We are our own worst enemies, anon. We can be so hard on ourselves, so critical and merciless, especially when it comes to something as inconsequential (and yet so important to us) as our outside appearances. I wish there was some way we could physically look into our bodies and see them for the amazing tools that they are. Complex networks of capillaries, tendons and ligaments holding our muscles together and keeping them attached to our bones. Limbs that transport us with barely a thought, appendages that allow us to touch our world and interact with it, to feel and taste and smell and interpret⊠itâs incredible. And we really have no idea of itâor perhaps we do, but we forget. Again and again. Sometimes we need to be reminded of it because we are so forgetful, and if weâre lucky, weâve got a special person or people in our lives who will do that.
I think that Loki is canonically self-conscious in the MCU, perhaps to the point he has a serious inferiority complex. I can see him staring into the mirror and beginning The List. We all know it. The List of Things We Hate About Ourselves.
I hate my hair. Itâs so thin and oily. My forehead is too wide. My nose is huge and crooked. My lips are thin. That scar is showing up againâI need to find a longer-lasting spellâŠ
He starts from the top and goes all the way down, until he is feeling so low and miserable and worthless that he canât even stand to look at himself anymore.
This only gets worse when itâs revealed that heâs a Frost Giant.
As if he werenât ugly before, now he has to deal with being an actual, real monster.
Once he learns how to manipulate the illusion of his Aesir form (a tricky process that takes him many hours of practice), the first thing he does is strip naked and take a good long look in the mirror.
Oh, itâs so much worse than before. Worse because this is whatâs real. These rheumy red eyes. The lines and creases on his face, his leathery skinâso greasy in Asgardâs warm, dry climateâwith its corpselike blue hue. There isnât an inch of him that is even faintly attractive. There never was. Heâs an ugly misfit. Even the Frost Giants would consider him pathetic, so small and weak, possessing none of the qualities of a worthy jötunn.
Because IÂ am worthless, he thinks. Not only am I ugly, but Iâm a failure as well. I canât do anything right. My plans always fall through. No one truly loves me. They love the illusion Iâve had cast over me all this time. After all, who in their right mind could love this? I am a horrible, ugly person with no friends and nothing to offer except parlor tricks and silly littleâ
âYouâre beautiful.â
Loki jumps at the voice and turns, covering himself with his hands.
Thor has been standing in the doorway for the last five minutes, watching Loki study his reflection with his face twisted in disgust, wiping away his tears, muttering quiet, distressed utterances with every new flaw he found.
âI know you donât think it,â says Thor, âbut you are. Youâre amazing, Loki.â
âI am not,â Loki utters, throwing on a robe but remaining in his jötunn form. He wants Thor to see this hideousness for himself. Maybe that will stop the lies heâs spewing. âIâm awful. I look like an ogre or some sort of demon.â
âBut youâre neither ogre nor demon. Youâre a prince. Youâre a sorcerer. Youâre my brother, and I love you.â
Loki glowers. âThat makes one of us, then.â
After a momentâs hesitation, Thor walks forward and puts his hands on Lokiâs shoulders, guiding him back to the mirror.
âYou donât have to look,â he says softly, âand Iâm not going to make you look. But I want you to know that you are more than this body, Loki. The you in hereââhe touches Lokiâs templeââand in hereââhe touches the center of Lokiâs chest, just above his beating heartââis still the same. That is the you I will always love, no matter what your outside looks like.â
Loki scoffs bitterly, his head bowed. âEven if that outside is your enemy?â
âYour skin is not my enemy, Loki. Nor is it yours.â
âIsnât it? Am I not a Frost Giant? Am I not a member of that race of monsters all Asgard despises, including you?â
Thor goes quiet, his expression reflecting his shame. âI have been forced to do a lot of thinking since Father told me of your true parentage. I have changed my mind about many things.â He looks at Lokiâs reflection and gives him a small smile. âSo can you. That is the beauty of it. We can change the way we think and see others, even ourselves.â
Loki finally raises his head and looks at himself in the mirror.
Standing beside Thor, his handsome and perfect brother, he thought he would look uglier than ever before. But he doesnât. He looks⊠not attractive, but something about their skins beside one another, pink and blue, and their hair, gold and blackâeven their eyes, sky-blue and fire-redâlooks nice somehow. Complementary. Diverse yet harmonious.
Or maybe itâs just the way Thor is looking at him, his heart and his hopesâand his loveâshowing clearly in his eyes. That is the most beautiful thing in this mirror. Not them. Certainly not Loki.
âIâm afraid itâs going to take a long time to do that,â Loki murmurs. âMuch longer than it took to change yours.â
âThatâs alright. I will help you. I am here for you, Loki. I will always be here for you.â Thor gives him a squeeze and leans forward to plant a kiss in his hairâhis oily, stringy, smelly jötunn hair, as if it doesnât bother him at all.
âŠmaybe it doesnât.
Loki reaches up and grasps Thorâs hand. A thin veil of frost spreads across his warm fingers, but he doesnât recoil, doesnât pull away. No, he smiles and moves even closer.
Tears sting Lokiâs eyes.
Maybe someday heâll love himself as much as Thor loves him. It seems unlikely. Impossible, even. How does one learn to un-see this much ugliness? Who could look at this face and think that itâor anything beneath itâcould be beautiful?
âI bet you can conjure some impressive ice weapons in this form,â says Thor, turning himself and Loki away from the mirror. âHas your sorcery been affected at all?â
âYou should. Perhaps they are even stronger now that your true form is no longer being suppressed.â
âI sincerely doubt that.â
âWell, thereâs only one way to find out,â says Thor cheerfully. âCome on, letâs go to the training yard. Iâve never been stabbed with an ice dagger before. Itâs probably quite refreshing.â
Loki canât quite keep his mouth straight; it curls up at the corners despite his best efforts. He rolls his eyes. âYouâre an idiot, brother.â
âIâm your idiot brother, forever and ever. Never forget that.â
âIâm already trying as hard as I can.â
Thor grins and pats Lokiâs back. âIâll leave you to get dressed. Meet me in the yard in ten minutes. Oh, and Loki?â
âWhat.â
âBring your best game.â Thor wags his eyebrows as he leaves the room. âI donât want to walk away from this without a scratch.â
Loki smiles at last. He doesnât even wonder what it looks like on his jötunn face. âYouâll be lucky to walk away from this at all, you pompous fool.â He finishes by putting on a scowl and sticking out his blue tongue as far as it will go. Not exactly mature, but somehow it feels appropriate in this moment.
Thor laughs heartily and points at him warningly. âWe shall see about that, little brother!â he declared. âWe shall see!â
This is what happens when Narnia gets involved. Itâs, um. Loki the White Sorcerer? I. I really donât know. I think I just wanted an excuse to paint Jotun!Loki in white. And ice. Does this make Thor⊠Aslan?
Anyway, Lyn â this is dedicated to you. You write Loki so ridiculously well (and you write ridiculously well in general, just saying). In addition to being unbelievably talented, youâre a lovely, thoughtful, insightful person and an amazing friend, and Iâm so so so so glad I know you. Please never ever stop being awesome. â„