Existential crisis refers to the point of self-ego breakdown by an individual. An individual at this point realizes that they are different from who they initially thought they were. Your values, personality, goals, desires, and motivations become the chopping block at the point of self-realization. An individual is most likely to throw away most of his values to the wayside after self-realization. After going through an existential crisis, you find yourself and follow the new path to a conclusion. Life becomes easier and much simpler.
Annalise Keating, a fictional character from the drama series How To Get Away With Murder, experiences an existential crisis in season two. Annalise is brilliant when it comes to legal strategy. She is a teacher and a mentor and is admired by both colleagues and students. Annalise’s career is perfect at first. She makes much money winning legal suits for a rich clientele.
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The death of Lilla prompts Annalise’s intern students to take matters into their own hands and investigate the roof that Sam Keating- the husband to Annalise Keating killed Lilla. Things take a turn for the worse and end up with the murder of Sam Keating. Wes Gibbins, Annalise Keating’s best student, ends up being the killer, and she decides to protect him. Annalise’s life takes turns from that moment. A series of blackmails and threats follow as everyone believes she killed her husband. Her reputation is jeopardized; she becomes an alcoholic, later loses her house, and takes a nosedive career. More parties get tangled up in a mess through blackmail and murders.
Later, upon self-reflection, Annalise realizes that she ended up protecting the people she thought were important to her while hurting herself. Annalise decides to close her law firm and release all her interns. She decides to shift focus from her husband’s death and to serve the rich to using her prowess to serve justice to the poor. She manages to win a class action lawsuit action at the supreme court and admits it’s the most powerful she’s ever felt in her career.