Goodbye blood plasma, hello 20 bucks! Definately returning to the Biolife center for another 30 dollars, again and again. I'm a strong and healthy person, I can afford to save other people's lives. Woohaw. Plus, the nurse said I had great veins in my arm, so I feel like somethin special
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I don't think I'm going to continue the series. I took the sudden ending of lyra walking up into her destiny as her growing up into maturity. Lord Asreal wanted to ascend because he wanted his youth back, he wanted a different destiny in a different universe. He wanted Mrs. Coulter to join him because in the other universe they would both have their innocence and they would be able to go back to the life they wanted to have at one time. She didn't want the innocent times back, she wanted to move on, and so she decided against ascending. Lord Asreal then realized that even in another universe he couldn't have everything he wanted in new youth, so he couldn't face himself to ascend. Lyra, the matured child looking towards controling her own life and her own actions grew up and faced her future head-on because she was ready. The fact that she grew up when she was ready and not when society or destiny told her to also ties in to the witches saying Lyra was the prophetic child who was to break destiny by making her own natural choices without knowing what she was doing. She didn't know she was ascending and growing up by traveling the bridge to the universe in the sky, and that's why the book suddenly ends instead of explaining.
In my mind, books two and three don't exist because it's all over the second she unknowingly, yet decidedly, grows up.
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And if you think my analysis of the ending of The Golden Compass is much deeper than the story itself, then I refer you to the KFC Twister because while it may be different, it's still pretty good as far as KFC goes.
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