I can't speak for everyone but it's the thought that their broken edges fit together, Vegas is offering all of his shattered pieces and Pete is working on assembling them back together. Vegas and Pete aren't set up to be contrasting, I know they are incompatible at first sight. Pete is a ray of sunshine with darkness underneath and Vegas is broken, he lashes out in his despair to hurt others. Pete reaches out for someone who harmed him in every way possible because his kindness is overshadowing everything else and Vegas is confused because he thinks of himself as unloveable.
Pete exudes kindness wherever he goes while Vegas is emitting danger all around, they come from two different worlds and yet they find each other and many of us find that beautiful. I can write a novel about this but you get the point
I'm not disputing your definition of Stockhol Syndrome, because it is essentially correct. Some professionals…
Thank you for explaining, I believe trauma bonding occurs often so I don't consider it that significant here. Usually the hostage parties develops negative feelings towards the one's that are attempting rescue them and this isn't the case because like I said, Pete tried to escape which is something a person with a Stockholm syndrome wouldn't do, not to that extend. Also these individuals are generally not harmed by their captors and may even be treated with kindness but we saw Vegas hurt Pete not just imprisoned him so it's really unlikely. After all it's a fictional character so people making this assumption is okay but I don't think they have any source of material to justify it as a fact like many tried before. If that's their perspective then that's fine but realistically speaking it's 1 in a million that this would be a case in real life
Pete exudes kindness wherever he goes while Vegas is emitting danger all around, they come from two different worlds and yet they find each other and many of us find that beautiful. I can write a novel about this but you get the point