[s2e11] Take — A Break From Your Values
Poussey remains one of the few characters who refuses to compromise her values, which leads to her suffering.
Red tries to reclaim her status through the "Golden Girls" kitchen takeover, while Vee continues her hostile takeover of the prison's underground economy. [S2E11] Take a Break from Your Values
The freedom she craved feels hollow, and she realizes that the person she was before Litchfield no longer exists. Her time outside highlights that "taking a break" from prison life doesn't necessarily mean returning to one's previous values. 2. Power Struggles: Red vs. Vee Poussey remains one of the few characters who
"Take a Break from Your Values" suggests that in a system designed to strip away individuality, rigid adherence to a moral code can be a liability. Whether it is Piper facing betrayal, Poussey facing violence, or Red facing a loss of power, the characters must decide which parts of themselves they are willing to lose to survive another day in Litchfield. Orange is the New Black Podcast Her time outside highlights that "taking a break"
Piper’s values regarding honesty and her identity as a "good person" are challenged when she learns that her ex-fiancé Larry and her best friend Polly have betrayed her by starting a relationship.
The episode explores how Sister Ingalls’ activism was often more about the "spectacle" and personal validation (her "arrest count") than the core religious values she claimed to represent. This revelation subverts the idea of the "selfless martyr," showing that even religious values can be co-opted by ego. Conclusion
The ideological and physical war between and Vee reaches a boiling point.
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