>>3460280>>3460373(2/2)
These questions you have been asking me recently, have been like daggers in my heart. They are so pointed, but they were the right questions to ask. If you didn't, I would have not rethought any of this. I gave this one major thinking one single time, left it at that, and didn't want to address any of the problems.
But after rethinking everything, I am rejecting my old, stubborn mindset that Sheik is just how she was in OoT. Certainly I love her there, but I want to now love each iteration of her just as much, including the one I've neglecting. So as of right now, I will love each and every iteration of Sheik equally. I will not play favorites. Not anymore.
Thank you for all these questions, anon. I know you weren't intending for them to as much of an effect as they did, but still, thank you. You've opened my eyes to what I've been ignoring.
>would you delete all her painful memories and experiencesThis I'm not sure of. It might be in her best interest, so I can help her live a happier life. But at the same time, as bad as it sounds, tragedy can build character and make a person tougher. Instinctively now, I would save her, but I'm not 100% sure if I would.
>even if she wouldn't be the same person you fell in love withThis doesn't apply anymore. I love her the same, no matter what now.
>Do you think that the "real" her would be so different that it would make you stop loving her, or your feelings would remain strong no matter what?This also does not apply anymore. I do not have this old mindset anymore. I will love her fully. now regardless of what she has been through, who is influencing her or not, or anything else.
>>3460218>Would your wife be the kind of girl to greet you when you come home?I sure hope so. I want more than anything to come home from a crappy day at work to be greeted and kissed right at the door. She could relieve much of the stress and tension I just had felt all day just by doing that.