

Life Sentence
Life Sentence – Reinventing the Abbots (1×02)
Stella has a lot to learn about life now that she’s cancer-free.
She’s been living in a shielded bubble, but the reality that set in is that life isn’t as peachy that everyone led her to believe.
And, she doesn’t actually know her husband as well as she thought. That wouldn’t be much of an issue if they were just dating because part of an evolving relationship is getting to know a person. But now that they are married there’s an added layer of stress to making things perfect while also being honest and learning a thing or two about each other.
Especially because they are under a time constraint. Almost immediately, the validity of their marriage is questioned when an immigration officer comes knocking on their door.
Wes isn’t legal, which Stella apparently knew because she admits in the cancer-frenzy, she forgot to file his paperwork.
But back then, she didn’t think twice about why a man would be willing to marry a dying woman. Now that she’s not dying, the thought starts creeping in.
Did Wes marry her for a visa? Was it not a whirlwind, fairtytale romance like she imagined?
Stella, who likes to get things done, tries to convince the immigration lady herself, but digs herself into an even bigger hole because to anyone on the outside, it seems probable that Wes would have used her for his own selfish gain.
I can’t think that of Wes though seeing how devoted he is to her and to making this work. And neither does Stella, who doesn’t let the doubt settle in for too long.
The two agree that they have to speed-up the “getting to know each other process” with a major study sesh aided by immigration questions download from the web.
Turns out, Stella didn’t even know basics like Wes having a law degree or how many sexual partners he’s had before.
Again, in her defense, none of that would have mattered to her when she knew she was dying.
However, it seems like the studying paid off because when they go for their interview, they know a lot about each other.
What they are most certain of is their love for each other, which is really what convinces the judge.
“Welcome to America, Mr. Charles,” she says as they newlyweds kiss in excitement.
Hey, we’ll take the wins where we can.
At home, Stella’s family continues to fall apart.
Dad refuses to sell the house because of sentimental reasons, which infuriates her mother considering there’s an interested buyer.
When Stella chooses her dad’s side, Ida knocks down a wall in the kitchen.
Still, Stella, the truest believer, thinks one last family dinner will be able to patch things up.
As predicted, she’s gravely mistaken.
Everyone ends up fighting and finally, Stella snaps at her mother for being too preoccupied with her new romance and “not caring about everyone’s lives.” She claims she’s “out of touch with how they’re feeling” and is so eager to let the house, and all of its memories, go.
“Go home to Poppy and thrive,” she retorts.
That’s when we find out why Ida is so detached from all of this; the home harbors no happy memories from her.
It’s a constant reminder of her pain — the home is where her daughter got sick, where her marriage fell apart. Unlike Stella, when she looks at that wall, she sees the dents from the damn hospital bed.
The first episode showed us how much the family kept from Stella to keep her final days blissful, but it turns out, they were really good at keeping up the charade and blocking out their feelings.
Stella, despite the sickness, found comfort in this home thanks to them while they were all completely miserable.
Heck, up until Ida digs up the dog, who coincidentally died of cancer, Stella still thinks he ran away.
That’s how in denial she was! And it speaks volumes to how much they all cared for her. Can you imagine how heartbroken she would have been if her own dog had cancer and died?
Being completely transparent is the first step in healing this family. Realization number one is finally knowing why Ida is trying so hard to distance herself from her old life.
Step 2 is forgiveness and Stella forgives Aiden, who expressed commitment issues, especially when it came to his baby momma Marlene, and gave him a “you’re going to be a great dad” pep talk.
Look how great he was when taking care of Stella and her late pup! He’s a natural.
They still have a long way to go, but despite the dysfunctionality, they’ll be just fine. After all, they’ve been through worse and defeated cancer.
Life Sentence
Life Sentence – Then and Now (1×13)

There was no better way for Life Sentence to end than with Stella finally choosing herself.
At the core of the series, the one thing continuously pestering the protagonist and causing her issues was that she didn’t know who she was or what made her happy.
She spent most of her teenage life in a hospital trying to cure her cancer so she didn’t exactly get to experiment when all of her peers were. And because of that cancer, she didn’t expect to live long into her adult life.
She married Wes on a limb out of fear that she would never have this experience. All of this was understandable and fair.
However, when the narrative changed, she kept living the same life she had set up for herself when she thought her time was limited.
It wasn’t fair to her nor was it fair to Wes and to the family that fought so persistently for her.
And that’s why she subconsciously sought out Dr. Grant.
She had two really incredible guys who wanted to give her the world but realistically, she’d never be fulfilled because she didn’t know what the world she wanted looked like.
