Lost Imaginations

Read. Write. Rest.

Be Better

D7216DDD-09D2-4F4D-A9CF-7F0350362447_1_105_c Picture the Batman. Hold the image in your mind. What do you see? Maybe a black cowl with white eyes, rippling abs, bulging biceps, and a cape the color of night capable of hiding the blur of fists and kicks as they assault the criminals of Gotham. You may see a man on his own with his own agenda as he battles the war on crime with nothing but his fists, fancy car, and bottomless bank account of funding any and all of his latest gadgets.

            What makes Batman #150 “Be Better” (2024) stand out among other Batman comics is the fact that it is none of these things. In fact, the comic hardly includes Batman at all. Instead, the story follows the thoughts and actions of thug-for-hire, Teddy.
            Teddy has made his living working for the criminal underbelly most of his adult life. He has been a henchman for B level villains throughout Gotham such as Ventriloquist and Firefly. He has been an absent deadbeat father and an abusive ungrateful partner. He views himself as the victim who has always been given the short end of the stick. Teddy perpetuates a lie to himself and his wife, Kim as he storms out of the apartment after coming home drunk the night prior, “I get it, Kim. I’m a loser. You’ve been #@$%& clear about that for years. All I’ve ever done is try to provide for this family.”
          E36BC3A0-ACC4-4B06-B2F9-3929F1E35F82_1_105_c  Teddy is a lowlife who only cares for himself and making a quick buck. However, Teddy has a secret he believes will be the game changer needed to turn his life around. He has discovered the secret identity of Batman and he believes he can cash in to live on easy street.
            First, Teddy tries to sell the information to the villain, Two-Face, but the duplicitous villain already knows the Caped Crusader’s alter ego and he could care less. Next, Teddy attempts to see the information to the Cobblepot Twins (the Penguin’s children), but the transaction falls through. Finally, he ends up with a group of low-level henchmen like himself who plan on using Teddy as collateral against Batman if he attempts to stop them from robbing a bank. Of course, Batman being Batman, he stops the crime before it can ever occur, knocks Teddy out and leaves him to wake up alone in the dorm room of his son who attends Gotham University.
            The adolescent explains how he attempted to follow in the footsteps of his father as a henchman for the villain, Scarecrow. The boy explains how he looked up to his father, taking Teddy’s side over the side of his mother, and viewing the busted knuckles and hand gun of his father as a sign of pride. However, when Batman saved the boy from being poisoned by Scarecrow’s fear toxin, he began to see things differently. Batman listens to the youth and agrees to pay for his education at Gotham University on one condition: be better.
            When Teddy is told he is not what a man is supposed to be, Teddy defends himself by stating, “I am! I hustled! I put food on your table! And this is how you treat me?! I did it for you! Risked my life! For you and your mother!” The son rebuttals and tells Teddy, “You hurt people, helped monsters, because you wanted to. Because you were too scared to enter the real world and have actual responsibilities. And you were addicted to the idea of easy money.”
            28155EE0-ABA8-4DFE-B81E-3596A65AFCB9_1_105_cTeddy takes his son’s words to heart. He leaves the dorm room and meets Bruce Wayne on the steps of the university with tears in his eyes. Bruce Wayne agrees to pay for Teddy to begin a new life in Metropolis, off the radar of those seeking to cash in on the knowledge he possessed. The only thing Bruce asks is that Teddy attempts to be better.
            So often, as men we view ourselves as victims without options who are only capable of living a life of others rather than ourselves. No, we aren’t henchmen for Two-Face and the Penguin, but we work a 9 to 5 in an office that can be soul crushing. The people we care for look up to us and notice our sacrifice, but still we believe we deserve more. So, we become Teddy. We push those who love us away and only dole out moments of affection we believe capable of affording. Soon, we become the villain as we seek easy money in the form of get-rich-quick schemes and gambling. We view ourselves as screw ups rather than through the eyes of those who see us as heroes. These people don’t want the next big score that will put them on easy street. Instead, they desire a father and husband who is present and putting in the work day-after-day to be better. Not be perfect, but to be better than the man who woke up the previous morning. Some days we will fall short, but each time we try to show people we love what it means to be a good man.

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