50 Shades Freed
Let
me start by recapping what happened in the last book. I do this because I
generally don’t want to spoil your experience if you’re reading the book; since
you’re on the 3rd one, I can talk about in detail of the contents of
the previous book. If there are no surprises, then there’s less excitement in
reading the book.
The
2ndbook 50 Shades Darker begins with Christian and Ana getting back
together again. Their chemistry is so electric, so palpable, you, as the reader
can feel it through the book which is one testament to the book’s success. For
instance, Christian becomes very expressive and loquacious when it comes to
conveying his admiration, feelings when he and Ana get back together, though he
is such a self-deprecating person, he doesn’t feel he’s worthy of her love, or
anyone’s for that matter. It’s hard to believe for him to be loved by anyone,
though even the Bitch Troll (sorry, Mrs. Lincoln) knows that he’s in love with
her. .....
We just can’t move on
without talking about their hmmm… first union, to put politely. Ok,
here’s what happens. Christian vowed to not to make love to Ana until she
begged. Well, that is too hard to avoid when the two get together because the
electric is so palpable between the two. After Christian picks Ana up from
work, they go to her apartment for a change. At that point there is more than
one emotion thrumming between them other than yearning, lust, love, passion.
That’s anger (from Ana). She’s just learned that Christian purchased SIP. But they manage to pass that with Christian’s
sexpertise. He manages to get close enough to her, but doesn’t even kiss her.
He wants her to tell him exactly what she wants. Here’s the thing: Christian can pack a lot of hotness, feral passion, love and
pleasure into simple words and make Ana swoon just with his words and with one
look. For instance, Ana is all shy and asking him if he would like a drink.
Simple enough, right? After saying no, but thank you, he says back to her,
“what would you like to do Anastasia?” Softly but with all his passion packed
into it, “I know what I want to do”.
Even when he
later leans down to her, he won’t kiss her, because he wants her to tell him
what she
wants. He’s asking permission. He wants her to spell it out. It’s not just what he says, but it’s how he says it. It’s
in the way he uses and utters his words, the body language, it’s in the
confidence, in his knowingness of what he’s doing (not like an amateur who confuses
the difference between his elbow and you know… his ass.) He asks, no,
actually he breathes into her ear if she wants him to kiss her. She’s all
“Yes”. But he’s taking no prisoners. “Where?” he asks. She says “everywhere.” But, that’s not enough;
he wants her to be more specific. He wants her to beg and tell him what to do.
She begs please. (Take note people…)
“Please
what?” he says. She wants him to touch her. Of course, that’s still
not enough, “where, baby?” Right there! In these two words he packs so much intoxication,
connection, communication, the demand of “get past your inhibitions and talk to me explicitly”
i.e. the said significant other, and a lot of love, passion, lust... In just two
simple words! If you can manage that, kudos to you!
Even after all this passionate exchange, they don’t make out, yet.
She’s hungry, and he wants her to eat, and so they start preparing stir fry. But
Ana is about to combust, so she innocently brushes her arm, her derrière, her
elbow, you name it… she’s trying to get his attention, and she succeeds. They
won’t be able to cook with all the passion that’s palpating between them, and
he can even make the “Put the chicken in
the fridge” to sound sexy and desirous because they won’t be
able to eat right then. He breathes to her “What do you want Anastasia?” This
question is enough to make her gasp, “You” she answers. He’s ready to take her on the kitchen floor,
but he wants her to specify where she wants to make love. She says ‘the bed’.
He scoops her up, and carries her to the bedroom and sets her on her feet. He
softly coaxes out what she wants him to do. Spell it out. She wants to make
love. He wants her to tell him exactly how. You see up until this point, no
kissing occurred, and no making out, nothing. Just
words! Words are sensual, it
builds expectation. His words are Alive. Palpable. Building expectation. And
expectation is half the fun. Unlike the
comedian Ron White telling his fresh bride “I have log ride here!”
(See my review on 50 Shades of Grey). This is what women expect (not the log ride,
but sensuality, love, and desire). End
game may be the same for the layman such as the likes of the log ride providers,
but there are rides, and then there are rides.
