(08-05-2020, 09:45 AM)N_grimm Wrote:(08-04-2020, 08:44 PM)irukandji Wrote: I think all of the reasons point to a major issue. Nick lacked the self-confidence needed to be completely honest with Juliette.Nick did not lack self-confidence, he assumed Juliette would react rationally.
And from a storyline perspective: If Nick told Juliette and she believed him, that would be totally absurd in relation to the plotline of a secret wesen world that only Grimms know about. Dragging Juliette along from the start would also weaken the Nick / Monroe interaction, where the two sneaked around in secret. If Nick, on the other hand, told Juliette and she did not believe him, that would also be pointless. She was hardly on screen during the first episodes (I think she had like 5 minutes in total during the first 5 episodes), so no one would care if she left – it would then have been better not to include her in the show in the first place.
The thing is, not only Grimms know about this secret world. Meisner knew of it and he wasn't a Grimm. Nick's own mother had one human friend that we know of. She married a human. Nick's grandfather married a human. Furthermore, Nick's uncle never raptured into a Grimm. These unions are not specific to just Nick's family, they are all over the place. Aside from the fact that wesen are woging all over, at least according to the series.
Nick lacked self-confidence because he all he looked at was worst case scenario.
The best way to frustrate a cyberbully is to ignore him.