Anyone else get sorted into Gryffindor? Welcome to the common room.
Hogwarts Common Room
We need to talk about this slytherpuff
how do you even
slytherin, is cunning and cruel and ambitious
hufflepuff, is friendly and kind and relaxed
how do you even get sorted like that
Also aren't hufflepuffs hard working which would suit an ambitious syltherin
Hold on I think I like you
The first time I got sorted I got gryffindor, then again, then again. I literally never get sorted any other way. It's interesting for me to see somone who's both
nevertheless two opposite houses
???????
explain
Hufflepuffs are hard-working and loyal.
Slytherins are ambitious and determined.
Those traits seem pretty similar. Just because some Hufflepuffs are super-duper kind and some Slytherins are evil and cunning doesn't mean they are two totally different opposites.
(HHHHIIIII Y'ALL I'M A MIX OF ALL HOUSES I MEAN LIKE HOW IS THAT POSSIBLE??!?!!!?)
(man, you're special! xD I'm personally a Huffledor, more Hufflepuff than Gryffindor. I have never been sorted into Ravenclaw or Slytherin even though I share some of those traits lol)
I've been sorted into mainly Gryffindor, although I have been sorted into other houses too.
Okay. I get it. So now I have a better question
gryffindor
common
room
hahahhaha
there I changed it
Hold up, alright I found something about Hogwarts house stereotypes
https://weheartit.com/entry/241432206
Praise this!
motherfucking potato house
……. Ugh Im a SlytherClaw?
Because they clash?
Then Ill have to do a flipping speech about it.
So we're all obviously different from one another. We get sorted differently, we get called differently, and we argue differently. The truth is that we're all different. Just in the way people talk, the way people will stand for some things, it's easy to tell why the way they are is so prevalent. The first thing you did, @Brokenchipmunk, was come into the wrong common room. (It's just an example.) We all behave differently. Like the way my immediate reaction was to find this amusing. But now I have a better question.
Can people actually be sorted into houses? We talk a lot of game about how, and we talk a lot about why stereotypes of each aren't true. But take a step back. Aren't the houses themselves a definition of the human mind? Isn't definition what we struggle against? So why can we be sorted, when we can't be labeled?
Woah don't get defensive it was an example
kicks down door
Hi, Slytherpuff here. Cool common room.
I'm sorry for provoking you, I had no intention of offending you.