It’s
like the Renaissance Festival we went a few weeks ago. They had certain
rides there for people. Swings and a huge swan ride where kids and adults alike
were seated inside and two girls stood on each and using their own weight made
the ride rock (it looked like a giant rocking chair); a similar one was a giant
rocking horse or the swings which were Medieval version of a carousel ride were
swung by two burly men. And in comparison to these imitations of a ride, there
is of course the Six Flags Magic Mountain (the
Batman Ride, Colossus, Dive Devil, Apocalypse, Scream, Ninja, Goliath…
you get the point. Oddly, up until this minute, I never thought Magic Mountain rides had sexual connotations until I entered the names of these rides. Dear God! I can never go on those rides without blushing anymore.). Kinda dwarves the medieval rides, do they not? Magic Mountain makes the Renaissance Festival look like
themed swap
meet. If you want to get on
the Apocalypse ride, you might want to ditch the swan, or the fake carousel
rides. See in order to get better experience from your ride; you have to have
better rides.
At that point Ana
spells out what she wants, where she wants to be kissed exactly. And that’s
what Christian wants to hear. He knows how to take charge with confidence, but
also gives her control, lets her participate, make decisions; he’s a good leader,
but empowering. And the rest is history as I’m sure you’ve read it…
I had to write this section on the 50 Shades Darker here, because, I want people to take notice that
closeness in a relationship doesn’t happen without communication. Throughout
the book, we see Christian pushing for clear communication. That’s
what I like the best: Communication is extremely important in a relationship.
Remember Dr. Randy Carlson’s callers? (From my 50 Shades of Grey review). Those men expected their wives to be
accommodating, and giving and doing God knows what they want them to do,
because I sure don’t, except they are saying “I’m starved for affection!” to the good Doctor. Take a note guys… Build
anticipation. Because you can’t just be the recipient, the receiver and the
expecting party. Tango
is done in pairs. You can possibly do it alone but, if you know how to dance
it, there is nothing like it; incredibly sensual, close, better than, well, you
know… just know that solo won’t feel the same. Since
this book is written by a woman, she’s expressed so clearly how to make a woman
beyond happy.
Ok, moving on…
There are a few major troubles: Christian has an emotionally disturbed
ex-sub who is stalking them both. Christian wants to get her the help she
needs, but Leila (who looks similar to Ana) doesn’t understand why “master”
wants Ana, and not her. She’s broken into his apartment, came to Ana’s work,
and finally despite the security, Leila has broken into Ana’s apartment toting
a gun. Ana goes back to her apartment to let Kate’s brother Ethan in, or to
check in on him, and he wasn’t there, but Leila was. Christian who happened to
take a phone call was in his car while Ana goes into her apartment. All hell
breaks loose when she goes in as she meets a disturbed young woman. Ana stays
calm, and when Ethan shows up outside, Christian and Taylor rushes in realizing
someone else opened the door for Ana. There stands Leila with a gun in her hand pointed at Ana, the love of Christian's life. He needs to quickly make a decision to save her, and the expression in Leila's face gives Christian an idea.
Her demeanor indicate him that he just may be able to get through to her if he reassumes his role
as her Dom like he was in the past. That actually was a sad scene for me, and I
think I was sympathizing with Ana who was shocked getting a glimpse of how he
behaved in the past. Then he ordered Ana out; though in his mind he was trying
to protect her to what was going to ravel, and she was frozen. Finally
Christian made Taylor carry her out of the apartment while he tended Leila's
needs. Here’s the crux of the things: This scene brings out all of Ana’s
insecurities. Because she can never be a submissive; not like these other
girls. She then has this crushing realization that she may not be enough for
him. That he may miss that lifestyle which she’s unable to provide to the
extent he’s used to. She goes out to a bar with Ethan teary eyed across from
her apartment, and sees Christian carry Leila out wrapped in a blanket. (We later find
out that he also had given her a bath, which he explained as compassion from
one human being to another as she really was very dirty, unkempt),
but nonetheless, that doesn’t make Ana feel any better. Feeling the 50 Shades of Fuckedupness yet?
Since Ana left her things in the car, she’s unable to get back to her
apartment, but walks to Christian’s. He’s by then so concerned, so livid, so
scared that he thought she ran. This single incident is very crucial to the
story. Because this is where we get a glimpse of what Christian had been like:
a true Dom. The sight of it is not pleasant. Not to Ana, and certainly not to
me. But what happens after she gets back is even more important. Ana’s fears of
not being good for him comes right back up on the surface. Because she sees a
girl, namely Leila who is a true sub. Who just submits to Christian’s will with
just one look. One
frigging look people! Geez! That’s
not in Ana’s character to do what Leila would do for him. So, this is where the
chips would fall.
Then later comes the confrontation: She spills all her insecurities
about how she’s not good enough for him, and that he’ll get tired of her.
