Amy (
brightknightie) wrote2008-09-01 09:17 am
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Effects and Duration of Dr. Jurgen's Treatments in ILCK
[Poll #1251783]
A month or so ago, pj1228 and I had a delightful little debate on this subject on forkni. After much canonical examination, we were unable to sway each other, and determined that canon cannot disprove either interpretation (cool, huh?). Before I import my side of that here, and reveal which angle I championed, I want to learn what you think! What is the mainstream perception on this?
no subject
Apart from the obvious real-world explanation, i.e. this is yet another Americanism in the show, one possibility for the use of the term "Social Security check" is that Norma was American. People do get pension checks sent to other countries if they live abroad. (See Social Security International Operations (http://www.ssa.gov/foreign/)).
I know the Canadian pension has to be applied for. But I don't know that you have to do it in person; you could, I think, do it by mail. As far as the American pension is concerned, the office that Norma would apply to is apparently the one in Niagara Falls, NY. Again, it seems likely that she would be doing this by mail. She would need to send identification, such as her birth certificate and proof of address, but she'd be doing that by registered mail along with the application form.
Then the checks would start coming.
no subject
When Natalie opens the body bag in the morgue, Norma's body has aged to look as though she is in late middle age. Her hair is iron grey, and her face has some lines. She could certainly be 65-70, but not likely more than that.
When the blonde woman (I forget her name) is shot by Schanke and her body ages, she finishes up looking quite a bit older. Her hair line seems to have radically receded, and her neck is very heavily creped.
Bernice's hair is silver, but looks in good condition and plentiful. She has some wrinkles, obviously; but she could be anywhere from her early 60s to well preserved 70s. She and Norma could easily be contemporaries. I'm not so sure about the blonde.
As I recall the FORKNI-L discussion, much was made of the famililarity the three women had with each other. From this someone drew the conclusion that they must have known each other in life. I'm not sure that this connection is so certain. It would be a lot easier for Dr. Jurgen to treat them if they all were in close contiguity to her—which means with each other—and, as the years go by, they'd have more in common with their fellow patients than with those not privy to the secret. They'd have to keep moving on, just as vampires do, lest people notice that they don't age. This would promote their friendship: their fellow patients would be the only ones with whom they could talk freely.
I can see Norma (the idiot!) turning 65 and applying for her pension because she's entitled to it, not even stopping to think that it might endanger their secret. We see so little of her that we have no idea what her personality might have been like; and there are certainly a lot of people who can't bear to be done out of any money they feel they've a right to. What Dr. Jurgen would have said if she knew is another matter; but there's no reason to believe that she kept that close tabs on the three women.
no subject
Once taking the training, though, Dr. Jurgen might well wonder about the nature and effects of vampirism, and do some of the same research that Natalie has done. In particular, given the importance of blood in vampire mystique, she might well be curious to see the effects of injections of vampire blood into live humans, as opposed to those drained to the point of death. And then try it out.
There are plenty of young women desperate to keep their youth. They pay a lot for "treatments" of other types, and the effects are often not immediately visible. Think of all those creams and potions that promise to reduce wrinkles and fade spots, but only over time.
I heard something on the radio recently that said that older women are far more cynical about the effects of such beauty products. Younger ones are more likely to believe the hype and buy them as a preventive measure.
So I can see Dr. Jurgen suspecting the likely effects, and picking out a woman to experiment on. It would presumably be someone she reasonably likes, since she's going to be creating a sort of "family" similar to LaCroix's, and will be seeing a lot of them. It would also be someone she thinks will be susceptible to the offer—someone who is acutely sensitive to the effects on her life that the loss of her looks will have as she ages. Having made her choice, Dr. Jurgen would offer this woman an "experimental preventive aging treatment".
She offers the same treatment to at least two others. There may, of course, have been yet more in the group at one time. We have no idea who might have dropped out after a while, before the youth-preserving effects became obvious, and simply returned to aging at a normal rate.
One thing is certain: none of the women knew the exact nature of their treatments. Dr. Jurgen was obviously being very careful that they not see that the liquid in the syringe was blood she drew from her own vein. So probably they just think she's giving herself the same experimental treatment she's giving them.
no subject
Nat: This was in her pocket.
Nick: What is it?
Nat: It's her Social Security check.
I might be paraphrasing slightly, but she did definitely say
Social Security. There was quite a bit of discussion about it at that time, as even many of us Yanks knew that didn't sound right!
The handwave of Norma being American is a nice option to have. Though a scenario in which that's the case and she was Miss Calgary Stampede is less likely. But not impossible. :-)
no subject
No, not impossible, I shouldn't think. She could have been Miss Calgary Stampede (if there actually is/was such a thing) in her teens, maybe; and then moved to the States and become an American citizen. You even have the possibility of an American girl's family emigrating to Canada, so that she spends her teens here; and then having her return to the States as an adult. She'd be an American citizen by birth, so she'd have no trouble moving there. Either way, it's not likely that she'd have been interested in Dr. Jurgen's treatment before her late twenties.
As for coming Norma's back to Canada more recently: well, I'm sure that Dr. Jurgen and all three of her patients would have had to move a lot. Like Nick, they could well have moved back and forth across the border. (Nick's fake background puts him last in Chicago.)
My family came to Canada when I was almost six and my sister was a baby. We both have dual citizenship. I still live here; but she moved back to England years ago. People cross borders all the time.
I can imagine them moving, with the documentation they use currently always referring back only to their last place of residence, cutting off the earlier domiciles. As long as people don't check too carefully, particularly into their apparent age in the last place they lived, they'd be able to get away with it indefinitely. That wouldn't stop them carrying "mementoes" which they keep private. (Nick does that too, after all. His apartment is full of mementoes.)