Talk:Headon/@comment-67.180.252.165-20160712203652

I think that heading to was hoping bam would beat his test as opposed to failing it. In doing so be would confirm his power and courage. These both correspond to his odds of success in future tower related endavors. It seems headon may have grown tired of the contracts established with the the. Great warriors, thereby explaining his willingness to assist fug. As for why Bam was trapped in the darkness his entire life it seems obvious that Rachel would likely have a hand in the affair. She craves glory and importance, all while she is unworthy of such significance. She is no true protagonist, yet she seems to deny bam a deprive from the dark either through entry into the tower or by freedom in a community of people who would free him of his loneliness by spouting bs qbout being one of the chosen. In reality the desperate attention provides her allows for her to believe she is as valuable and central as she always hoped. It is perhaps why she is so dostraugbt to see Bam follow her. To seek the stars in the tower is to seek a legend and her own selfish desire to bolster her self importance. The fact that bam may hav scaled his confinement as a chosen and loved himself far more worthy than ner m and that she has to face her own lies and delusions about herself like owe as time passes and he meets others Bam may lead s his desperate need for company and have his impression of her greater worth, whcich she too seems to fool herself with, shattered. Rachel still seeks to be seen as the most beatific girl ever as she claims to moon that bam per levee he as such.