Christian is exasperated. He tells her he loves her in desperation. He feels
she’s about to run. He’s panicked, extremely panicky, looking for almost a
divine intervention, anything. He loses it, and it happens: He drops on his knees, head bowed, his fingers spread out on his thighs, and stops moving. Ana is confused, bewildered asks him what he’s doing. No answer! She commands in panic “Christian, look at me!” and he does, serene, and expectant; he became a sub. Reading this section was very emotional, because if you already loathe this sort of life style, it just breaks your heart to see someone who will do anything to receive your love. Just completely heartbreaking! (←Poesession by Sarah McLachlan)
You see, right here, you realize that he loves her that he will have
her any way, any capacity she’s willing to be with him. Ana realizes that this
is so wrong, and so disturbing, and she thinks she somehow broke him. This is
also where we realize that Ana needs to be expressive of her thoughts and
feelings instead of just taking off and running away. This incident allows her
to do that. She goes down to his level, on her hands and knees and tells all
her fears, concerns, and of her love to Christian, and brings him back out of
his undesired state of submissiveness.
When he comes out, he tells her that he was so scared. So scared that she would die because of
him. He says that it was like dying a thousand deaths when he saw Leila holding
a gun to her. He tells her of his exasperation with Ana because he wanted her
to be gone so she wouldn’t get harmed.
See what happens when you communicate people? You discover your
misconceptions, clear the air, and start a fresh. He admits that Ana is his lifeline.
Ok, by now, the shrink in your head is screaming “co-dependent”! Paging Dr. Drew! Shut that
shrink up! (Sorry, got caught in the moment L) Just because
the majority of the world is experiencing a mere existence with no strong
attachment to their significant other, doesn’t make this wrong. I would take
this over any other kind. Because life must be lived fully, not barely. What better way to do it if it’s not with one person who
gives meaning to your existence?
Some of you might say, he’s overbearing, controlling, fucked up (let me remind you that women too can present such behavior excessively).
And please don’t you
get your inner feminist moving in on me; I'm not interested…I will gladly hand her an eviction slip. This sort of thinking would be giving very little
credit to Ana (yes, you're a lot smarter than her, you would never fall for a man like Christian Grey - after all, you've been around the block more often than the Good Humor ice-cream man, whereas she's only 21), or to the intelligence of other women that they can’t handle the
characters quirks of men as we women have them as well. It's in our biology. Honestly, I
think a man would be too dull if he wasn’t a little jealous, a little
controlling, a little overbearing (don’t overdo the spices though). You, as the
woman, are the measuring cup. You let him put just the right amount of that.
Not too much, or not too little. Learn the art of it that your predecessors
perfected. Ana
does that beautifully, and Christian responds, and reciprocates and responds
positively. That’s where the beauty of this relationship lies. They’re
perfect compliments to each other, but you wouldn’t know that in the first
book; they teach each other that ~ it’s a learned and perfected behavior which
gives hope to the rest of the people who can manage to do that in their own
relationships. Then again, relationships take two people; there is no one size fits all. What makes you happy may not make someone else happy. By the same token, Christian is a good match for Ana, but he wasn't for 15 other women. Just keep in mind that this is a love story, a fiction in a very unexplored context (at least in the first book). If there was no sin, there would be no need for redemption. Because, we'd all be in heaven.
During this “bring everything to the surface and air your
darkest parts of your soul” time, Christian confesses to Ana
something very dark about himself; he believes he’s a sadist and tells her he
likes to whip little brown-haired girls like her because they all look like the
crack whore, his birth mother. I just about died when I read that. See
the enormous dark elephant in the room no one can ignore? That’s the
last piece of big crappy secret he’s carrying inside, and it’s all out in the
open now. He’s basically exorcising all his demons for Ana. He explains how his worldview has changed
after she left; her love was a revelation for him. Ana knows how to confront
him, and go toe to toe with him. She loves him, and he’s scared that she’d run.
She’s mad at what she heard but she won’t run. He’s not sure of that. She asks
him, how she could make sure that she won’t run though she’s mad. He says
“marry me.” She won’t say yes or no, well for one, this isn’t the most romantic
proposal. (He’ll make up for the deficiency – see even if he’s inadequate he
learns quickly and corrects his mistake very well.) It sounds like I’m
shortchanging you here, but you have to read the book, because, there is so
much more to talk about still.
2nd
big incident…
That’s aboutJack
the boss, a.k.a. the blackmailer. We learn that Jack, Ana’s boss is trying to
blackmail Ana – after reading her outgoing steamy e-mails to Christian to get
into her panties. She kicks him in the family jewels and runs out of the
building (this occurs right before she leaves for work) and collapses outside.
