When was raven born
A founding member of the New Teen Titans, Raven, the Daughter of Darkness, fights for a world to which she fears she can never truly belong. Families are never a walk in the park, but when your father is an actual, literal demon lord? And Raven would know. But those who do get close?
They have a loyal and powerful friend in their corner for life When Trigon did manifest, however, he took the form of a human man—not the monstrous, red giant she would later come to know as his true form. Arella was seduced by Trigon, married him and became pregnant with his child before he revealed the truth to her.
It was here that Raven was born. On Azarath, Raven was taken under the wing of a mystic named Azar who taught her to control her emotions in order to curb the energy in her bloodline. His looming threat would eventually force Raven to leave Azarath in search of ways to stop him once and for all, a process that would inspire her to become a Super Hero.
Under the teachings of Azar, Raven learned to become a powerful empath and mystic. First Appearance. Related Characters: Titans. Beast Boy. Should the Titans Forgive Jason Todd? Nobody hurts you like family. Sometimes a family member Not yet an HBO Max subscriber? Once extracted, they tossed the hate through the Great Door of Azarath, never to be seen again.
Now free, the hateful energy began to take a form. When it was strong enough, it took the shape of a small being and placed itself in the body of a woman. Nine short months later Trigon was born. Immediately following his birth, he killed his mother and all those around her. When it comes to Trigon, Raven is left with only two choices. She can either 1 die fighting her father or 2 be forced to help him bring about the end of the world. This is what makes her such a unique character.
Every time she chooses to die fighting her father, Raven fulfills her own prophecy. That is, she knows she will die fighting him but does so because the alternative is a far worse fate.
Because she has lived a never-ending cycle of life, death, and fear, Raven has had a tough time making and keeping connections, intimate or otherwise.
Her inability to create connections has caused others to see her as distant, unfriendly, and unapproachable. Raven cares deeply about those around her but is poorly equipped to express it. I often try to write about characters who have histories that tie into real-world issues. Raven is one of these characters.
She echoes a very haunting real-world problem…child abuse. She was conceived through violence and immediately put up for adoption. She was both feared by and feared for by her mother. Her entire childhood was spent being told that should she not control her emotions, the world around her would collapse. Unfortunately, because she was a child and children are very easy to manipulate, Raven believed this and simply shut off.
Worse yet, because she A feared the being responsible for her creation, and B feared becoming a worse version of him, she became distant and unwilling to let anyone close to her. Often, one of the most tragic consequences of such trauma is its impact on your interpersonal relationships; by disrupting healthy development in your formative years, childhood abuse can deeply compromise your ability to form and maintain the healthy bonds that nurture us throughout our lives.
Throughout the history of Raven, she spent her life living in fear of who she was, what she could become, and the being responsible for her creation. Because her mother was ill-equipped to take care of her, she was given to a being who taught her to fear her emotions.
He taught her to suppress her emotions.
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