The woman's name is Mrs. Hawking,,,,,,, not Hawkings. That seems to be a big problem for people. Seems small, but what if I went around saying Jack Shepards and Charlie Paces. You'd think I had water on the brain. It's H A W I N G. No S's.
Now to more important matters.
There are few things which I can think of that we'll be sure to see. First is that Ben will have another confrontation with Widmore. He has too. If that's the case, I'd have to say it's unlikely Ben once again leaves the island, which means that Widmore will likely come to the island. Has he already done this via 316? Possibly as a passenger in the back?
It's also clear that Jack will wind up meeting his father. What an episode that is going to be. Holy Hell!!! What will that mean? Here's how I see it. Jack has accepted his role, but he has some task to complete in the Dharma days before they meet. When his father told Locke to say hello to his son though, it must have been hinting at this reunion which would have to take place in season in the season 5 finale. WRITE IT DOWN. I'd say Jack will find his way to the Cabin with Christian stepping out of the shadows to greet him. That I say will be one of the very last scenes this season.
And while I'm thinking about it. Does Locke say anything to Jack about a man who said to say hi to his son? He had to right? If you're Locke and that's the last thing Christian tells you before you zap away, then you're at the very least too curious not to ask each of the off island men about it. So he tells Jack about the encounter, and he gives enough detail that Jack knows it's true, and this is what starts Jack's belief in the island, his depression, and prompts him to later ask Ben if Locke is dead.
And finally, with the presence of light and dark, I don't believe there are sides per se. In other words, I don't think there are good and bad guys in the normal since. Everybody, just as in life, are influenced by impulses to do both good and evil, and all of us take part in some of each. Some of us even think we do good things, but we don't think it through. For instance, giving money to a bum. Sounds great, but all you've done is make him weak and dependant, just as Locke describes stealing a moths strength to Boone in season 1, if he had helped him escape his cocoon. The same thing goes on in real life, for instance with bail outs. The idea is great, that helps people and companies survive in the short term, but all you're doing is breading a bunch of weak and dependant people.
So the point is that when Richard says, we're the good guys, what he means is, that they are principaled. They don't take advantage of power in any form. They just live as the island lets them. Other people are more suceptable to influence of negative forces. Doesn't make them evil, they just fall prey to the need for power, or the desire to fix everything. They can't just let things be as they are. So what Lost will reveal, is that those able to live on principle and accept who they are, those people will win/survive/set things right. That's the game. Accept the force of light, and come what may, or accept the force of dark, and never be satisfied in your attempt to control. As Tyler Durden says in Fight Club. "Just let go." Theory by Locke4God
Now to more important matters.
There are few things which I can think of that we'll be sure to see. First is that Ben will have another confrontation with Widmore. He has too. If that's the case, I'd have to say it's unlikely Ben once again leaves the island, which means that Widmore will likely come to the island. Has he already done this via 316? Possibly as a passenger in the back?
It's also clear that Jack will wind up meeting his father. What an episode that is going to be. Holy Hell!!! What will that mean? Here's how I see it. Jack has accepted his role, but he has some task to complete in the Dharma days before they meet. When his father told Locke to say hello to his son though, it must have been hinting at this reunion which would have to take place in season in the season 5 finale. WRITE IT DOWN. I'd say Jack will find his way to the Cabin with Christian stepping out of the shadows to greet him. That I say will be one of the very last scenes this season.
And while I'm thinking about it. Does Locke say anything to Jack about a man who said to say hi to his son? He had to right? If you're Locke and that's the last thing Christian tells you before you zap away, then you're at the very least too curious not to ask each of the off island men about it. So he tells Jack about the encounter, and he gives enough detail that Jack knows it's true, and this is what starts Jack's belief in the island, his depression, and prompts him to later ask Ben if Locke is dead.
And finally, with the presence of light and dark, I don't believe there are sides per se. In other words, I don't think there are good and bad guys in the normal since. Everybody, just as in life, are influenced by impulses to do both good and evil, and all of us take part in some of each. Some of us even think we do good things, but we don't think it through. For instance, giving money to a bum. Sounds great, but all you've done is make him weak and dependant, just as Locke describes stealing a moths strength to Boone in season 1, if he had helped him escape his cocoon. The same thing goes on in real life, for instance with bail outs. The idea is great, that helps people and companies survive in the short term, but all you're doing is breading a bunch of weak and dependant people.
So the point is that when Richard says, we're the good guys, what he means is, that they are principaled. They don't take advantage of power in any form. They just live as the island lets them. Other people are more suceptable to influence of negative forces. Doesn't make them evil, they just fall prey to the need for power, or the desire to fix everything. They can't just let things be as they are. So what Lost will reveal, is that those able to live on principle and accept who they are, those people will win/survive/set things right. That's the game. Accept the force of light, and come what may, or accept the force of dark, and never be satisfied in your attempt to control. As Tyler Durden says in Fight Club. "Just let go." Theory by Locke4God