Christian and Taylor rushes to her side, and Taylor beats the crap out of Jack
and in short he’s sent packing after Christian gets his due. We find more about
this in the third book, but Jack sabotages Christian’s helicopter Charlie
Tango. Luckily Christian manages to land it with difficulty. But until he gets
home, the news of him being lost is everywhere, and a devastated family and Ana
wait for the news of his well-being. When he comes home all dirty and ragged,
it’s the most welcoming sight to everyone which makes Christian realize that
his family does love him (he who feels unworthy of love.)
Most
important event..
Ana
accepts to marry Christian, and her answer is his birthday present. Of course
the bitch troll is sooo unhappy about it when she hears this news during his
birthday party, and corners Ana to scold her because she isn’t good enough, and
calls her a “gold digger”. Ana pours her drink on Elena’s head, Christian walks
in, and confrontation begins. To top things up, his mom walks in and hears what
Elena had an affair with her son, and slaps the bitch child molester and kicks
her out of her house. (Thank God! Being a parent, that’s my
favorite part.)
Now, we can properly begin talking about 50 Shades Freed:
The third and final book on the series begins with Christian and Ana’s
honeymoon in Monte
Carlo. They were married in his parents’ house, and they consummate their first
night as a married couple at 35,000 feet on Christian’s private jet on their
way to London a first for both of them, joining the mile high club. Of course
when we read about these, Ana was dreaming about it reliving the experience at
the beach where she kinda went topless face down, but when she fell asleep she turned over and was exposed to all
to see to Christian’s shock and anger. You know what that means; he’s going to
punish her someway, and that usually ends in the bedroom, because that’s his
coping mechanism. He sort of goes primal on her, and marks her with hickies
which she doesn’t realize till the next day, not to mention the marks left by
the hand and ankle cuffs which greatly upsets Ana although at the time she
likes how they did the uhm… act. She just didn’t like being marked like an
adolescent, and rightly so. And she lets Christian have a piece of her mind.
What you realize here is that Ana is not afraid of him; she may be intimidated
by him at times, but she can let him have an intimidating piece of her mind, and she’s a force to be reckoned
with. She knows how to hold her own, and knows how to stand up for herself (some
of you girls need to learn from this! Namely to stand up for yourself…) So, that was the result of the
punishment uhmm fuck (I hate to keep
using this word,
but that’s what it was & had been rectified by a
makeup love session which just shows that he’s mercurial but willing to correct
his erroneous ways. You just have to read it; I’m not spelling out for you.)

We also learn along the way that Carrick, Christian’s dad wants Ana to
sign a prenuptial agreement, and Christian is really pissed at him for bringing
it up. Ana, knowing she’s not bringing anything into the relationship is
willing to sing, but Christian is mad as hell, and adamant that she’s not to
sign anything. She tells him, that she isn’t bringing anything in. In the event
that she may do something exceptionally stupid, or that cross some imaginary
line he’s drawn, he may not want her. He tells her “if you leave me, you might
as well take everything. You left me
once before…” He closes the subject never to be rehashed again.
During
the honeymoon they learn that someone tried to set fire to Christian’s
company’s server room; another added concern to the Charlie Tango incident. Christian
keeps as much of the details as possible to not to worry her, but he’s ever in
control via his Blackberry. He’s larger than life, that guy.
I
want to skip this because we’ll deal with this later in the book, but bring you
to a different subject: Intimacy. It’s not what you think thought. You’d be happy to know that ever the
science loving persona in me conducted a limited survey among my gal-pals
recently. What’s
more intimate, a kiss or sex? And the consensus was unanimous: a kiss was more
intimate than sex (don’t take this as with strangers. My friends are all
either married, or had been in a steady relationship for quite some time.)
So, even for married couples, a kiss was more intimate. I then asked the question what would
be even more intimate than a kiss, and they couldn’t think of another aspect.
Then I asked “how about getting
shaved?”
“You mean shaving
your legs?” one of my friends blurted.
“No,” I said embarrassed,
“your privates...” I said as calmly as possible.
Considering some of these women go to a beauty salon to get those bits
waxed, I found that this one act was too intimate to share with a guy who knows
your intimate parts better than yourself. Even the most seasoned ones
were shy about it. That’s what Christian did for Ana. She tried
to shave herself but didn’t do a very good job, and Christian told her “if a job is worth doing, it’s worth doing properly,”
and wanted to shave her. Ana too was extremely shy about it even though she’s
done more things with him in a few weeks that many people didn’t know was
doable in a lifetime.
