Thank you for your words and prayers.
I have heard of the first movie, and I understand fiction is a way for us to explore the potential consequences of things that are either not possible in real life or too dangerous to explore in real life. I don't get my morality from movies though. However, since we're talking about movies and TV, allow me to recommend some of my own.
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This show and Spock in this movie, as well as James Bond to an extent. Pretty much demonstrate the kind of mind that I have to live with. One that thinks almost completely logically and has either never had the chance to have a romance, or were simply never interested.
There's a reason Sherlock Holmes and James Bond are regarded as two of the greatest fictional characters of all time. Casino Royale was the first Bond movie to portray him as he originally was in the books, a man of few words, he gets in, he gets out, he gets the job done. In the prologue we see him get his kills that make him a double-0 agent.
As he kills this one guy, you get a quick flash of the guy's family photo. This set up to portray that Bond is a cold, dark assassin. He will take you out, even if you're a family man. If that's his job, he's gonna get the job done.
Not to mention there's a scene where it looks like he might get with this one lady, but once he gets the info he needs, he leaves, he doesn't sleep with her. He's an assassin on the job.
This movie also pretty much explained why he has these sexual escapades. He falls in love with a woman known as Vesper Lynd, and she ends up betraying him and even allows herself to drown. And when Bond gets on the phone with M, he says, "Forget about it. The b*tch is dead."
Sherlock Holmes is much the same. Maybe not as cold as James Bond, but he's never been interested in romance 'cause he thinks almost completely logically, trying to explain emotions to him is like trying to explain calculus to a 3-year-old. He doesn't understand it. Not that he doesn't have emotions, that's just not his default way of thinking. In fact he considers himself married to his job. And he does it not because he has this moral drive. He does it because he's egotistical and wants people, both law-abiding and criminals, to know that he's smart.
And just like Bond, if he has a job that needs to be done, he's gonna get it done. And he doesn't let petty emotion get in his way. Take this scene from "A Scandal in Belgravia."
Sherlock Holmes: Sentiment is a chemical defect found in the losing side.
Irene Adler: Sentiment? What are you talking about?
Sherlock Holmes: You.
Irene Adler: Oh, look at the poor man. You don't actually think I was interested in you? Why? Because you're the great Sherlock Holmes, the clever detective in the funny hat?
Sherlock Holmes: No...[Takes her hand and leans in to whisper] because I took your pulse. Elevated. Your pupils dilated. I imagine John Watson thinks love’s a mystery to me, but the chemistry is incredibly simple and very destructive. When we first met, you told me that a disguise is always a self-portrait, how true of you, the combination to your safe – your measurements. [Holds up her phone] But this, this is far more intimate. This is your heart, and you should never let it rule your head. [He starts entering digits] You could have chosen any random number and walked out of here today with everything you worked for. But you just couldn't resist it, could you? I've always assumed that love is a dangerous disadvantage. Thank you for the final proof.
[She grabs his hand, desperate. Tears are starting to form]
Irene Adler: Everything I said. It's not real. I was just playing the game.
Sherlock Holmes: I know. And this is just losing.
[He holds up her phone, having finally deduced her password. It reads I AM S-H-E-R LOCKED]
Irene Adler's little crush on him was what ultimately got her caught. I know how people think. I know how people think I think.
With that, let's move onto Spock. Spock is about the closest you can get to a person with high-functioning autism. He doesn't fit in with either humans or Vulcans. He has emotions, but he also thinks very logically like Vulcans do.
His father even says, "Emotions run deep within our race. In many ways, more deeply than in humans. Logic therefore is a defense mechanism. To control your emotions to make sure that they don't control you."
It's not that people with high-functioning autism don't feel emotion. If anything, we may feel more emotion than most people. The issue is that I've seen and experienced what happens when I or someone else gives into that in a moment of weakness.
And it costs them or me A LOT. Just earlier I had a very nasty fight with a loved one where I was screaming and saying all sorts of bad things, 'cause I felt that was the only way to get their attention. In hindsight, I see how awful that was. I gave into intense emotion, and I really hurt that person. They may forgive me but the guilt remains.
In Star Trek 2009, Spock Prime tells Kirk that a captain can be relieved of their duties if they're emotionally compromised. He tells Kirk to go and make his younger self see that. Spock has been keeping all this rage about his mother's murder bottled up, and it results in this scene happening.
Kirk: What's it like? Not to feel anger or heartbreak, or the need to stop at nothing to avenge the death of the woman who gave birth to you?
Spock: Back away from me-
Kirk: You feel nothing! It must not even compute for you! You never loved her! [Spock attacks Kirk in anger]
Sarek: [Spock is choking Kirk] Spock!
Spock: [breaks off; to McCoy] Doctor, I am no longer fit for duty. I hereby relinquish my command on the grounds that I have been emotionally compromised. Please note the time and date in the ship's log.
So you see where I'm coming from? I have huge, huge regrets because of times when I acted out emotionally. And I've seen too many times people choosing feelings over facts. It's one reason why half of all marriages end in divorce. People get bored with their spouses and fall out of love just as fast as they fell into it. Plus, STDs and unwanted pregnancies do not care how much you don't want them. They're going to happen because you chose emotion over reason.