so we don't talk about bruno is playing in our tv and i ofc was jamming to it then it got to isabela's part which made me think how everyone's spouting negative stuff about bruno while she's being arrogant (was what the viewers' first thought) again saying things like bruno told me my gift's gonna get even better and powerful in the future and I'll be married to some guy something like that and i went WAIT. i dashed to get the remote to play her part again and it came to me. she's actually saying negative things about bruno too. of how his visions SUCKS. because she doesn't want her gift to become more powerful. she HATES her gift. and she doesn't want to get married to what's his name mariano because she's just being forced to do so. and she HATES IT. and just aaaa! my girl isabela just wants to be HERSELF! wanna be true to herself! and with this train of thought it also came to me the reason why she's always so mean to mirabel. mirabel, even though without a gift, stays true to herself, while isabela is the exact opposite. she hates the way she's built. and whenever she says rude things to mirabel i like to think she also wants to say 'why are you acting like a sorry sad kid oh boo hoo i don't have powers and the rest of the family has theirs you wanna have one? take mine!! at least you yourself don't have to fake everything everytime..' and please take note how things escalated so unrealistically quickly when Bruno's vision told mirabel that to fix the miracle or candle thing from breaking down is just to. hug— no actually not hug— EMBRACE. isabela. it sounds so ridiculously simple and that's exactly what makes it sad to me. isabela just wanted to be understood. their song literally took so short with her transition from summoning flowers such as roses to cactuses etc that moment was all she needed to EMBRACE herself for what she truly is. she didn't need to act like a perfect princess anymore. and i just iegscxkaidhvfndks.
tldr isabela madrigal has a future wife and it's me bruno told us real not clickbait
If you genuinely enjoy being alone, do you ever wonder if it is an inherent part of your character or if it stems from feeling inescapably lonely in the first place until you taught yourself to enjoy the peace and happiness one can find in solitude? what if the reason you now prefer & choose solitude at every turn is because you were a very lonely child, or teenager, not by your own choice, and that’s how you learnt to thrive and grow, so you no longer know if you can do that around people? There might also be an element of personal pride, an unconscious “you can’t fire me I quit” point when your brain decided to switch your feelings about solitude from distress to relief. I often find myself defending my love of being alone, to people who worry that I can’t possibly be happy to live in an isolated house in the woods; I insist that I do! I really do specifically enjoy the isolated factor and chose to live here because of it, but then I wonder how to differentiate an ingrained love of solitude from an acquired ability to thrive off unchosen loneliness, to learn from it and be nourished by it; to what extent it might be a form of contentment built on a bedrock of resignation.