I was just testing whether this was plausible (how intimate of a feeling being shaved was),
and it in fact was: The women in my acquaintance agreed last week that it is a
very intimate act – letting your privates shaved by your significant
other. I would have never thought about it, if it
wasn’t in this book. Live and learn people, live and learn…
The things I do
for the sake of science… And shut up, it is for science! I value learning, and as
Christian said, if a job is worth doing, it’s worth doing properly! It’s not the easiest thing to ask a roomful of
women who are having a tea party talking about their jobs, kids, hubbies, and
recipes… “Girls, let me ask you a question. Which
of these two things is more intimate for you: sex or kissing? Pass
the sugar please…”
“What?” blurts my
best friend.
“Just answer, I
know you have no reservations expressing your feelings.” She gave me a knowing
smile.
“Kissing,
undoubtedly.” She said, and others chimed in the same manner, and went on why
it was going on with their experiences over the years. She then calls her friend in North Carolina
who is dating a new guy and she too wants to be in on the conversation, so
we’re having this surreal impromptu book club meeting – though it wasn’t the
initial intent of the tea party. And
this other lady I’ve never met in N. Carolina also agrees that a kiss was more
intimate. I then sprung up the shaving question on them.
My friend gives me a sly smile, and says, “Ok, what the hell’s going on? Who are you and what
have you done with my best friend?” (I’m very private in public, even with my best friend; see what this
book does to you? I’m now talking to strangers here… Savor this people, because
this is not an everyday occurrence for me.)
I told my best friend, “This is my version of a science experiment, so just
answer the damn question, I’m writing a book review, I want to be through!”
I scold her. That she gets, because she knows I read a lot, and in a strange
way, this is right up my scientific alley.
“Trust you to
make a science experiment out of intimacy…” she laughs but answers.
“I
don’t think I’ve ever done that, it’s too intimate,” she says shyly. By then I’m
gaping at her. My best friend is
blushing and getting shy? Because she
talks about doing the deed, oh… in the pool, the Jacuzzi, on top of the washer,
in the ocean, oh I don’t know many other surfaces she’s been to. And she thinks
this is intimate? I’m surprised, but other women agree. Too intimate, they
all chime in. This answer comes from a group of women who’s been around the
block at least once. So, there you have
it people; this can be a sensual experience for those who dare to put it in
practice.
Ok, I digress… Christian and
Ana get back home after a wonderful honeymoon to the problems awaiting them at
home. The first visit they pay as a couple is to Christian’s family. After
their visit, Christian allows Ana to drive his beloved R8 which is ensued by a
car chase; the person who is threatening their lives and livelihood is chasing
them! Ana is on the wheel, and the security detail on the back. The excitement
climaxed when the car nearly gets very close to them, and they manage to pull
into a parking lot; the un-sub drives away losing them and C&A have their
first car sex in the parking lot. What? You expect me to spell out how they did
it? You have to read it yourself. There’s a lot more to talk about in the book. Moving on…
They’ve also purchased a home and remodeling it by this time. The
architect, a friend of Elliott’s is another woman who is ready to lie under
Christian if he would have her, and making subtle passes at him which bothers
Christian. When Taylor calls Christian to discuss something, Christian tells
Gia, the architect, that he’s given Ana free reign to do as she wishes with the
house, so she’s the boss. The first order of work Ana has on her plate is to
straighten Gia (good job!!) Ana tells Gia that she will fire her if she doesn’t
stop hitting on her husband, as it is her job hangs by a thread! (I patted her
on the back a lot for this confrontation), and she learned to give an impassive
face like Christian, and realize that “impassive” is actually very
intimidating. I have to keep that in mind. And that snaps Gia back to her
place, and she will not make a pass at Christian again.
Here’s another crux for you girls: Christian and Ana were on the same side, and actually
he was upset about Gia’s passes. He actually was happy and proud in the end that Ana was
branding him as her own, as he would in a pissing contest with other guys. I
tell you girls this because if your guy is not giving you this free reign he’s
not giving you himself 100%. It’s a red flag. You can lie through your teeth to
yourself, but it doesn’t change the fact. Men likes to declare their territory
with their women, it’s only fair that we would get to reciprocate. I don’t mind
if my man is declaring his territory, and I’d do the same for him. He knows
he’s mine, why should I be passive if some other woman is making a pass at him?
We like to be assured, and that’s my assurance to him.
