by Galena May » Tue Jul 23, 2024 6:38 am
Having read the others' answers, I now have so much to think. There are points where I agree and points where I respectfully disagree with the different people who have replied to this topic.A good topic, overall. My individual viewpoints go as:
I respectfully disagree that Harry was too young to love Ginny because they only met at the age of eleven, actually they did not "get together" at the age of eleven, they grew up together upto the age of seventeen and got together only in Harry's sixth year, but their relationship was then still developing, and they also had explored other relationships to compare with before each other.
But, I also respectfully disagree that they had a lot in common, except for Quidditch and Ron Weasley, because Ginny never experienced the heartbreak and lack of family and blood relations that Harry went through. Ginny was brave and outspoken, but very respectfully, my opinion is that Ginny never had enough opportunity to explore the difficult emotions that the Golden Trio went through. She was two years behind in maturity anyway. She was a great by-the-books definition of hero's girlfriend perhaps, as compared to all the other girls who had a crush on Harry, but I don't really see her emotionally bonding with him anywhere. I see their relationship a bit superficial and partially a product of Ginny's hero-worship and attraction- based as opposed to real love, at least during the timeline of the story. In fact, I have sometimes thought that Harry's respect for Ginny looks like Ginny is Harry's sister.
But again, let me not fail to also add that this is how I see it on the basis of how much we got to know by the time the story ended. We never had time to explore their relationship better with all the Voldy stuff happening. They might have very well been perfect for each other after the serious stuff ended when they finally got the time to relax and explore their compatibility. In my opinion, J.K. Rowling simply left Ginny as Harry's hope of a stable future, not as an established relationship. We do not even actually get to read the part where their relationship develops further, that part gets just fast -forwarded upto their marriage and their children, completely skipping all the reasons why Harry stayed forever with Ginny and not someone else.
Not going to lie, from my own experience and referring to my own love-life, I don't think bonding has to occur only over having things in common, dramatic experiences, and shared conflicts. In fact, its quite the opposite. Going through a lot of trauma together merely sets the foundation for a "we understand each other" and " healing together" journey, then there's nothing left to bond over when they have finished healing, then they start exploring other options if they don't successfully create other things to do together. In fact, I have found that couples who meet AFTER completing their own individual healing journeys are more likely to last longer and create new memories thus helping to bond faster as opposed to those with shared conflicts who bond over reminiscing old traumas and are simply auto-piloted by their shared pasts and "used to " being there for each other simply because they had no other choice in their shared past which I think only delays the healing process further.
When the trauma resolves, and you are at a relatively happier place in life, you no longer have anything to bond over, and that's when you get to decide if you really want each other even in the absence of any drama. That's when you actually get to explore yourself without triggers be who you really want to be, and your bonding at this stage is more effortless, which really happened AFTER the story ended for Harry.
Basically what I am trying to say is that when you just saved the whole wizarding world, you are likely thinking about someone who mentally heals you and gives in the effort, not about what you would do together when there is nothing more to do. So, it isn't the right time to date.
Therefore, we don't have enough evidence to determine if Ginny was a good fit for Harry.
The same would go for anyone else mentioned in this topic, whether Luna , Hermione, or Cho. Even Cho could very well have stood a second - chance with Harry, because she was still sad about Cedric when dating Harry and Harry was so immature not to understand her emotions and confusion in my opinion. Would the dynamics be different if they met again after the Wizarding War after gaining maturity? We never got to read about that at all.
Overall, I think I actually agreed with Janne here. After stating how I view this, I am reminded of reading Janne state that Harry needed a therapist. Very true, in my opinion. We may actually have therapists in the wizarding realm, though. Nobody said that only Muggles have therapists, given that magic doesn't make someone immune to going through a lot, why else did magicals invent the Cheering Charm ( isn't that pretty much the magical equivalent of therapy?). Maybe we would find a therapist or two in St. Mungo's hospital though they didn't play a pivotal role in the story, because the other events took center-stage here, or maybe going to a therapist was expensive or frowned upon in Harry's days, like it still is in some parts of the Muggle realm.
Beauty is everywhere, if only you will choose to see it!
Galena May for you, a first year witch student at Hogwarts. Say hi if you see me.