Yeah, that scene was confusing to me. So, was his name a result of what Bran did? Did he somehow interfere the flow of time to have him suffer a seizure?
That's how understood that moment as well. I also think the only reason why Bran was able to manipulate the timeline was due to the desperate and traumatic situation of the "present" while within in proximity of Hodor. I would be surprised if Bran is able to do that again.It would appear that he can "change" things in a predetermined paradox way. Anything he does already happened.OMG, the idea Bran can change things in past, in fact has changed things puts a whole different spin on things. Makes me immediately wonder why he didn't stop the chain of events that ended with Ned's beheading.
It would appear that he can "change" things in a predetermined paradox way. Anything he does already happened.
That does make me wonder, though. When Bran called out to Ned in the earlier vision, Ned clearly heard him, but the Three-Eyed Raven didn't react as if that moment had always happened.
There were hints that Bran could have the slightest interaction with people he was seeing. IIRC, in the first GOT book, he (and Ned) could hear "whispers" from the tree that was generally dismissed as the rustling of the leaves. Later on, as Bran got to see things through the tree's eyes, the "whispers" may have been the Three Eyed Crow or the Children reaching out to them as historical lynch-pins, who were clearly seen reacting to that interaction. The show is definitely taking that interaction up to the next level, producing more active (and extremely drastic) interactions with the past that I didn't think was possible.The way I interpreted that was that Ned was actually reacting to something else that had happened in the past. You can kind of see this happening in other visions. Bran was mostly just a viewer watching these things unfold. I think that changed with Hodor when he saw what was happening to him and tried to interfere. At this point, I'm not entirely convinced he caused it, rather it was a representation of some major trauma in Hodor's life that coincided with these current events, imprinting themselves on it.
They are (believed to be) the first race of Westeros, living in harmony with nature, worshipping the Old Gods of the forest for thousands of years before The First Men landed on their shores from Essos 12,000 years prior to the shows timeline.Wow, season 6 is full of answers to long asked questions and even questions not asked.
I'm not so familiar with these children of the forest. My only knowledge of them is from the show. So they are like a powerful elder race?
Re: Euron's "resurrection" - they definitely made this seem considerably more spiritual event than what was in the books, which instead described a rudimentary form of CPR to resuscitate the drowned ones - possibly an ancient scientific knowledge that was passed down through Drowned God Priests and moved its way into the religious mythology as one of the priesthood's "mysteries". There should have been nothing mystical about it at all, but when Euron came back to life - on his own - with people standing around watching, it definitely gave it a more metaphysical tone than what was originally intended.
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