S1E1 · Encanto graph
S1E1
· Encanto

Abuela Alma faces her burden in the past

In this pivotal flashback, young Abuela Alma grapples with the trauma of losing her childhood home and family in Colombia. Holding her two babies close, she vows never to let her new family’s magic fade as hers did. But her fear of loss calcifies into rigidity, shaping the harsh matriarch the family knows. When she reaches Mirabel’s vanished door, the weight of her hardened choices becomes visible—her gaze shows recognition of what she’s done and she whispers a broken apology. The scene ends in the ruins of the home, where the candle and all her hopes now lie shattered, forcing her to confront the consequences of her protective cruelty. key_dialogue: [ ABUELA ALMA: I was given a miracle... a second chance... and I was so afraid to lose it... that I lost sight of who our miracle was for. ]

Plot Beats

The narrative micro-steps within this event

3

Abuela Alma reflects on her past, realizing she became overly protective and rigid with her family, including Mirabel, after being given a second chance with the miracle of Encanto.

reflection to regret ["Abuela Alma's bedroom", 'the rubble of …

Abuela Alma expresses her deep regret and apologizes for her past behavior, acknowledging that she lost sight of the true purpose of their miracle.

regret to vulnerability

Abuela Alma confronts the reality of her mistakes as she finds herself in the rubble of their destroyed home, symbolizing the loss of their miracle and her failure.

vulnerability to despair ['the rubble of the house']

Who Was There

Characters present in this moment

2

Bereaved yet determined, shifting from sorrow to steely resolve, then crumbling into remorse when confronting the consequences of her hardened choices

Alma sits in a bedroom designed to replicate her lost childhood home, tears wiped away as she steel herself to become harder for the sake of her children. She clutches her babies to her chest and eventually falls to her knees in the rubble, candle in hand, voice trembling with remorse.

Goals in this moment
  • Ensure her family’s magic endures at all costs
  • Never again experience the devastation of loss
Active beliefs
  • Safety lies in unyielding control over tradition and expectation
  • Her family’s survival depends on suppressing individuality for the sake of the miracle
Character traits
vulnerable yet resolute protective to a fault regretful upon reflection
Follow Alma Madrigal's journey
Supporting 1

Hopeful expectation curdling into disappointment as Alma’s gaze passes over her vanished space

Mirabel’s presence is felt through the vanishing of her door, serving as a silent witness to Alma’s transformation. She embodies the consequence of Alma’s rigidity, her absence felt as a poignant absence in the hallway.

Goals in this moment
  • Seek compassion and recognition from Abuela Alma
  • Exist within the family’s embrace despite familial pressure
Active beliefs
  • Abuela’s love is unconditional and protective
  • Her place in the family is secure through their bond
Character traits
silent yet symbolic excluded by design
Follow Mirabel Madrigal's journey

Objects Involved

Significant items in this scene

1
The Madrigal Miracle Candle

The shawl appears as a secondary emblem of loss and memory, something Alma wraps around the babies or retains from her past life. Its presence reinforces her struggle between old wounds and new purpose.

Before: Worn or held as a tangible relic of …
After: Retained as a burden or cradled in the …
Before: Worn or held as a tangible relic of her earlier life in Colombia, possibly wrapped around her shoulders
After: Retained as a burden or cradled in the ruins, a remnant of love and old grief

Location Details

Places and their significance in this event

3
Abuela Alma's Bedroom Window

The bedroom functions as the emotional fulcrum where Alma’s transformation begins, designed to mirror her lost childhood counterpart down to the smallest detail. It bears witness to her initial vulnerability, her resolve, and her silent progression onto the porch where doors shift symbolically.

Atmosphere Heavy with grief and silent resolve, the glow of the candle casting long shadows that …
Function Private sanctuary where traumatic decisions are made and the seeds of rigidity are planted
Symbolism Represents the intersection of personal trauma and protective control, the room itself becoming a cage …
Access Limited to Alma and the immediate family members whose doors represent temporal progression
Bedroom designed as an exact replica of her childhood home, amplifying the weight of memory The candle’s golden light serves as a focal point, casting the room into stark clarity
Ruins of Casa Madrigal (including Mirabel's House)

The rubble of Casa Madrigal becomes the physical manifestation of Alma’s failed rigidity, where kneeling turns her regret into a communal scene of loss. The destruction is both literal and a metaphor for the hollow outcomes of her protective cruelty.

Atmosphere A suffocating stillness hangs over broken walls and exposed rebar, dust suspended in the dim …
Function Stage for Alma’s confrontation with the consequences of her hardened choices, a place where foundations …
Symbolism Represents the collapse of the controlled environment she tried to build, showing the ruin her …
Access No barriers remain, exposing all the weaknesses and cracks in Alma’s once-protective structure
Dust hangs thickly in the air, catching what little light filters through a mountain fissure Jagged remains of the crumbled foundation create a labyrinth of loss and sorrow
Alma Madrigal's Childhood Home (Highlands Adobe)

The old apartment in Colombia stands symbolically as the lost paradise Alma seeks to preserve through her family’s magic. Its absence haunts the childhood bedroom, while its physical existence in the narrative past underscores the source of Alma’s rigidity.

Atmosphere Bitter nostalgia and stifled sorrow linger like echoes, the warmth of memory contrasting the aching …
Function Symbolic foundation of Alma’s trauma and her misguided mission to protect what cannot be preserved …
Symbolism Embodies the paradise that the Madrigal miracle seeks to replicate and secure, yet highlights its …
Access Inaccessible due to separation by time and sea, reinforcing Alma’s drive to create an unchanging …
Sunlight filtered through shutters creating sharp rectangles of light on worn wooden floors Cold hearth serves as a stark reminder of what once was a place of warmth and familial love

Narrative Connections

How this event relates to others in the story

What this causes 2

"The house's collapse (beat_5903cc4b43770d44) leads to Abuela Alma's breakdown by the river (beat_159525f4849fbb86), where she admits her mistakes and reconciles with Mirabel."

Abuela Alma and Mirabel share grief by the river
S1E1 · Encanto

"Abuela Alma's regret and realization about holding on too tightly (beat_d2d0944bf621ce70) escalates into a communal redefinition of the family's future during the rebuilding (beat_a5d68a95ee03e4ee), showing that acknowledging pain leads to collective healing."

Mirabel returns to cheering Encanto
S1E1 · Encanto