There
is one thing in the book (oh, when it comes to that there is a lot of things)
that would rile up the feminist in you, or the shrink in you if you don’t have
one already. You see, Ana
decides to keep her own last name at work without telling Christian. Well, he
sends her an email which bounces because she hasn’t changed her last name. He
sends the message to her old email back again, and an argument ensues over the
last name. Ana doesn’t want to pursue it, so, she goes on with her daily work,
and Christian just shows up at work along with her boss (since Christian is the
boss’ boss’ boss.) When they’re
alone, emphasizing on Miss Steele, he tells her that he was checking on his
assets, and he realized that some of them needs re-branding! (I can already
feel your itchy fingers typing messages to me, giving the women wrong message.
Ease up. Give women credit, we can handle it!)She has her reasons to
keep her own last name, but he thinks she’s embarrassed of him. He uses his
perfected negotiating skills and she finds herself giving in to him. Those of
you who thinks that this is overbearing, I Strongly Disagree!
Yes,
he wants her world start and end with him. That’s what people who are in love do. I think it’d
be a waste of life to be around with someone who values you any less. If you
don’t love someone, if you have no feeling for your significant other you’d be
recalcitrant, but when you’re in love, boy, the sun rises and sets with that
person. The best thing I can wish for
you is a person whom you love and loves you back that way. There is no feeling like it on earth. You
feel alive!
As
for the last name thing, I’d just keep it just so he comes and asks me to
change it, because there is fun in the being asked, reaffirmation of being
wanted, needed, desired, and claimed. Because personally, unity is very
important to me, and I’m on the same page with Christian on that, and if you
think otherwise, it’s your opinion, not mine. I’m just as entitled to mine as
you are. He loves her; he wants the world to know she belongs to him. Some of
you may think of it as proprietary, but it’s not, not the way he does it.
Admittedly there are those people, who are that way, but Ana handles Christian
well, and they always compromise – both of them get what they want to both of
their satisfaction despite the arguments which results in them resolving their
issues no matter how difficult.
When they get back to Seattle, they discover – thanks to Ana that it
was Jack who broke into Christian’s company and set fire. The already tight security tightens even
more. Christian has to take a trip to New York for business, and Ana’s best
friend Kate comes back from vacation, and wants to go out for a drink. Even
though Christian wants her to come right home from work she goes for a drink
anyway. We then discover that Christian’s home was broken in by none other than
Jake who was going to attempt to kidnap her. Ryan fights and captures him,
and when Ana comes home she find this mess, and the cops are called. Christian
who finds out that Ana went for a drink disobeying him despite the security
threats flies right back leaving business negotiations hanging. When he’s in
the air, Jack is captured, and he comes home to find the mess, and things can
in fact get out of hand crazily no matter how hard you try to be a control
freak. He’s confronted with his demons of losing her. He’s mad at her, mad at
everyone, at himself. He’s angry; he’s short, mono syllabic. Even his anger is
palpable, touchable; tangible out of the book, you can feel it so solidly. They
ride this incident slowly, but it’s looming over their heads.
Of course, not
every day is fun and leisure for everyone and that certainly is true for
Christian and Ana. Otherwise it wouldn’t be a normal life. Ana receives a phone
call that her step dad had been in a car accident where the vehicle he was in
was hit by a drunk driver. She rushes to be at his side, and as soon as he can
make it so does Christian. They spend the week until he is awake and they
decide to move him to Seattle so they can keep a better eye on him. When they
were in Portland, it was also Ana’s birthday, and Christian surprises her with
flying her mom and her husband out in his private jet, and calling all her
friends to a birthday party, and buys her an R8!
When the father was in the hospital in Seattle, Ana gets a phone call
from her OBGYN who gave her a birth control shot which ran its course out, and
the doctor catches up with her at the hospital. To
Ana’s shock, she discovers that she’s pregnant! And here’s the big big fear of anyone who first
discovers they’re pregnant unexpectedly. Parenting is a life changing event, and it really is
scary even if you are prepared. She’s unprepared, and scared of Christian’s
reaction. It’s actually a hell of an event to break the news to him. It’s
almost the climax of the book. Because Christian flips! He’s had a bad start in life, and he has no trust
in himself that he’d be a good father, and he doesn’t want to share Ana with a
baby. So, in anger he leaves to get drunk, and runs into none other than the
Bitch Troll, and they drink together, and Ana accidentally learns about it,
when he comes home all drunk and she’s putting him to bed, and his Blackberry
falls down and she reads her text message “you’ll make a great father”. Ana is
mad thinking he ran to tell her about their issues instead of discussing with
her. Rightfully so. Wouldn’t any of you? (Of course that wasn’t how it happened but when in anger,
and there’s misunderstanding things have a potential of going from bad to worse.) When she finds that out, she spends the night
locked in the Play Room. The next morning she finds Christian and the security
detail frantically looking for her thinking she ran. They think she ran,
because Ana forwards the text from the BT to her phone and replies to the
message to her husband if he would like her to join them to discuss that
message; that way it will save him running to her afterwards, signing it ‘your
wife.’
