06-05-2017, 03:56 AM
(06-04-2017, 09:24 PM)MarylikesGrimm Wrote:Both sides of the debate speak to Nick's and Juliette's mindset concerning there future and the prospect of children. It's reasonable that they discussed starting a family and equally reasonable they worried about the hardships of children growing up in the Grimm lifestyle.(06-04-2017, 09:20 PM)irukandji Wrote: So Nick telling Juliette he loved her meant nothing then, right? And Juliette telling Nick she loved him meant nothing then, right?I am saying the opposite. Love is not marriage and/or child. It is different.
Adalind was the caregiver while Nick had a sporadic schedule and was rarely home. Realistically, Juliette would have considered that she would be the primary, and oftentimes the only caregiver, as well as the likelihood that Nick wouldn't survive to see his children grow up.
That said, once Nick became a father his thoughts turned to being father/protector and any reasons not to have a child flew out the window. If Nick could embrace parenthood with a woman he hated, he would certainly embrace it with a woman he'd loved for years.
"If my devils are to leave me, I am afraid my angels will take flight as well." Rainer Maria Rilke