02-05-2017, 10:32 AM
(02-05-2017, 07:56 AM)Robyn Wrote: Meisner wanting Renard to admit his responsibility in his death and apologize is a personal, self-serving objective. There has to be more to it than that. But whatβs the value of Renard acknowledging his wrong doings and feeling regret if he has to be tortured into it?As I wrote in another thread
If Meisner or some power using Meisnerβs form is trying to bring Renard to the right side of the good fight, wouldnβt he/she/it, orchestrate a sort of Charles Dickensβ Christmas Carol scenario? Show Renard how his decisions have harmed the people in his life, and how his selfish ambitions have left him alone and friendless?
The entity haunting Renard only talks about Meisner. Yes, Meisnerβs death was needlessly cruel, but itβs hardly more than a drop in the bucket of Renardβs deeds. The most obvious, close to heart, and current regret would be Diana and Adalind.
Miesner told Sean that they have unfinish real issues to work through
and until Renard stops and listens what the issue are..Miesner can't rest and neither can Sean, sleep deprivation would start breaking you down faster than the mind games do