GOOD1. Caregiver: One can say many things about Samira's slave upbringing, but one thing it has certainly left is a selfless nature. She was born and raised to serve and she finds fulfillment and comfort in placing others before herself. She needs to be needed. She is quick to offer aid and rarely complains about whatever work she is made to do; she strives to be a humanitarian and really does want to make the universe a better place. As long as she is helping people, whether on an individual level in simple manual labor or in directly tending to someone's personal suffering, or on a wider scale with rescuing and caring for victims of atrocity, she feels like her life has meaning, and so this drives her to always make herself available even when her own stress levels or income can scarcely afford for her to take on more work.
2. Principled: While it can occasionally be negative, Samira's principles ultimately serve to make her a better person. She is consistent, loyal, reliable, honorable, and usually trustworthy. Whatever problems she may have, and while she may occasionally fail, Samira's principles are the pillars that hold her up. She acts according to proper social mores, she upholds order and a higher purpose than herself, she condemns wrong even in friends, and she stands by her word. When she makes a promise, she will do everything in her power to keep that promise. The one time she met with Havohej in person to discuss recovering his slaves, she extended to him, and
upheld, a promise of hospitality in spite of the fact that everything he is and everything he has done scares and angers her to her core. When she swore to hunt down Nauplius, she did precisely that, being the first person to take deliberate action and still being the one with the most kills against him. And when she learned about Pyre's dealings with Sansha she broke off contact with Pieter for many months out of principle; their friendship has never really recovered.
BAD1. Cowardice: Samira's positive qualities would have the potential to make her a heroic individual. However, her lack of courage frequently taints her good deeds. She is afraid of embarrassment, she is afraid of harassment, she is afraid of dying, and she is afraid of rejection. She will fight for others, but she will not give her own life for theirs. She will valiantly uphold noble principles, until there is a chance that those principles will jeopardize her. She will be honest and open, except where it would expose her own personal problems. Under everything, Samira wants to protect herself, and she is desperately afraid of anything that threatens that self.
2. Self-hatred: The real damage inflicted by slavery. In spite of the above, she despises herself (It is, afterall,
wrong to be selfish). She fulfills many forms of
Internalized Categorism. She hates herself for being a Minmatar, and blames many of her negative qualities on that heritage. She hates herself for having been a slave, because slaves are slaves because they were sinful. She hates herself for being an addict, because only weak people become addicts. She hates herself for her temper, even though it is her withdrawal and burying everything inside that spawns it. She hates herself for her sexuality, because she strives towards an unrealistic expectation of "purity". And she hates her personality, because it has pushed away people and left her with few friends and partners. All of this internalized hate leads to a deeply depressed and neurotic character, with multitudes of emotions forced to boil beneath a mask of virtue she refuses to ever take off. It leads to terribly destructive behavior, from explosive rage and cruelty to deliberate self-harm and a permissive attitude towards abuse. Whatever good charity and service she does for others, she reserves none of it for herself.