The relationship between Eddie Diaz and Evan Buckley on 9-1-1 is the most profound one on TV.
Since Eddie joined 118 in Season 2, Season 2, the two went from one-sided enemies to record time, they never really looked back.
Their friendship is rooted in each other’s trust, respect and care, which is why it’s a bit of arguing in Season 9-1-1 Episode 8 Episode 9, which shocks them a little, as Eddie prepares to leave Los Angeles and then leave Los Angeles as well.


The time spent playing with Buck and Eddie is not exactly synchronized, which is far from their usual friendship.
Both create a dynamic that puts them at the same wavelength. They are so synced that they usually only need to change their eyes to know where the other person is or what else they need.
This has expanded to their personal relationships, which makes the two rely on each other in a healthy way, and they feel supported and understood.
But both of them are humans and can make mistakes.
When Buck realizes that Eddie is moving back to Texas as he plans to follow his plan, he jumps into assistant mode and offers to help Eddie get his place. He could feel Eddie starting to stress that he wanted to help.
Eddie was grateful that both began their pursuit to get Eddie’s house off his hands so he could prepare for his move without hanging on him, but everything started to fall from there.


In some cases, Buck is known to be overly fanatical and excited, and he seems to be doing it when he helps Eddie’s house show.
Feeling he has no agenda to ruin things and deliberately stresses Eddie. Instead, he overshared in various situations and perhaps did not fully read the room.
Buck was never cruel, and I don’t have a part of me who thinks he’s working to make sure Eddie can’t get his place, but that didn’t really frustrate his actions and therefore hurt Eddie.
Eddie has the right to ask him to leave because he did not help him or support him in the way Eddie needed at the time. Eddie is an anxious ball trying to keep the duck, and Buck suddenly becomes another duck.
Buck heard Eddie’s conversation without any background, and while it sounded bad, Eddie didn’t mean to suggest that no one in Los Angeles was important to him in any way, shape or form.


Eddie started a family in Los Angeles. He dedicated his life to the life of anyone, including Buck.
But his heartbeat and one thing in the world that matters most to him was not around him – Christopher, whose flesh and bones were in Texas, and returning to him was Eddie’s top priority.
Christopher is important, why he has to do all of this first.
That doesn’t mean Buck, or anyone else in Los Angeles for that isn’t a priority.
Over the years, Eddie has shown in various ways how much money is important to him, whether it is trusting him with Christopher after the shooting, trusting him after the shooting, or finding his team from Afghanistan to die in the 9-1-1 season.
It was frustrating to see Buck internalize these words without talking to Eddie, especially earlier in the hour, when Eddie made it very clear that he didn’t know what he would do without Buck.


But Buck has a deep, traumatic past that feels abandoned, so it’s easy to see why these words are so influential.
But Eddie is not talking about Buck.
Buck’s decision to force Eddie’s hand to tell the rest of the team the decision to come cannot be explained by his overly eagerness.
He was frustrated by the sounds he heard and was harmful to his friends before Eddie prepared his move, especially considering that Buck was one of the few people Eddie told about his plan.
Eddie has the right to be frustrated with Buck because of what he did. While it is related to the way the story is dispersed from here, two things can be correct.


Buck was unmoved and had poor communication. You can admit that even how he sees Buck’s past and how he sees the people he left him, even if this is completely different from what was before.
But even if you understand your feelings and recognize your effectiveness, Eddie has the right to be frustrated with Buck and disappointed with his actions.
This is especially true, because the crux of it stems from Buck’s complex feeling about Eddie leaving him, even if it’s Eddie have Do.
Eddie didn’t leave because he hated Buck or wanted to stay away from him, but because he was a father, he lost contact with his son. He was unwilling to continue to exist every day, and in this world the gap between them continued to grow.
If you claim Eddie is too harsh on Buck, there is no need to argue because that’s your explanation, but Eddie is frustrated with Buck at the end of the hour.
Frankly, he has the right to be.


You can learn about Buck and Eddie at the same time. But if you’re just blaming Eddie and what he said to Buck, rather than considering Buck’s all of the actions, you might want to dig deeper into why you do it.
Eddie is doing what he has to do, and unfortunately Buck is harder for him. That’s just the reality of what’s going on.
A big and complex feeling doesn’t always make people think and perform the most reasonable situation and try to put these two characters into a box that won’t mess up or make mistakes, which is a major damage.
Sometimes you have to understand that most things run in grey areas and there is not always a sure right or wrong way to handle the situation.
In a situation he never expected, Eddie’s words were the words of a scared father, making decisions he had never expected. His whole life has changed, and one of his constants is not the pillar of his expectation for his support.


I hope we get more from Eddie’s perspective and really see how much the move has impacted him, but maybe it’s asking too much.
Finally, it seems that during Buck’s brief time with Blaze-Bingo, hopefully when he has time to sit and talk about it at the other time of 118, he realizes that he hasn’t shown how he should have it. He made himself remember the heart of everything: Eddie and Christopher.
These two are inside him, making this decision and doing the right thing for the person you love, like Buck’s character, like anything else.
You can see in Eddie’s eyes how much he appreciates and awesome he has, because someone cares enough to do it for him.
The plot ends with Buck and Eddie more equally. Nevertheless, their differences remind me of the fact that people often look for a villain in this situation, and it is more likely that two people who care deeply about each other and have huge feelings and reactions.


Eddie is certainly not the villain in this story.
Eddie’s most important thing is his parents. Ultimately, it should and will always take priority – period.
Well, people, let me know what you are about what happened between Buck and Eddie and how you feel about everything. Am I opening it or on the trademark?
Let’s talk about it below!
You can watch 9-1-1 on ABC on Thursday at 8/7C.
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