Friday, 13 December 2019

13/12/19 - Favourite Character Praise Friday! - Rei Ryugazaki


Hello and welcome back to Favourite Character Praise Friday! This is one of my absolute favourite posts to write and I hope you enjoy my picking apart of my favourite characters enough to stick around while I examine my next victim, I mean, character. Don’t worry, I do not rank these characters in a particular order, it just so happens that some characters are better worth sharing praise for at a different point in time to others! Remember, every fifth instalment is Least Favourite Character Praise Friday, so keep an eye out for me probing at characters I can’t stand and raving about how well they were written in order to evoke such a reaction.

So, who is the subject of my next Favourite Character Praise Friday?

Rei Ryugazaki from the Free! Franchise!



Anyone who knows me at all well will know that I have an absolutely unhealthy and excessive love for this character. I have, adored Rei as a character for over seven years. I have been immensely invested in his story struggle to articulate how much he means to me as a fan of the show. It has taken this long to actually start to word why I love him, as many of my friends expected him to be the first subject of my character praise, but whenever it came to explaining why I adored him, I would usually type out an incoherent key-smash punctuated with various heart shaped emoticons.

It’s taken until now for me to even begin to fathom articulating why I adore him as a character. Before I start praising him in a more analytical fashion, I would like to explain WHY he is one of my favourite characters.

Free! Iwatobi Swim Club was my first anime. I saw GIFs from the ever-iconic “I’ll show you a sight you’ve never seen before” scene on my Tumblr and was transfixed by the beauty of the animation and knew I had to watch this show, which was much harder than I ever thought it would be, with my media players were refusing to play I ended up sneakily streaming it and weeping in the local library. It was very hard to stay composed.

Rei always stood out as a character I related to due to his disposition. From the start of the show he makes it very clear he only hopes to be part of things that are beautiful and organised. He strives for perfection in his prospects. He struck me as a character that was similar to me in that respect, always striving for better, always aiming to excel. I related to him more than I’d related to characters in the past.

Watching his story unfold before my eyes was something that made me very emotional, watching him go from being unable to swim at all, to learning how to keep his head above water in all four strokes, improving his form in his specialised event, and bagging the position of captain had me sobbing.
When Dive To The Future came out, I doubted I would get as emotional as I did, as Rei would have been demoted to a re-occurring side character instead of a main character. Yet I still ended up in pools of tears. I was so proud of a character that I knew had worked hard for his achievements. I felt that seeing that season when I had only recently graduated from university made me feel even more emotional about my relating to him.

Obviously, this just explains why I love him, as opposed to actual character praise.

The first thing I feel a need to mention when it comes to praising Rei would be that his blatant disregard for egoism when it comes to chasing something he wanted. When Nagisa finally convinced him to join the swim club, he spared no expense, even his pride in attempting to find the things that were best for him, trying on numerous ridiculous swimsuits trying to find one that was comfortable. Then, after spending so much money on a swimming costume, he realised that what he had been wearing wasn’t the issue at all; he couldn’t swim. In the end, regardless of how hard it was, and how embarrassed he clearly was by his inability to even float, he did eventually learn how to swim, not just the butterfly stroke, but front crawl, backstroke and breaststroke. He also learned that his plight wasn’t due to an ineptitude with water, it actually had to do with him not having learned before, combined with a high muscle density from spending his middle-school career doing track and field events. He had no experience keeping himself above water without the excess weight from his muscles so evidently had a lot of hassle learning to swim. But he didn’t stop trying.

