when rebellion ends in a graduation cap
2026, march 2
okay, rant is coming. i binge-watched the big c. it’s about a suburban mom who gets a cancer diagnosis and won’t live much longer. one or two years. it’s told in comedy style, so the horrible stuff is often funny. in many ways i found it lovely and liberating. it loosened something in me instead of making me afraid of death.
but what really upsets me is the son’s storyline. spoiler alert.
the dying mom keeps saying she desperately wants to see her son graduate before she dies. that becomes her goal: to stay alive til her son’s graduation.
in her final weeks, when she’s mostly bedridden but still laughing, still enjoying people, the son keeps rushing off. he leaves family gatherings quickly. everyone asks him to stay. especially his mom. he always says he’s going to spend time with friends.
so the whole time you think: what is he doing? why is he not with her? why is he choosing other things over his dying mother?
but then, one morning he storms out again and suddenly he comes back with the school principal. surprise. they perform a graduation ceremony right there in front of his mom. cap and everything. he’s actually still a junior. it should have taken another year. but he secretly pulled all his senior classes forward. he studied like crazy. that’s why he kept disappearing. he wasn’t with friends. he was grinding.
and this is presented as the beautiful resolution.
now it all makes sense. now it’s noble. now everyone is moved. now the mother is proud and relieved.
this is what makes me furious.
because first of all: why is it morally better that he spent those months cramming for graduation instead of actually spending time with people who matter to him, e.g. friends? in the show, she is disappointed when she thinks he’s with friends. but the second she finds out he was studying for graduation instead, it’s suddenly okay. as if pouring all your energy into an institution is somehow more legitimate than being with your friends. why is school the higher value than friendship?
and second: why is this framed as the ultimate act of love? as if achieving a milestone before a deadline is more meaningful than presence.
the mother used to be an unhappy high school teacher. when she quit, she hijacked the school microphone and publicly said she didn’t believe in the system. she said she was forced to teach kids things they would never need. she dismantled it. she walked out. she was applauded for breaking with the system.
and then at the end of the series, the show crawls right back into this system. the happy ending is a turbo graduation ceremony.
the show reproduces grind culture logic. you must accomplish x before time runs out. even if you live past your actual life to do it.
they could have spent those months differently. mother and son could have spent more meaningful time together. or he could have really spent them with friends, honestly, if that’s what he needed. but instead, the revelation is: don’t worry, he wasn’t wasting time socially. he was investing it productively. that’s the redemption.
i hate that this is framed as the better choice.
this whole “i’ll never see him graduate, i’ll never see him get married” narrative. as if those are the real moments that count. as if life is a timeline of institutional checkpoints.
what about all the micro-moments of shared time? like singing together while brushing your teeth. like building lego towers together. like hearing a loved one saying “wow” because the pink foam on mulled wine looks amazing. those are life. those are shared aliveness.
not a cap and gown. not some milestones a system tells you to reach.
and it makes me crazy that even a show that first mocks the school system ends up worshipping it in the final scene.