The fact is that
Christian is worried that Ana would choose the baby over him, and finally Ana
tells him that she would choose a defenseless baby over him which is something
his mother should have done with him. But now that he’s an adult, he can take
care of himself, but a baby doesn’t deserve to be aborted or ignored. I love
her even more for that. She knows how to stand up for herself and for what is right.
She can hold her own.
But
one thing she does wrong, and that’s my own personal principle: never go to
sleep without resolving your problem, or leave the premises. She does that. She
goes to work angry, and hurt. When she comes home, Christian is not back from
work, and he hasn’t called her, but called Mrs. Jones to tell her he’d be
working late. Mrs. Jones a compassionate woman tells Ana to be patient with
him, because he was frantic when he thought she left him. He was beside
himself.
Next day also goes on with little interaction and he flew to Portland
for business. Ana goes to work. She gets a phone call from her sister-in-law
Mia. But when she answers the phone it wasn’t Mia; it was Jack! He somehow got
released on bail, and kidnapped Mia. Now he wants Ana to bring him 5 million
dollars within the next two hours. Though she doesn’t have access to that kind
of money. She rushes home pretending to be sick, finds checks that are made for
her and Christian’s name, puts on her sweats on, and eludes Sawyer, and runs to
the bank to withdraw money.
This
particular part is very climactic because many emotions are tumbled in here.
Jack told her that he would first rape and then kill Mia if she called the
cops, her husband, or the security detail, as he would know it. So, the only
defense she has against him is the pistol Christian confiscated from Leila. She
goes to the bank to withdraw this rather large sum of money. The bank manager
calls Christian to make sure, because it’s out of convention to withdraw that
much money the same second you ask for it. Christian tells him that she has
Carte Blanche, but he wants to talk to her. The manager hands Ana the phone, and
Christian asks her if it was always about the money. I think to me that’s the
most heartbreaking question. He knew she always loved him, but having doubts
about your own self-worth would bring this question out. And of course that’s
not what it was about, and Ana tells him that. He assumes the worst of course,
thinking she’s leaving him. He tells her
to take everything. He too is heartbroken, and this chapter really was soo
emotional for me to read. Because you can feel the pain in every word; the
heartbreak, the doubt, the loss of a loved one, and the confusion. The fact that Ana can’t tell him that she’s
trying to rescue his sister, his words stabs new wounds in her. When she hangs
the phone up, she’s spent with emotion and worry.
She borrows the bank manager’s phone, and goes out back to avoid
Sawyer, and guess who comes to pick her up? Her boss Elizabeth from work who
was also blackmailed by Jack to do this. Elizabeth tosses her phone (the bank
manager’s phone, but she doesn’t know that), and goes to meet Jack to rescue
Mia. At that time Christian learns that Jack was released on bail, and he has a
hunch that this might be the reason why Ana is acting this way. When Ana
finally sees Jack, he gives her a good beating and kicks her around, but before
she passes out, she shoots him. The last thing she sees as she falls down is
Christian running to her in agony.
By this time Ana
had saved two of the Grey children from hurt and destruction one way or the
other; both Mia and Christian. Ana is taken to the hospital where she spends
days in the ICU unconscious. Christian doesn’t leave her side one minute,
always watching out for her. That is the pinnacle of their love and their
connection. Because, you can’t think of one, without the other. Individually
they are not complete. They only make sense together. Nothing really makes
sense if they’re not together. I love
that aspect of it. If you still think its Co-D (codependent), eat your heart
out, it’s better than to be with someone who is ok to be with anyone (you or
someone else just as easily). I’d rather
have someone who completes me, not a separate unit. Here's one of 50's favorite songs and his personal anthem, “Every Breath You Take” by Police (just click on the name).
During her rise and fall in her comatose state, Ana hears that the
baby is ok, and she hears the relief in Christian’s voice to its affirmation.
He fights and argues with his family as well as the nurse to not to leave Ana’s
side. She also hears Christian talking to his mom, and hears his regret about
arguing and leaving over the baby that day. When she finally does wake up, Ana
is badly in need of using the restroom, and Christian will not have the nurse
take her; he wants to take care of her. I don’t know why some women are like
that. She lets him fuck her (excuse the pun) 7 shades of Sunday, but why won’t
she let him to take her to the bathroom to pee? He compromises (always
compromise), and waits by the door his back turned with semi-privacy.
