Board Thread:General Grimm Discussion/@comment-25875828-20141217190511/@comment-24397663-20150605215951

@Lurkenfrau + LCD2YOU

Nick walking out of the house after Juliette showed him, I think it was not only that she just woged in his face unprepared, but that she answered his question of 'why didn't you tell me...' with 'I thought you were gonna kill me...'

The person you love, the person who said 'no' to his proposal years ago because 'he wasn't completely honest with her'... that same person who should have known him better than that, who knows he isn't the killing grimm, that exact person tells you, she is afraid of you... because you're going to kill her? how on earth shold anyone react to such... accusations? At least getting some fresh air to sort out his thoughts should be permitted... and after that, Juliette never really allowed a reasonable conversation with any of her friends, much less Nick...

@Grimmster

About having noone to teach her how to be a hexenbiest, that might be true, but she had witnessed on plenty occasion how better not to be, to learn at least that much... At the end, she was even more ferocious than Adalind has ever been. Adalind never attacked someone directly (besides the syringe in Nicks arm at the beginning of the show). Juliette tried to kill people straight with her hexenbiest-abilities on several occasions. Did she really need someone to tell her to not do that? I don't think so...

There is a Childrens book called 'The little witch'. Don't know if anyone here ever heard of it. It's about a young little witch who liked to join the older witches on their Walpurgis-celebration. So they told her 'be a good witch from this day forth, then you might be allowed to dance with us next year'. So, she did what she thought a good witch does - helping people. Returning to the Brocken on Walpurgis next year she was certain she had done what she was told and would be allowed to join the celebration. But the older witches tell her 'You can't dance with us. You've been a bad witch. Witches don't do nice, they play foul!'

And the point is - what is good and what is bad is always relative and lies in the eyes of the beholder...

If she'd had a mentoring hexenbiest to teach her to be a 'good' hexenbiest, it would've actually just led her to the opposite - be nasty, selfish and never show respect for other peoples feelings... And considering that, Juliette had become an A+ student, even without a book or a teacher...