She barely ventured out of her hometown or further from the hospital which when you think about it, is despairing. The one time she did, she met Wes, the love of her life. Imagine what else she could experience and find out about herself by doing something other than trying to make a marriage work at such a young age.
Second chances are never guaranteed so it was important she came to this realization. But it was even more important that Wes did too because that made being selfish easier on her. It was as if she’d gotten his blessing and could, without any guilt, explore who she truly was.
And you know, they say that if it’s meant to be, it’ll come back to you.
That final scene, with Wes and Stella celebrating their wedding, felt like an “up to your own interpretation” moment. I know it wasn’t because she was recording the video for him, but in the context, following the scene where she chooses to go hiking, I felt like Stella focused on herself, experienced everything she needed too and eventually, returned to him.
And together, they walked into the sunset. Or maybe that’s just what I wanted to believe because I’m a sucker for romance.
Regardless of what happened at the end, when they made the decision to call it quits, everything came full circle. Their marriage had an eight-month shelf life and although they tried to extend it, it had already served its purpose — to save Stella and Wes from themselves… and cancer. Neither of them had done anything wrong, it had just run its course.
If you think about it, even Stella asking Aiden to take care of Wes after she passed actually came to fruition with their joint business venture.
This kept Wes around the Abbotts which only meant that he was still sticking around in hopes of one day reuniting with Stella. After all, he promised to love her forever even if she wasn’t around to see it.
There was a poetry about their relationship and their promises to each other that you just don’t see on many shows and with many couples lately.
Stella’s ending with Dr. Grant was also fitting because much like Wes, he served a much greater purpose in her life than just being a love interest.
He helped Stella realize that despite being alive again, she wasn’t really living. And what’s the point of all of it if you aren’t actually happy? Though he hoped to gain much more from this, he pushed her out of her comfort zone and in return, she pieced together his broken heart by also reminding him to go live.
Admittedly, I did hope for a goodbye kiss between the two, but I’ll settle for the one outside of the bar where sparks quite literally flew.
I thought that I was going to be Team Dr. Grant in the end, however, it dawned on me that he would have just been a really good fling. Wes was always the real deal and he proved that by sacrificing so much to make Stella happy even for a short while. He’s the real MVP.
Even mom and dad got their happy ending or their own version of it. Marriage didn’t exactly work for them but the love was still there and both of them felt it. Peter proposed to her again and though she turned it down, she did agree to go on a date. It’s safe to say, they are back together.
But with Stella’s romantic triangle out of the way, you realize that Life Sentence really never had much substance. We figured that out during the first episode — there was too much fluff and happiness — and by the thirteenth one, not much had been added. Don’t get me wrong, as a one-season show, it was an enjoyable escape, and I’ll look back fondly on my time with the Abbott’s. But it never stood a chance for anything more meaningful.
We cared about Lizzie and Diego because they were Stella’s siblings but what did we really know about them? We never even found out what Gina called him about after Peter broke up with her! Did she fire Diego? And was she mad that she spent all this time visiting him in the hospital just to be “second best?”
Aiden never saw his “true love” again so we’ll just assume he’s still the womanizer we met in the first episode. Maybe he’ll have a thing with Finley, the bar’s new silent investor?
Will Sadie survive her clinical trial? Will she be just as lucky as Stella? That girl had so much spunk and character but she was sorely unutilized serving as just a crutch to keep some kind of connection between Grant and Sella. It’s unfortunate because every time she shared a scene with Lucy Hale, there was a type of magic on screen.
I almost feel like I would have wanted a flashforward to at least get some of these answers and to see that Stella decided to become a doctor herself.
On a positive note, it doesn’t seem like Wes will go back to Pippa so at least he’s aware of the “going backward and trying to force something to happen” isn’t the solution for success.
Overall, it was a solid finale that tied up the major stories but the minor once deserved some TLC before the curtain’s closed too.
What did you think of the finale of Life Sentence? Should Stella have made a choice? Was choosing herself the bravest and most sincere thing she could have done?
Life Sentence
Life Sentence – Love Factually (1×12)

I’m actually a bit disappointed that Life Sentence never got a second chance at The CW. It was just getting interesting.
All of the Abbott family secrets are finally catching up with them, just in time for the series finale.
The episode kicked off with all the Wes vs. Dr. Grant drama but it was sidelined by Peter, who suffered a heart attack after his cheating ways weighed down on him.
Peter was definitely onto something when he told Wes that there were too many people in his marriage with Stella but he failed to realize that he was pulled into that “too many” category.
His intentions were in the right place — a father still trying to protect his baby girl in the only way he knows how — however, Stella is no longer that hopeless little girl. She’s not sick, and she’s perfectly capable of making her own decisions and solving her own problems.
