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Well...



Episode submitted by Area82 on Wed Jan 18 10:25:57 2012
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"- First, while Mrs. Crawford doesn't have any way of knowing this yet (as she didn't seem to get much of the story out of Tiffany's dad,) Mrs. Summers wasn't treating Tiffany's corruption as a "threat" in a general sense. Rather, she was trying to avoid the problem until Mr. Saunders came to her about it, out of fear of being unable to control herself and harming Tiffany by it. Somehow, from Mr. Saunders's call (probably in the context of the incidents at school,) she gathered that Tiffany was taking a turn for the worse, and intervened only because she thought that Tiffany herself might be in danger. Just for the record."
> Okay, those are some good points, and I will definitely be looking into those points during their conflict. But, you have to remember that Mrs. Crawford doesn't know much about the situation with Mary, so she was trying to connect the dots from both her own experiences and educated theories, while basing those theories on Mary's new behaviors. And, at the same time, Mrs. Crawford did mention that she could be wrong about her 'educated theories' and that she was trying to keep an open-mind by going to asking them first for their sides of the story before she decided if her theories are true or not.

Furthermore, while that might be true about why she did what she did (again, Mrs. Crawford did somewhat mention that a part of Mary might have tried to help her), Mary still did risk a student's life and never even told anyone about it, and then acted like nothing had ever happen at all. That is going to leave a bad impression to anyone's opinion, no matter how well it was painted or how nice the painter was. Ultimately, I think the primary reason for Mrs. Crawford to tell him all that would have just been to note to him how serious this situation actually might have been, in order to get deeper into what going on, so that she could look for a peaceful way to prevent this situation from repeating itself.

As for not getting much of the story from her father, how do you know that? Getting his side of the story might have been very important, since it allowed her to get a clearer view in this madness. And, when she get the other sides of the story, she can finally figured out something from this mess.

"- Also, I'm kind of curious how Mrs. Crawford thinks she could have prevented this?"
> Emily noticed something off with Tiffany when she walked past her (who was still in her first transformed state) and felt a familiar negative feeling from her. But, at the time, she had school, the Magical Girls, and her own daughter to worry about, so it had ended up being somewhat forgotten. Although it was true that Emily couldn't do anything about it personally, she did knew of a potential treatment for Tiffany from her own experience, but she never got the chance to explored it, and thus she felt guilty by not acting on that thought. I didn't make Mr. Saunders pressured her to why she felt that way, because it would have been a moot point anyway, since you can't undo something that already happened...that and he didn't seems like a person who would do that.


Ah...

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