OoP: Most Ridiculously Mushy Theory *Ever*

maneelyfh maneelyfh at yahoo.com
Sat Jun 28 12:40:04 UTC 2003


No: HPFGUIDX 65347

--- In HPforGrownups at yahoogroups.com, "goingoutsleepwalking" 
<goingoutsleepwalking at x> wrote:
> ...spoiler...
> First of all
> 
> Bohcoo said:
SNIP> > And, I do apologize if these things have been discussed 
before, etc.
> 
> I (goingoutsleepwalking) say:
> I feel your pain
> 
> Okay, now something that has been rolling around in my head a 
little since
> I finished OoP.  Maybe it has been brought up, but I haven't seen 
it yet
> and I can only spend so many hours a day reading these emails, even 
if I
> do consider it to be the most intereting thing that I do all day.  
Okay,
> it's Harry's heart that is going to be a major factor in his defeat 
of
> Voldemort (bear with me while I state the obvious, I'm trying to 
explain
> *why* this has been in my mind as well as what it is... only now 
that I
> try to put it into words I am failing...)  Okay, there is more to my
> thought process and it's probably going to sound kind of off the 
wall
> without that, but I don't know how to put it into words.  But 
grudges held
> against people is an increasingly important theme in the book 

SNIP

RESPONSE:
Definitely Harry's heart is going to play a big role in the next two 
books!  It was part of the lesson learned in OOP>>>CONTOLLING YOUR 
EMOTIONS! If Harry had been in control of himself, 1)he would not 
have run off to save Sirius, 2) He would ahve taken Occulmency 
classes with Snaper more seriously.  Emotions are tied to the heart 
and they affect our brain and common sense. When we are emotional we 
make bad decisions.  Sirius's death did have a point, a very big sad 
point, and that wsa to teach Harry to control himself. 

Must go know as my dog has brought a krumple-horn snackak to play 
with ;o)
fran







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