But the worst part is that he was being very hypocritical and directing the anger he had for himself at everyone else.
You can’t cheat on your girlfriend with your almost ex-wife and then go around telling everybody they need to be more faithful. It just doesn’t work like that Peter.
Seeing him so invested in Stella’s broken marriage proved that he was feeling very guilty for what he did to Gina. To be honest, I feel kind of terrible for him. He went through hell and back when Ida split with him and revealed she was bi. Then, he finally found happiness and got roped back in on a drunk night.
And Ida isn’t making it easier on him because she doesn’t know what she wants either. She didn’t want this marriage but the minute it was almost over, she couldn’t give it up.
There’s even more confusion because after Peter is rushed to the ER, she tells Gina about the one-night affair and then offers to share her husband with her. “He’d want you to be here when he wakes up,” she tells Gina. On one hand, you want the ex-wife to accept you but on the other hand, the bi ex-wife who still wants her husband allowing you to stick around is questionable on many levels.
One of the best parts of this plot is that Stella got to see what it was like in the “waiting room.”For as long as we’ve known her, she’s always been the patient — the sick one. Now, she’s on the other side of it and realizing that it was never easy for her family.
They never knew when her last goodbye would but her father was always there for her regardless.
It was time for her to return that favor.
In terms of relationships on this show, Stella and Peter’s has always been the strongest and most genuine.
Wes and Stella’s marriage was already strained going into this episode. She woke up concerned that he didn’t come home after the bar opening. When he finally did, she admitted that Dr. Grant kissed her, but Wes already knew. And before they could even acknowledge it, he rushed off to the bar because it was leaking. I guess they never got it inspected before they bought it.
To make matters worse, Pippa showed up at the hospital and blurted out that she spent the night with Wes and although it didn’t lead to anything, there was an unexpected kiss.
Talk about too many people in this relationship, right?
My take on this is simple — both of them have feelings for other people. That doesn’t necessarily mean they should pull the plug on their marriage, but it is a huge indication that there is no solid foundation underneath them and lasting 30-years like Stella’s parents did isn’t going to be easy.
Maybe they should consider exploring different relationships if their paths keep being split. The thought of “if it’s meant to be, it’ll find it’s way back,” keeps popping into my head. And it could be applied in different ways; either Stella and Wes will find their way back to each other one day or Wes and Pippa and Stella and Dr. Grant keep finding their way back to each other.
All I know for certain is that you cannot move on with a happy marriage knowing you have a safety net; another man who loves you. That isn’t fair to anyone.
It didn’t help that Dr. Grant was directly responsible for saving Peter’s life by offering up a second opinion which was riskier but more long-term. I can’t blame Wes for hating the guy.
I can blame Wes for encouraging Pippa’s behavior. Stella has obvious feelings for Dr. Grant and keeps letting him be her “support system,” but she’s nowhere as bad as Wes is when it comes to his ex. He’s enabling her even as he knows full well what her intentions are. She made them perfectly clear to Stella; she wants her to let Wes go and she vows to be there for him when it happens. That was brazen of her, you have to admit.
Wes continues to let Pippa in on a deeper level. Not to mention Dr. Grant kissed Stella and she pulled away, but Wes pursued that kiss with Pippa.
It’s also frustrating because at no point do Wes and Stella have an honest conversation. They are so preoccupied with family hysterics and Stella’s non-salary job that they don’t even acknowledge what’s best for them. Not necessarily what they want, because I know they want to make this work. But what’s best.
I really thought that Dr. Grant telling Stella that he’s been temporarily suspended would mean that he was finally removing himself from the situation and going to do something other than ruining someone’s marriage. I say that passively because, at this point, I’m more involved with Stella and Grant’s connection than I am with her and Wes’.
Instead, Grant took it one step further and professed his LOVE to Stella via a writing on her car window. Admittedly, it was so juvenile, I couldn’t help but giggle in the same way elementary school girls used to when they got the “do you like me” note from a crush.
But again, is this appropriate for a married woman? Is this grounds for taking a break from your marriage? Is it okay to end something that was never meant to be permanent anyway? Only Stella knows that answer and she has ONE episode to make the right call and figure out what is worth the fight.
Part of me also feels for Pippa. She’s trying so hard to stay relevant in Wes’ life by trying to become a partner in the bar.
She knows she messed up when she ditched their wedding — she could have been his wife at this very moment. But that’s no reason to come destroy what he’s built up.
I was so proud of Aiden for sticking up to her, choosing Stella’s happiness and also, not giving into temptation and not drinking while still bound by his ankle monitor.