Christian tells
Ana that both Elizabeth and Jack back in custody. Christian explains that after
the bank called he thought his world had just completely fallen apart. Ana
scolds him that she was hurt that he would think it was about his money, it
never was, and in fact she put her own cell inside the money bag so he could
track his money. Christian and Ana spend the night holding each other in her
hospital bed she hooked up on IV and machines, but that’s the only way they can
feel complete. The next day they air out
how he ended up seeing the Bitch Troll, and she finds out that he hasn’t told
her she was pregnant, but that she wanted to have children. But of course he’s
completely regretful and that was their final meeting anyway; that was a
decision that was made that night.
Ok, by now Christian’s parents know she’s pregnant (Grace read her
chart and told her husband, and of course she’s had a talk with
Christian). They’re very happy about it.
Ana leaves the hospital to go home in a few days, and Christian learns that he
has lived with Jack as foster children. That he’d been on the wrong side of the
tracks, but got a scholarship went to Princeton. Likes rough sex. So, this
makes Christian upset, because he feels they’re cut from the same cloth. There’s
a huge difference between Christian and Jack. Jack has no remorse; he’ll use
women any way he can. Christian on the other hand is compassionate, he loves
Ana, and he’ll go to any extent to protect her. They’re not cut from the same
cloth.
Christian later
finds out that it was Elena’s ex-husband who anonymously paid for Jack’s bail! Christian
who had purchased his timber company for a day like this, sells and liquidates
the company: Tit for tat. Lincoln fucks with him and his family to the extent
of aiding and abetting to the kidnapping of his sister, extortion from his
wife, and near death of his wife and child, the guy deserved far worse. He ruins his company only instead.
The story continues when Ana is pregnant… with her second child. The
first one, their son Ted is about 2 years old. They’re moving on with their
happily ever after. Christian is ever protective of his pregnant wife, loving,
playful and attentive to their son, and now living in the big house. Perfect
happy ending! Just the way I like it!!
I think it'd be also noteworthy to mention that Elliot proposes to Kate in Aspen when Christian and Ana takes them all there for a vacation together. In the end they too are married, and have a baby girl, Eva. See how happy everyone is? So cool!
I loved all 3 of the books!!
There
are people who have reservations against Christian’s strong character. He’s
dominating, he’s larger than life, he’s a force of life, demanding, possessive,
full of sexual desire and prowess, and it’s a lot to take on for an ordinary
person. Of course there is his former "persuasion" of lifestyle. He needs his equal to take on him. Ana is that person. She’s just as
strong, she can match wits, strength, and wills. Christian’s personality is not
for weak women. You must be able to go toe to toe with him without fear. But
living in a society where certain norms are expected, anything out of the
ordinary is shunned. I’m not talking about his previous lifestyle. That’s out
of option for most people including me. I’m a life force of my own; I’d never
submit to anyone. What I’m talking about is that the society now expects men to
be docile, flat, and almost submissive; just like trying to medicate normal
children who are hyper with Ritalin (I wonder if there is a husband version of
this medicine… Something to search about.)
He just has rough edges, and Ana is the best panacea for him. She shapes
him up and he doesn’t have to give up his personality.
If Ana was never to be with
Christian, she’d have a mediocre existence with someone like Jose, or Ethan, or
someone else like them. But neither of those individuals have the fire, the
life force Christian has. He is truly alive. You feel the life oozing out of
him, and it is such a draw. When Christian feels something, he really feels it,
and expresses it with his words, his action, his love making, his music, his
dance. How much more expressive can someone be… It’s an amazing personality,
you can actually visualize him without having an image. Like seeing someone’s
soul, it’s that clear. And there’s Ana. I love her character. She’s just as
alive as Christian, but level headed. She’s ready to explore herself, she knows
what she wants from her life, from her relationship, and that girl can set her
priorities.
And
the biggest draw about Ana is that she demands respect for her own, and she
gets it. She sets her lines clear, and has a good idea what is right and wrong.
She’s monogamous (heck, Christian is the only guy who’s been in her life),
lucky for other guys too, because Christian would have beaten the shit out of
them even if it was in the past. But she doesn’t have a past that needs
overhauling as Christian’s is enough for both of them.
I end my reviews
with this: Now these three remain, Faith, hope and love. And the greatest of
these is love.
"La passion est toute l'humanité,
sans elle, la religion, l'histoire, le roman, l'art seraient inutiles." said Honoré de Balzac; "Passion is in all humanity, without it, religion, history, literature, and art would be rendered useless."
May you all have
love, passion and excitement in your lives as deep and strong as
Christian and Ana.