(09-13-2017, 08:09 PM)irukandji Wrote: This was what you brought up.
I doubt you'll believe me, so go back and read my original statement and your response. None of this really had anything to do with the statement I made.
This was the original quote I replied to:
Quote:it's not only misdeeds. In the other thread you wrote how Nick started seeing Adalind as more than just the mother to his son. Well, what exactly is Nick seeing? Just what he wants to see? Shouldn't a big part of what he sees include her hexenbiest heritage? If this is the great and wonderful union that produced a hybrid son, why should Adalind have to shy away? Juliette/Eve gets criticized for embracing the hexenbiest, like it's some form of cancer because she does so whenever she wants. Adalind doesn't embrace it like Eve does, and so all she's praised for is how great she gets along with Nick, like that's all she's good for. Hexenbiests are not entire evil walking amongst the innocent. Adalind shouldn't be have to practice restraint. She should be able to utilize her hexenbiest whenever she so chooses. All I'm saying is it appears she shies away from it because it seems she's in an environment which consists of Nick and the kids, who appear to disapprove of her being a hexenbiest at all.
I, along with several other posters, have addressed some of your points:
1) Nick has accepted and fully embraced Adalind as a hexenbiest at the end of the series.
2) Adalind does not shy away from her powers in the end, rather she chose to control them instead of allowing them to control her.