Red Shirt 101: We Aren't All Captain Kirk in Every Story
In the original Star Trek, if a crew member beamed down to a mysterious planet wearing a red shirt… you just knew they weren’t coming back.
In the original Star Trek, if a crew member beamed down to a mysterious planet wearing a red shirt… you just knew they weren’t coming back.
They didn’t get names.
They didn’t get backstories.
They got vaporized by aliens so Captain Kirk could yell something dramatic and make it out alive.
Over time, the term "redshirt" came to mean any expendable character—someone introduced solely to die in the first act so the rest of the crew could react meaningfully. The redshirt didn’t matter.
Their only job was to not matter.
They were NPCs before NPCs were a thing.
It’s hilarious.
And kind of tragic.
And, well… also kind of real life.
Because here’s the thing:
Sometimes, you’re letting a redshirt steer your story!
The Redshirts in Your Life
You know those people who aren’t really part of your life—but you still worry about what they think?
The coworker who didn’t invite you to their party.
The cousin who rolled their eyes at your dream.
The high school friend who unfollowed you on Facebook.
They’re not main characters.
They don’t know your full story.
They wouldn’t even show up in the credits of your movie.
But somehow?
You’re still giving them veto power over your next chapter.
We’ve all done it. We’ve all played out our lives with imaginary critics in the balcony.
And most of them? Are redshirts.
You don’t need their blessing. You don’t need their applause.
And if they disappear from your story? The plot still moves forward.
But Sometimes… You’re the Redshirt
Maybe you used to be a main character, or at least a guest star, in someone else’s story—but then life shifted. Maybe they changed. Maybe you changed. Maybe your role was only ever meant to be temporary.
That doesn’t mean your story is over.
It means your role in their story is over. At least for now.
Being a redshirt in someone else's story doesn't make you expendable.
It makes you free.
It means you get to step back onto the bridge of your own starship.
Plot your own course.
Live your own story.
Full speed ahead.
A Few Red-Shirt Lessons from the Final Frontier
Don’t give redshirts narrative authority.
If they don’t know your full arc, they don’t get to critique the chapter you’re in. Period.Know when your scene is over.
Sometimes, your time in another story ends. That doesn’t make you a failure. It makes you free.Remember: redshirts always come back.
They get reassigned. Rewritten. Given a name and a line in season three. You’re never stuck in the background forever.