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Originally Posted by Fire Me Boy!
Also, I think you learned that Darryl puts what happened at the prison squarely on his own shoulders. His breakdown was a good scene and showed his grief and guilt.
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To expand on this, the fact that Darryl finally told someone what he was before the zombies (he was a worthless redneck just following his worthless brother) adds weight to his breakdown about the prison.
Before he was nothing, had no purpose. Now he has a purpose and he puts it all on himself that it (the prison and the hope it contained) failed. People respected him, looked up to him, counted on him and his feelings of letting them down was powerful.