what really boggles me is that Adalind still has the ring on ???? and Bonaparte is dead ???? but she can’t take it off ????

That bothered me at first, too, but it was explained in the first episode of this season, thankfully!

She didn’t realize Bonaparte was dead until Sean told her about it later, and then she was afraid to take it off because the ring itself was cursed, not just laden with a threat from Bonaparte.

She’s afraid the curse may not be gone just because he is, and wants to make sure nothing will happen to her children before she takes it off and risks their safety.

I would rather Nick be single, or else be involved for some new character. But since the writers so clearly set it up that it would either be Juliette or Adalind (and confirmed this in interviews) I guess what I’m saying is that I understand why people would ship Nick and Adalind. I don’t like it, what she did was gross and wrong, but the entire thing with all three of them is so messed up and not handled very well by the show.

I wouldn’t want Nick to suddenly become involved with a new character here at the very end. That would seem…cheap and rushed and out-of-nowhere, to me. There wouldn’t really be time to develop the character or the relationship well and take care of all the other stuff they need to answer and deal with.

I will say this: I do understand why people would ship Nick and Adalind, both before and after the rape at the end of season 3. I understand as in comprehend, not as in agree with, support, condone, or ship it myself.

I understand it for two reasons: 1) we are trained from birth by the things we see portrayed in media to process antagonism, dominance, violence, and aggression as evidence of passion rather than abuse, and 2) we are not trained to think critically about the importance and nature of true consent, or to see men as potential victims of rape and women as potential perpetrators.

I can also definitely agree that the show hasn’t handled either relationship perfectly or even very well, and they definitely screwed up with the way they explained hexenbiest powers and the way they supposedly affect people. They broke their own continuity in that regard, and they’ve made it so their two main contenders for Nick’s affections at the end are a woman who doesn’t deserve him and a woman he doesn’t deserve.

Nadalind as a ship is unsalvageable from the standpoint of being healthy or positive in any way. Even if you argue that she did what she did under duress and because she was a hexenbiest, there are things in canon that contradict both conclusions and it doesn’t change the fact that Nick was still violated.

And even as much as I love Silverhardt, I can fully acknowledge that the writers would have to do a whole lot of work to make anything between them remotely healthy again…work I’m not convinced they really have time to do. Nick’s tendency to deceive Juliette and dismiss her feelings whenever convenient for him was a problem from like the third or fourth episode of the first season, and one they’ve never fully addressed.

Still, at the end of the day I know it’s going to be one or the other of the two. And in that context, I can wrap my head around Nick ending up with someone he needs to work on his relationship with over his ending up someone who literally raped him as well as one of his best friends, any day of the week.

With the whole Juliette thing it makes sense that nick would have been uncomfortable + even scared/nervous given that he’s had a lot of bad experiences with hexenbiests and very little-no positive ones. He’d need time + while Juliette has the right to be hurt + upset by that (and to leave) the way she treated him wasn’t right since a healthy relationship means both people are comfortable + agree + theirs turned toxic + Juliette abusive. Including to their friends with nick being the main target.

(2/3) *so I’m glad that the relationship’s ended (+ hopefully won’t start again since that would be bad for both of them.) adalind did a lot of bad things too to people he cared about (the people who had her do it are at to blame too) + nick helped take her baby + powers from her which means there’s a lot of hate anger + mistrust between them. Not exactly the basis for a healthy relationship + I think after she took kelly he’s probably not going to trust leaving her alone with him. Her mother was also

(3/3) *also abusive given what I’ve seen of how she treated adalind, + that might have played a part in some of what she did. Doesn’t excuse it tho. She also acted out on them when they took her baby + nobody was in the right there, given that they took her baby (even if we can understand WHY they still took her kid from her) and she acted out on them for it (which again, wasn’t right but we can see why she did it, + she was desperate to have her child back.) the whole thing with adalind’s complicated

Well Anon…there are a few things I’d like to respond to here. Forgive me if this is a little incoherent, but you put a lot into those three asks and I want to make sure I touch on all of it at least a bit.

