This Is the Most Shocking Thing About HBO's 'True Detective' - Speakeasy - WSJ


Cohle’s poignant, if warped, reflection on his daughter’s death and mortality in general: I think about my daughter now and what she was spared. Sometimes I feel grateful. The doctor said she didn’t feel a thing, went straight into a coma. Then, somewhere in that blackness, she slipped off into another deeper kind. Isn’t that a beautiful way to go out — painlessly as a happy child? Trouble with dying later is you’ve already grown up, the damage is done too late. I think about the hubris it must take to yank a soul out of nonexistence into this. Force a life into this thresher. As for my daughter, she spared me the sin of being a father.

This Is the Most Shocking Thing About HBO's 'True Detective' - Speakeasy - WSJ Monday, February 10, 2014 @ 10:59pm | Modified

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In the third episode, there is a scene at a revival ministry in a tent where his pious anti-religious declarations make him sound like a jerk. But two things give me pause: First is Cohle’s poignant, if warped, reflection on his daughter’s death and mortality in general: I think about my daughter now and what she was spared. Sometimes I feel grateful. The doctor said she didn’t feel a thing, went straight into a coma. Then, somewhere in that blackness, she slipped off into another deeper kind. Isn’t that a beautiful way to go out — painlessly as a happy child? Trouble with dying later is you’ve already grown up, the damage is done too late. I think about the hubris it must take to yank a soul out of nonexistence into this. Force a life into this thresher. As for my daughter, she spared me the sin of being a father. Second is the condition of the detectives in 2012: Cohle, devastated and alcoholic, more ruined and despairing than even in 1995
- Monday, February 10, 2014 @ 8:05pm

But two things give me pause: First is Cohle’s poignant, if warped, reflection on his daughter’s death and mortality in general: I think about my daughter now and what she was spared. Sometimes I feel grateful. The doctor said she didn’t feel a thing, went straight into a coma. Then, somewhere in that blackness, she slipped off into another deeper kind. Isn’t that a beautiful way to go out — painlessly as a happy child? Trouble with dying later is you’ve already grown up, the damage is done too late. I think about the hubris it must take to yank a soul out of nonexistence into this. Force a life into this thresher. As for my daughter, she spared me the sin of being a father. Second is the condition of the detectives in 2012: Cohle, devastated and alcoholic, more ruined and despairing than even in 1995 father.
- Tuesday, February 18, 2014 @ 7:50pm

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