompeo and the wonderful Jim Pickens
acted it. And I cried. Every take. I just sat there crying take after
take after take. I cried for Meredith, mostly, because finally,
FINALLY one of the adults in her life is taking responsibility for what
happened to her. Finally, she’s hearing the words that she needed and
didn’t even know she needed. People have tried to apologize before.
Thatcher has tried. Richard has even tried. And it’s not that Meredith
is hard-hearted. It’s not that she can’t forgive. It’s just that no one
ever got it right before. She was just a baby. She was a little kid.
She couldn’t stand up for herself. And here were all these adults
running around acting like children and failing, every day, to fight
for her. She was neglected and she was abused. Her mother, for those
who may have forgotten, attempted suicide IN FRONT OF HER. This was an
emotionally unstable woman, Ellis Grey. Richard saw that – and he
did nothing. And Thatcher, her freaking FATHER, who not only saw it, he
lived it WITH HER, did less than nothing. To make an amends is
not just to apologize. It’s to make a thing right. And Thatcher’s
little scripted apology can’t do that for Meredith. It
can’t make it right. Her pain runs too deep. Her abandonment was too
complete. And so when Richard finally truly takes responsibility?
It breaks down a wall in Meredith’s heart that I truly believe she
didn’t even know was there. I think she’s as shocked by her tears as
anyone. And I think there is real and profound healing in that
moment.
Almost as much as I love what Richard says to Meredith, I love what
Meredith says to the mother of poor little Maddy, who emptied a 17
bullet clip into her abusive father. (And yes, by the way, there
are 17 bullet clips. And no, 6 year old Maddy would not have been
arrested and taken away from her Mom. We called the Seattle Police and
asked. ) I know that what Meredith says and does is
controversial, and I meant it to be. I know that there are
syndromes that abuse victims go through, and that perspectives get
wholly skewed. And I think Richard is absolutely right to order
Meredith to stay away from that family. And I think Meredith is
absolutely right – and powerful and awesome – to ignore that
order. And maybe it’s just my fantasy that an over-stepping
doctor could prompt a woman that damaged to finally do the right thing
and take a stand to protect herself and her child. But if it’s a
fantasy, it’s one I’m proud to put on TV.
There’s a lot more I could say about this episode, but I did the
podcast this week, so I’m kinda sick of hearing myself talk about
it. So instead, I’d just like to say, once more, with
feeling, please advocate for the children in your life. With
love, Krista