Has your son ever been in love? Has your son ever had a life long friendship tested to the point where it was almost destroyed? Has your son ever experienced the death of someone as important as a parent or mentor? Has your son ever faced the classic moral dilemma between doing what is right and what is easy? I have. A child is not mature enough to truly understand the deep significance of these books, period. Most of them haven't even read the books, just seen the movies, and to them, it's just a bunch of neat magic tricks and people dressed in funny clothes.I don't mean to sound like a stick in the mud, but this statement made me bust out laughing. Domronr who is barely legal waxing poetic about 6 year olds and life experiences is extremely ironic and amusing. I'm in my 30's, have a wonderful wife of almost 8 years, a great son, awesome job, underwater mortgage and 2 car payments, and I still constantly learn something new about life and the human condition every day. I promise you, until you bring a life into this world and are responsible for the well being of a little person you created, you will NOT fully comprehend the meaning of love and sacifice that are central to Harry's story, so under you reasoning, perhaps only parents should be allowed to experience the wand selection? I also promise you that while 4 - 7 year old's don't have the development of a teenager or adult, they most certainly do understand the basic concepts of love, and right and wrong (even if they don't attribute it to good and evil in a classcal or religous context).
I do not mean to belittle your enthusiasm toward HP in the slightest. You grew up reading Harry's trials and tribulations, all the while going through you own. I'm willing to bet he seems like a trusted friend and Hogwart's almost like a second home. I'm sure if you got the chance to be picked, it would fulfill a 12 year dream of yours, as is the whole WWOHP addition. But it's just that- a fulfillment, or ending of a dream. Picking kids to do the wand selection, even kids who haven't read the books, allows new dreams to be created and for their imaginations to be stimulated. To me, creation is more powerful than completion.
I'm not even sure what the point of your post was, other than to be condescending towards me. I agreed that children should be the ones primarily chosen, as it's a chance for them to see some cool little effects and get caught up in the whole idea of magic. I'm mature enough to allow someone else to experience it for me. But to say that a 6 year old is capable of appreciating the experience the way a fan who grew up with Harry would is ridiculous. Who do you think the people are going to be who are bawling their eyes out at the idea of finally having a wand choose them? Hint: not the 6 year olds.
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