Chapter 132: Magic potion? Don’t be greedy!
Chapter 132: Magic potion? Don’t be greedy!
The benefit of in-depth discussions with the two professors soon became apparent: I was allowed to not do homework for long periods of time and just communicate with the professors regularly.
Of course, it was he who took the initiative to propose this preferential treatment, and the professors agreed after a brief consideration.
As for the Potions homework, he didn't bother Snape.
If he dared to bring it up, Sainz was sure he would only get another, even heavier assignment.
He really couldn't understand Snape's fans. In Sainz's eyes and from his experience of meeting him for more than two years, Snape was a mean person with a bad temper and no teacher ethics.
No matter how much he washed it, he couldn't wash away the fact that he was a Death Eater.
Some people only talk about how he endured humiliation and how he served "justice"!
He has a shitty sense of justice!
Isn't everything he did just out of personal vendetta?
Isn't it that there is nothing you can do after making a mistake?
Knowing that he could not achieve revenge on his own, he had no choice but to turn to Old Deng for help.
Old Dumbledore was not as glorious and perfect as Harry had imagined. When a cannon fodder was offered to him, of course he used him without mercy. He didn't care whether the cannon fodder had any tragic experience or not.
It's just a Death Eater anyway.
Another aspect of Snape that is often criticized is his "love".
Please forgive Sainz for putting his "love" in quotation marks, because in his opinion it is not love at all, it is just the crazy possessiveness of a mentally twisted person.
How did he do it?
He thought that by joining the Death Eaters and using Voldemort to kill Harry's father, he would have the chance to get Harry's mother!
As a result, he underestimated his own value in Lao Fu's eyes, and also underestimated the extent to which Lao Fu would keep his promises.
People like Lao Fu have no room for anyone other than himself. The so-called Death Eaters are nothing more than his subordinates and tools for him to gain power.
How could he care about the feelings of a tool? In the end, Voldemort killed Harry's mother as well.
At this time, it was too late for Snape to regret!
But one thing must be admitted, he was indeed calm and patient, and did not jump out directly, and ultimately gave Harry a push on the road to revenge.
Sainz is not a moral role model. He does not have the saintly habit of demanding that others be great and righteous. He simply hates a mean person who engages in school bullying.
As a professor, Snape cannot treat all students fairly. Let’s not talk about this for now. After all, everyone has preferences, and he does have the right to give extra points to some students and not to some students.
But it was too much that he kept saying insulting things to students every day.
I don't ask him to take special care of certain students with poor academic performance, but the worse the students' grades are, the more verbal violence he uses!
If a student verbally abuses another student in this way, the other student can fight back, but as he is a professor, the status gap is naturally there, and the students can only endure his insults unilaterally and have no way to stop him.
He suffered from school bullying when he was young. Doesn't he know the harm of school bullying? Of course he knows!
He simply spread the humiliation he had suffered in the past to the students who could not resist.
If he had only directed his venom at his peers, perhaps Sainz would have felt sorry for him, but he was facing students and did not consider the consequences of his insulting words.
Since Snape doesn't mind the consequences of his harshness, Sainz naturally won't mind it either!
Everyone is responsible for his own actions. If he treats others harshly, he will naturally have to endure others treating him harshly.
So, to Sainz, Snape was just a Potions professor at Hogwarts and nothing else.
The other party's potion level was indeed very high, but Sainz had never asked him any questions after class.
No matter how much knowledge the other party imparted during class, it was his responsibility, and Sainz accepted it normally.
If you ask questions after class, Sai thinks you owe the other person a favor.
But Sai didn't want to have anything to do with him except attending classes. He was afraid that he would not be able to help but shoot a flying sword through his head when the other party was spitting shit.
Of course Snape could sense that Sainz was ignoring him. At first, he would find fault with him for no reason, but after seeing that Sainz was not resisting, he became bored and stopped causing trouble.
Now the two of them are in a state of ignoring each other. The other attends class on time, and he also attends class on time. During class, they maintain basic respect for professors. If the other does not ask him questions, he never takes the initiative to speak.
As for the other party's occasional pointed snorts, as long as he was not mentioned by name, he would just pretend not to hear them.
Sometimes the professor would indeed use his position to ask him to do more things, such as rewriting an assignment, and Sai would do as he was asked, because it showed the professor's "concern" for the students and was "urging" the students to make progress.
Sainz never thought of himself as an all-rounder. As soon as he knew that this was "Harry Potter", he focused his work on the study of spells.
That is why they can master things in the third grade that most students cannot master until graduation.
As a pragmatist, he certainly would not deliberately create shortcomings for himself. The key point is that compared to a subject like Potions that has restrictions on "casting materials", he prefers spells, a "casting without materials" magic method.
That's why he tried so hard to use spells and transfiguration to make himself stronger in a short period of time.
Because only when your own life safety is guaranteed will you be able to take care of other things.
In fact, it can be seen from the Animagus Transfiguration that Transfiguration and Alchemy intersect here, and the entire Animagus training process does make more use of Alchemy.
What does this show? It shows that these disciplines are interconnected.
Since potions can have the same effect as Transfiguration in some cases, he believed that as long as he was willing to study, Transfiguration or spells could also have the same effect as potions.
Potions, potions, are essentially a kind of magic!
The reason they work is the magic inside them, not the material that carries the magic. At least not just those materials!
As long as the research is in-depth enough, Sainz believes that there must be a way to achieve "potion without materials", and the effect of the potion will then be just a matter of a spell.
Of course, this is a long way off. He doesn't know if he can hope to accomplish it in his lifetime!
But he was not discouraged. Although Professor McGonagall was not a master of potions, it did not prevent her from being one of the best wizards in the world!
Dumbledore is not a master of potions, but that doesn't stop him from being the greatest wizard of this century!
Wizard, wizard, to put it bluntly, the competition is still about knowledge and magic!
Throughout history, I have never heard of any wizard who reached the top through potions.
Because it does have a disadvantage that other magic does not have: material limitations.
This is extremely fatal!
Therefore, since he entered school, Sai had never thought of taking potions as his major subject.
Sainz was very clear-headed. He knew that he was not a genius and did not have a golden finger to help him record what he had learned. He warned himself that he was not qualified to be proficient in all subjects like some other time travelers.
He is not that greedy!
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