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Jaxon Campbell
Jaxon Campbell

Dany Dreams Set 8 |VERIFIED|


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Dany Dreams Set 8



What dany said was truth ..everything happened the way it had..she might have decided not to tell Sam and it would have been wrong but she herself gave him the news..And all this fuss about she not telling jon is ridiculous because how can she know that he had a friend named Sam Tarly..


The difference between dany and other rulers is, she is learning, that is her whole arc, she is trying to be good and do the right thing, where as the other rulers have not,which is why she has asked advice , ignored advice and tried to be her own person and tried new things, the whole story is her beaten and used but becoming strong, the same as a lot of the female characters,She wants to break the wheel, but to break it you need loyalty and you need to get rid of the old guard & those who mean to do you harm, her actions so far are perfectly normal, to lead , as she was told your a dragon be a dragon,so far she has been nice and patient, and been good to those who dislike her, but she wont for long when she is betrayed, then i expect to see no mercy vengeance with a redemption ending. the bitter sweet ending


Daenerys spent her entire early life living on the sufferance of others, bouncing back and forth between benefactors (like Illyrio Mopatis) with her brother, until whatever dreams those benefactors had of supporting the siblings' claim to the Iron Throne wore off, and they were forced to move on to another patron. As a result, Daenerys never knew a true home, and constantly living under her brother's domination gave her great empathy with the downtrodden of the world: she was deeply sympathetic to those she perceived as oppressed, while at the same time, her pent-up frustration from years of being dominated by her petty would-be-king of a brother made Daenerys capable of utter ruthlessness against those she perceived as oppressing others. This experience caused Daenerys to develop a largely black-and-white worldview, and she could be idealistic to a fault: upon seeing the plight of the slaves in Slaver's Bay, Daenerys became determined to free all the slaves in the region, with little thought devoted to the practical after-effects which would result from such an action and without thinking that between some slaves and their masters could exist respect or even love. A particular example of this is when the Great Masters of Meereen crucified 163 children as she approached the city in an attempt to intimidate her. After she took the city, instead of pardoning the slave-masters, she had 163 of them crucified in retribution, including many who opposed the crucifixion of the children, unconcerned about any negative political fallout which would result.


Daenerys's extreme actions could also have been triggered by the destruction of her dreams: While she had accepted the stories of her father's madness were true, she sincerely believed it was her destiny to become Queen of the Seven Kingdoms by virtue of her birthright. Her many accomplishments in Essos, including her dragons' birth, her liberation of slaves, and her persuading the Dothraki to follow her across the sea, only furthered this vision of a grand destiny in her mind. As Tyrion had previously warned her, however, neither her accomplishments nor her birthright were guaranteed to secure support in Westeros, either from the common people or the noble houses. After discovering that Jon was the true heir to the Iron Throne, and that people in Westeros viewed her not as a liberator but as an invader, she realized that her dreams were truly empty. This would have been a great blow to her psyche, and unable to accept a future in which she wouldn't sit on the Iron Throne, she decided that she had to take it by force.


The books go into a little more detail about Daenerys's early life in the Free Cities. Initially, Daenerys lived with Ser Willem and Viserys in Braavos, in a house with a big red door. Ser Willem was old and bedridden and yelled at the servants, but was very kind to Daenerys. After several years, Ser Willem died and the servants drove the Targaryen children from the house, taking what money they had. Daenerys was old enough to remember living in this house and has recurrent dreams about her last sight of the big red door, which came to symbolize the childhood she never had. The house in Braavos was the closest thing to a home Daenerys ever had, but even she never considered herself to be truly home here. Afterward, the Targaryen children bounced around between different patrons, each enjoying having the Targaryen exiles as guests but abandoning them when the novelty wore off. Some briefly entertained the idea of helping them retake the Iron Throne, but as the years passed and Robert Baratheon's rule appeared more and more secure, the number of patrons dwindled and their lives grew meaner. Daenerys grew up living on the sufferance of others, frequently turned out on the street with little warning when their patrons lost interest in them. Viserys was reduced to pathetically begging for support throughout the Free Cities as they moved from patron to patron. In the process, they traveled from Braavos to Myr, then to Tyrosh, then to Qohor, then to Volantis, then to Lys, and ultimately to Pentos (each of the Free Cities except Norvos and Lorath). They never lived in one place for more than a few months, and their stay in Pentos with Illyrio was actually the longest time they had lived in one place since Braavos (for six months in the books, but stated to be over a year in the TV series).


After getting hurt playing football in college, Johnson gave up his NFL dreams, instead signing with the Canadian Football League's Calgary Stampeders. Living in a two-bedroom apartment with three of his football teammates and sleeping on a mattress he found on the street, Johnson wasn't sure things could get worse -- and then he was cut from the team.


\"There was no injury. It's just, 'That's it. You're not good enough.' That was very sobering\" he told the Hollywood Reporter, adding that the stress also led him to break up with his girlfriend, Dany Garcia, who would go on to be his ex-wife. \"The dreams I had, they're dashed. There is no more football. My relationship was crushed. That was my absolute worst time.\"


Jon confronts Dany, who is on the verge of finally sitting on the magically intact Iron Throne when he barges in. She's giddy and tries to reminisce about her childhood dreams of what the Iron Throne might look like, but he moves the conversation squarely into the realm of dead children and burned cities. 041b061a72


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