06-20-2014, 05:22 PM
(This post was last modified: 06-20-2014, 05:26 PM by wfmyers1207.)
This is an interesting question, but I think an answerable one.
Let's go through the history of the shows universe.
Women TEND to know they're grimms before men, but this is not an absolute.
Kelly and Marie were raised and trained 'old school' by their father.
Truble was 'raised' if you will, half feral and subject to constant threats she didn't understand.
Nick wasn't even told what he was until rather late in life. He didn't even know he was a grimm until long after he was a trained officer of the law. So, he tends to try and deal with wesen issues as a law enforcement matter.
Rolek Porter never wanted to be a grimm, even after he knew what it was, he was a person who would not strike back at anyone who wasn't an immediate threat to him or his family. (He did kill the werat agent that came into their hotel room.) As he told Nick: "I can't do what they did. What you do."
So, it seems to me, it's the background rather than the gender that is important.
Let's go through the history of the shows universe.
Women TEND to know they're grimms before men, but this is not an absolute.
Kelly and Marie were raised and trained 'old school' by their father.
Truble was 'raised' if you will, half feral and subject to constant threats she didn't understand.
Nick wasn't even told what he was until rather late in life. He didn't even know he was a grimm until long after he was a trained officer of the law. So, he tends to try and deal with wesen issues as a law enforcement matter.
Rolek Porter never wanted to be a grimm, even after he knew what it was, he was a person who would not strike back at anyone who wasn't an immediate threat to him or his family. (He did kill the werat agent that came into their hotel room.) As he told Nick: "I can't do what they did. What you do."
So, it seems to me, it's the background rather than the gender that is important.