Kikyo’s Love for Inuyasha May Be Selfish… But It Was Also an Act of Rebellion
One of the biggest mistakes I see in the Inuyasha fandom is reducing Kikyo’s love to either “pure and tragic” or simply “selfish and toxic." When the truth is far more complicated.
Yes, She wanted to change Inuyasha to something he is not and true love is ultimately about accepting someone for who they are rather than asking them to change
However, I truly believe that her selfish love make perfect sense when viewed within the context of her world
Kikyo wasn’t simply any shrine priestess, she was also the guardian of the Shikon Jewel, a role built on constant self-sacrifice. Her duty demanded purity, leaving her with no real opportunity to marry, have children, or live an ordinary life. More than anything, she longed to be just a normal woman
Inuyasha too had his own burdens. As a half-demon, he was rejected by both humans and demons, never truly belonging to either world
They were both trapped by circumstances beyond their control
When Kikyo asked Inuyasha to become human, I don’t think it was solely for his sake or solely for her own, it was for both of them. She believed becoming fully human would free Inuyasha from the prejudice he faced as a half-demon. At the same time, she believed using the Shikon Jewel in this way would cause it to disappear, releasing her from her responsibilities as its guardian
In her mind, they could finally leave their burdens behind and live together as ordinary people. It was a dream that promised freedom for both of them, even if it ultimately required Inuyasha to change who he was
This is why I think Kikyo’s love can also be interpreted as a form of rebellion against the restrictions of her world, by choosing Inuyasha, she wasn’t only choosing the man she loved, she was choosing the life she had always been denied. Loving him represented the rejection of the role forced upon her. It was her chance to stop being the guardian of the Shikon Jewel and finally become an ordinary woman, a wife, and perhaps even a mother
Her "rebellious love" for Inuyasha became inseparable from her longing to escape duty, tradition, and the expectations that had defined her entire existence, it was also shaped by loneliness and a desperate desire for freedom
Kagome possessed something Kikyo never had : freedom, she can choose who she loves. She can make mistakes and live as a normal teenage girl. She isn’t forced to be a pure saint and a virgin, isnt trapped by obligations, centuries of tradition or confined to a role she never chose
The fandom often falls into two extremes
Many Kikyo fans focus almost entirely on her romance with Inuyasha while dismissing Kagome as merely “Kikyo’s replacement,” despite Kagome being her own independent character with her own personality, values, and experiences.
Meanwhile, many Kagome fans reduce Kikyo’s love to something selfish or toxic and constantly compare it with Kagome's love for Inuyasha without considering the social, cultural, and circumstances that shaped Kikyo's love
Neither perspectives is fully accurate
In many ways Kikyo story reflects real restrictive roles that were forced on women throughout our history, where love was influenced by gender roles, social expectations, family, purity culture and duty. It also echoes the experiences of women who seek to reclaim control over lives that others have defined for them by using love as a way to rebel and challenge those expectations and fight for freedom
Kagome represents the opposite. She comes from a a society that is already free and modern where love doesn’t require sacrificing one’s identity, leaving one's duty or or asking another person to change who they are (in religious societies in the modern world, this is still an issue) that's why she accepts Inuyasha as both human and half-demon,
Neither girl should be reduced to a simple label and neither one should be compared and neither one deserve any hate
Understanding why Kikyo's love developed this way doesn’t excuse its flaws, but it does make Kikyo one of the series’ most tragic and psychologically compelling characters.
Edit: I’m not judging Kikyo here or doubting her love, I’m analyzing how her love gets interpreted differently depending on whether people focus on her emotions, her actions, or her circumstances