"I Hate Suzie" - despite marketing itself as some sort of comedy in the trailers on Sky - is actually much closer to a reflection of our own reality than it would have us believe & consequently, with three dimensional adult characters behaving in morally ambiguous (& yet wholly understandable) ways, inadvertently creating complex issues they're not fully able to fix - due to their flawed natures, the show concludes in a way which is true to form - believably.
In the real world Lucy Prebble mirrors with her fantastic writing, there are no good guys & bad guys, there are just people doing what they believe to be right or they're behaving in their own self interests because that's what they've been conditioned to do from a young age. Hence, nothing's black or white & neither are the solutions to the problems which have arisen in this series; they aren't fixed & not all all loose ends are neatly tied up satisfyingly because life isn't always like that. Sometimes, we don't always get the closure we'd like to think we deserve but (as the title suggests) we just have to find "acceptance" with what's occured & make the most of the hand we're dealt.
In the real world Lucy Prebble mirrors with her fantastic writing, there are no good guys & bad guys, there are just people doing what they believe to be right or they're behaving in their own self interests because that's what they've been conditioned to do from a young age. Hence, nothing's black or white & neither are the solutions to the problems which have arisen in this series; they aren't fixed & not all all loose ends are neatly tied up satisfyingly because life isn't always like that. Sometimes, we don't always get the closure we'd like to think we deserve but (as the title suggests) we just have to find "acceptance" with what's occured & make the most of the hand we're dealt.