In the end he chose his family and would have stuck by that decision if his ghost mother and aunt never paid him a visit, grimming seemed to take a back seat to having Adalind, Diana, his son and his friends back. This isn't the same Nick that placed his relationship at the far end of the spectrum over his Grimm.
(12-27-2017, 08:15 AM)irukandji Wrote: I don't see where Nick desired marriage all that greatly. I recall him talking about it with Hank, but during the same conversation, greatly expressed the desire to be a grimm. Because he placed marriage and children at the opposite end from being a grimm in his immediate world, I believe he considered that if he accepted one way of life, the other was out of the question.Unfortunately what you believe isn't substantiated by the script/or show. It's an opinion I'm okay to dismiss as nothing more than that. You believe what you want, I'll stick to the show.