Which leads very much to my second point. Rei doesn’t give up on himself. He is a character that knows his own limits and always pushes himself to excel in his ventures. Swimming was exception. Prior to joining Iwatobi High School, it was clear that Rei was very much a visual learner when it came to academia and engaging in outside interests – his hobbies were oriented around reading and he relied upon theory to excel, feeling as if the reason he couldn’t swim was because he hadn’t managed to apply the correct theories of motion to his actions. Despite this issue, he learned to swim through a mix of visual, auditory and kinaesthetic experiences, before he eventually managed to swim butterfly for the first time. He knew he was capable of swimming beautifully like he had hoped, and he was willing to take his time to learn the best way to do that, when he had many an opportunity to give up. The fact that continues to chase this dream of a visually pleasing and clean butterfly stroke stays with him during the winter months where they are unable to use the outdoor swimming facilities for health and safety purposes. Rei maintains his position in the swim club in his second year, when he actually only agreed to be a part of it for his first year, but upon getting a goal in his head, he was adamant to achieve it. This continues into Dive To The Future, where as captain of the Iwatobi Swim Club, Ryugazaki Rei manages to win his heat that the National Swim Meet, and swim in the final, where he beat his personal best. He acknowledges at the end of the series that even though he didn’t win at Nationals, he made it there and placed, and that therefore ended his High School swimming career with a bang, which was what he wanted.

The last thing I want to mention in this post is that he is very selfless. Back in Season One Rei gave up his position in the relay at the regional swim-meet in order to give Rin, someone he didn’t particularly like at the time, an opportunity to wake up from the negative mental space he had found himself in. He gave Rin the opportunity to reunite with his original relay team and see “the sight [he’d] never seen before” once again, even though he had worked so hard to learn to swim and help get his team to that point. Even though he knew forfeiting his position to someone from another school would mean that his team wouldn’t be able to progress to Nationals, he knew it was the only way to get through to someone in desperate need of help that only he and his friends could provide, and he put that above everyone else and still supported Rin, and his teammates as they swam together, even though he wanted to be at the poolside with him. Those selfless actions further translate into the way he didn’t wish to burden his teammates by asking them to help teach him how to swim when, after a year, he was still struggling to swim any other stroke than butterfly, he ended up going to look for private teaching so he didn’t inconvenience the team. He was also shown to put his teammates above himself when he was their captain, actively trying to make sure that Romio was alright during the training camp, instead of focusing on his own performance and how to excel. Albeit it isn’t discussed, but theoretically, when a competition is coming up, one ought to focus on themselves because any time with your attention on other things, is time you could be spending improving your own performance. With this in mind, Rei potentially sacrificed his own performance, to make sure his teammates were performing at their bests. I don’t believe that this attitude would cease to be when Team Iwatobi went to compete in the subsequent competitions too.  

I feel like as a writer, there is a lot one can learn from Rei’s character, and the arc he goes through during his three years at High School. It is really interesting and I would go into a lot more detail about my feelings about it, except, I intend to do that in a future post. I will, however, provide a link to said post once it goes live on the blog.  

However, I do believe that there are things to learn from him as a writer, outside of looking at his character arc. For example, Rei's means of communicating with Nagisa is something I adore looking at, what started as a relationship where Rei would solely call Nagisa by his surname, "Hazuki-kun", he eventually ended up on a first name basis with him, referring to him by "Nagisa-kun" instead. Despite this happening relatively quickly in the series, significant changes take place from where he hesitates to be so informal, to him being so comfortable with being known as "Rei-chan" and calling his classmate and later friend "Nagisa-kun". The way that he interacts with him can be looked at in terms of motion and action. In Season One, Rei tends to avoid instigating contact, and reciprocating it. Nagisa is very hands-on and is fine touching his friends, while Rei is not as comfortable with it. By Season Two: Free! Eternal Summer, Rei and Nagisa are so synchronised that they lean toward each other when showing off their matching swimsuits. Simple things like that say a lot about the way a relationship has developed. Its subtle and clever and something I aim to focus on when writing my own works, as its the nuanced aspects of a dynamic that tend to say the most about characters.

Please, if you have opinions on Rei Ryugazaki, feel free ((pun intended)) to share them with me! Don’t forget you can check out my previous Character Praise by looking through the hashtags below.

And remember!

Per Aruda Ad Astra

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