First, I think we all agree that it was perfectly reasonable for Nick to need time to deal with what was happening to Juliette. But here’s the thing that so many people seem to forget, anon: he had time.

The scene where Juliette tells him what has happened to her, the scene where she’s hurt that he can’t even look at her, and the scene where she leaves are three completely different scenes with a lot of space and time between them. In the first, she isn’t angry with him at all. She’s upset, fighting tears and visibly terrified. And Nick’s response to this isn’t to tell her that he needs time to figure this out. He doesn’t take the time to do even the bare minimum to communicate to the woman he claims to love that he isn’t going to just desert her.

Instead, he just leaves her there. Crying, alone, in their shattered house where she’s just been attacked. And it doesn’t matter that she fended off that attack incredibly well. If a friend or loved one survived an attack and sent their attacker running, would you leave them completely alone and crying right after? I wouldn’t, not under any circumstances. If I was too upset to stay with them, I would call another friend of ours to do so. What if Adalind had come back with reinforcements?

But Nick wasn’t thinking about Juliette’s safety or her feelings, or whether this whole experience was traumatizing for her. The only thing that mattered to him in that moment was how he felt about the situation. And this isn’t a special circumstance, either, something that can be explained by Nick’s trauma related to hexenbiests and a resulting fear of them (especially considering how easily he gets over that fear later, toward the actual source of his trauma no less).

No, Nick’s lack of concern for Juliette’s feelings or well-being is part of a pattern in their relationship that goes all the way back to season one, and that Juliette calls him out for when she does leave…not that he really seemed to listen to her and let what she was saying sink in. Then of course, he doesn’t talk to her about it at all, not at any point. He talks to Hank instead, and basically forces her to tell their entire group of friends before she’s ready.

Now before I get more into their relationship’s messed-up dynamic, I wanna just toss out that a healthy relationship does NOT mean both partners always agree. That would be virtually impossible. A healthy relationship does involve mutual respect, support, and caring, and that is something that was definitely lacking in Nick and Juliette’s relationship. But I don’t think it’s fair to say that their relationship “turned” unhealthy and toxic when Juliette changed, or to lay that solely at Juliette’s door by calling her abusive.

Their relationship, whether Nick himself wanted to acknowledge it or not, was over the moment he walked out and left Juliette crying in their living room. While Juliette getting angry at Nick and going to start a fight in a bar (when he forced her to tell everyone before she was ready) wasn’t necessarily healthy for her, it wasn’t abuse. And while Juliette burning down Nick’s trailer and attacking his friends (when they tried to force a temporary cure on her that she didn’t want) wasn’t nice and was certainly violent, it wasn’t one partner abusing the other.

That doesn’t make the situation okay or healthy or good…but I don’t see Juliette fighting Nick and their friends as abuse any more than I see Juliette and Adalind duking it out with their powers as abuse. It’s violence, to be sure, but it lacks the unbalanced power dynamics and other features that characterize abuse patterns in relationships.

On the other hand, their relationship prior to Juliette’s change did display several patterns of abuse, and they came from Nick, not from Juliette. Their relationship was unhealthy and parasitic from at least mid-season one. Nick used abuse tactics such as gaslighting on Juliette throughout seasons one and two, and repeatedly dismissed or ignored her needs in favor of his own even after she knew the truth and they were supposed to be on the same page. She was VERY supportive of his life as a Grimm, even though she found it strange and often frightening. And as long as she was being unconditionally pro-Grimm, things were fine. But whenever she tried to express her concerns, fears, or misgivings, he brushed her off. He even lied to her about Trubel when she first showed up, near the end of season three.

