All The Clues Nathan Isn’t Nathan On General Hospital

Things just don’t add up with General Hospital’s Nathan

General Hospital's Nathan

From the second Nathan came back from the dead on General Hospital, the character has been off. Despite his best efforts to be like the real Nathan, several clues have made it clear that he’s not the real deal.

Key Takeaways

  • Nathan’s feelings for Maxie and Lulu.
  • Actions that are not Nathan-like at all.
  • Britt’s recent Faison children comment.

The Real Nathan Would Never Give Up on Maxie

After seven years apart and missing the birth of their son, it doesn’t add up that Nathan (Ryan Paevey) was crushing on Lulu (Alexa Havins) while Maxie (Kirsten Storms) was in a coma. Even when Maxie woke up and chose Spinelli (Bradford Anderson), Nathan didn’t fight for her at all, and it makes no sense.

The Nathan GH fans know would have done everything in his power to be with Maxie and their son. Yet that didn’t happen, and Nathan’s more focused on Lulu than ever.

All The Clues Nathan Isn't Nathan On General Hospital

Maxie moved on because seven years had passed for her, but for Nathan, no time had passed. However, after Nathan was awake for a hot minute and already found someone new, nope, it doesn’t add up.

These Actions Are Not Nathan

During his time back in Port Charles, he has made some mistakes that are very not Nathan-esque. For starters, Nathan broke the chain of evidence with a cigarette butt he claimed was from a crime scene.

Nathan was a detective for far too long to make a mistake like that. He also takes great pride in being a cop, so he was lying to Dante (Dominic Zamprogna) about the cigarette. All signs point to it not being part of a crime scene but something else Nathan was researching.

The fact that Nathan kept pushing back when James (Gary James Fuller) asked him to show off his baseball skills is another clue. Nathan was an excellent baseball player, and now he suddenly doesn’t want to help his son, not buying it.

Then, when Nathan gave in and tried to hit the baseball, he couldn’t do it. Either Nathan lost his skills during his seven-year break, or he never had them to begin with. We are going with the latter.

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