Life Sentence
Life Sentence – Our Father The Hero (1×07)

Is anyone on Life Sentence actually living in reality?
We’re now on the seventh episode of the season and with each passing episode, it feels more and more like Stella and friends live in “La La Land” even more than when she was going through a battle with cancer.
There is nothing realistic about how the Abbot family handles issues especially ones that involve their son and felony drug charges.
The sunny disposition even when things look grim is starting to wear thin.
For starters, it was obvious that Peter was the one who tipped off the police about his son’s side hustle because he wanted to “set his straight.”
As a professor, you’d think he’d consider all the repercussions of his actions before pulling the trigger but nope, because in “la la land” he thought the cops would rough him up a bit, give him a scare and magically, Aiden would transform into a new, logical and morally sound human being. Come on!
Then, when the guilt began to settle in, he decided to feed Aiden to the sharks by turning down a pretty lenient plea deal in exchange for a trial which would likely land his son with the 3-year punishment. Yes, he thought it was helping him but again, how could he not think it through thoroughly?
Don’t worry, it gets worse. After Stella told Aiden the truth about what his father did, Aiden decided to run away because it didn’t occur to him that it was an admission of guilt.
And worst of all, Peter threw caution to the wind and barged into the judge’s office to tell her all about his failings as a father.
This isn’t how life works. This isn’t how any of this works.
There are fictional shows all the time and they aren’t always realistic but they’re relatable to the audience. Life Sentence definitely has the potential, the family drama but they don’t keep coasting on the surface hoping to resonate.
This is actually one of the first episodes where an issue lingers for longer than half an hour.
Aiden’s drug bust doesn’t fade away like his baby momma or Peter’s rebound girlfriend did. Yet, I can’t say that any of it gave it more meaning.
In fact, I was more angered by the tone-deaf representation of a family. Aiden is a spoiled, entitled kid who has never had to face any consequences in his life because his parents have always covered for him. And even when he does get a sentencing, it’s still lenient enough not to have him actually pay.
Even the love triangle is mediocre at best. Stella isn’t exactly torn between Wes and Dr. Hottie since there’s about zero chemistry with either of them.
The only thing that has ever transpired between her and Dr. Will Grant aside from the one-sided sex dream is her telling him that he “understands her” better than Wes which on the surface may seem bad but if you put jealousy aside, it really does make sense.
Wes has never even come off as the jealous type nor has he ever been confrontational so it is a bit strange that they decided to go the typical route. Out of all the problems two people who rushed into marriage because one was on the brink of dying, this should be closer to the bottom of the list.
The worst part is, Stella doesn’t even know if she’s pining or not. She doesn’t even understand her feelings, she only has them because he planted the seed in her head. And if it was that easy for him to get into her head when she’s “in love” than maybe Stella really should take a step back and rethink her marriage.
Wes could have been Mr. Right for her limited time on Earth but now that’s she’s gotten an extension. Maybe he’s not Mr. Right Now.
When Wes sneered, “of course he’s in a band,” I could understand the level of annoyance in his voice because it’s all so predictable. Of course, he is. Of course this was the bar he’s playing at. Of course Stella would stand there all piny and of course Wes would catch on.
In fact, she should probably just step back and re-evaluate her life. Since she’s been cured, all she has done was run around like a goose with her head cut off trying to solve everyone’s problems. What is her life plan? How is she utilizing her second chance?
No one with an understanding of life actually goes and spends a whole week working for free to get their job at a quirky coffee shop back. No one.
It’s so unrealistic. There are bills to pay and rent that comes knocking each month but again, this is just further proof that Stella is not living in the real world. Which means she’s in no way equipped to help anyone else figure out their lives or give advice.
Sometimes, Stella’s actions are so questionable, I feel like maybe this whole show is a dream. At least that would give it some character. It would definitely explain the quirkiness.
Picture it – Stella’s cancer is getting worse and to cope, she dreams of this life she could have if she was just cured. Bad things still happen in this life but they resolve themselves within an episode’s time, there are no real consequences and everyone still loves each other no matter what.
Elizabeth’s character is cliche in every sense of the word and her plight about whether or not to split up the twins and hold one back in kindergarten served no purpose.
In fact, the most interesting thing that happened in this episode was that Peter and Ida hooked up after bonding about their dysfunctional son. And even that hastily ended because Peter confessed to being a horrible father.
The writers have something good here if they just spent a bit more time fleshing it out instead of feeding us a sugary, fluffy, cookie-cutter confection of sentimental.
But until then, I’m going to say that our time with the Abbotts is going to be a one-season kind of deal. It’s not you Lucy Hale, trust us.
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