Where we can agree on the Juliette/Silverhardt front is that I’m also glad their relationship has ended. I loved them together when the show first started, but things went downhill fast, and the primary victim of that spiral has always been Juliette, even after she became a hexenbiest. Heck, the very existence of Eve is in part a product of the traumas Juliette suffered. The only way I would ever support the two of them getting back together would be if they actually addressed all the problems that led to the end of their previous relationship and showed a definite change in Nick’s treatment toward her. And honestly, given the short order for season 6 and the definite possibility that this will be the show’s last season, I don’t see them having time to give the characters the space, time, and healing they would both need in order to remotely approach being able to realistically resolve/resume their relationship issues.

As for your thoughts on Adalind, I think you’re probably right that her mother was abusive and most likely also neglectful. Adalind herself has hinted that her relationship with her mother was an unsupportive one, that her mother was only there for her in death. And the events at the end of season one clearly showed that Catherine’s affection was conditional, based on Adalind doing/saying/being the “right” thing. The moment Adalind was a “disappointment,” Catherine withdrew all emotional support and affection. That is definitely an abuse tactic.

I’ve spent an untold number of words on discussing all the ways in which Nadalind is unhealthy. Unless they eventually reveal that there was some magic going on somewhere, the way they’ve written the Nadalind relationship has been incredibly rushed, unrealistic, and grossly romanticized. Nick shacking up with his rapist–who has attacked every friend he has at least once, who is the main reason for what happened to Juliette in the first place, and who used the child resulting from raping him to emotionally manipulate him into helping her –is beyond twisted.

And on the other side of it, Adalind suddenly being in love with the man who helped steal her first child from her, and trusting him when he says no one will take her second child, makes zero sense to me. Even disregarding every other bad thing that’s happened between them, I cannot imagine a mother who loves her children–as Adalind clearly does–being willing to even entertain taking that risk with one child after having lost another.

The whole thing with Adalind is very complicated, as you say, and I think part of that is due to some messy writing, honestly. The Grimm Writers do a good job with a lot of things, but Adalind’s arc and ostensible “redemption” has not been one of them. And unfortunately, that goes for anywhere her arc intertwines with the other characters’ as well.

tumblr_oc4rmiiwwh1rx652j

Top 5 Grimm Moments by Season

Season 3, #2: Adalind loses Diana in 3×18, “The Law of Sacrifice”

If this were a list of the show’s most gut-wrenchingly painful moments, this would be in the top three, if not number one. It didn’t matter if you loved Adalind or hated her, none of us could help but feel every ounce of the pain in that scream.

(Source: tumblr_oc4rmiiwwh1rx652j

Top 5 Grimm Moments by Season

Season 3, #2: Adalind loses Diana in 3×18, “The Law of Sacrifice”

If this were a list of the show’s most gut-wrenchingly painful moments, this would be in the top three, if not number one. It didn’t matter if you loved Adalind or hated her, none of us could help but feel every ounce of the pain in that scream.

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I didn’t ship nadalind, silverhardt all the way, but I don’t think the writers should kill off Adalind. It’s weird I don’t like her and I never have, but I feel like it would be a cheap cop-out, not to mention terrible writing, to kill of Adalind after her character arc however forced it was. I want them to complete her story in a way that works, not just kill her. Maybe this comes from being a writer but… they decided to develop her like that and now they should deal with it. Your thoughts?

Anon, I’m totally with you! I would much rather have the writers finish Adalind’s storyline in a way that makes sense, answers some questions, clears up some inconsistencies, and feels satisfying and worthy of everything that came before than just summarily kill her off and be done with it.

Killing her off would be lazy and wouldn’t even begin to do justice to the roller-coaster of an arc she’s been on over the last five years. No matter how they did it, it just wouldn’t feel like a good ending for her.

In fact, I’d rather the writers didn’t kill any member of Team Grimm…they’ve all had some incredible arcs, and just killing everybody–or even mostly everybody–at the end wouldn’t really fit with the tone and the story they’ve set up previously. So…yeah, let’s hope they don’t do that.