Jon had a dream.
This time, of course, it wasn't an illusion. It was just a dream.
When humans dreamt, they often had very important things in their hearts.
Jon was no exception.
He looked at the vast world and ocean in front of him and remained silent.
After so many years of training, Helga had long been able to maintain a clear mind in a dream. Of course, he wasn't completely clear-headed, he was only able to slightly maintain his consciousness in a dream.
And now, what was echoing in his mind was what Grindelwald had told him not long ago.
His problem wasn't that he wasn't strong enough, but that he looked at the problem from a certain angle.
Grindelwald had taught him to look at the problems in this world from a God's point of view.
As the saying goes, a ten-thousand-feet-tall building starts from the ground. If you want to go higher, you have to at least have a standard to show how far you are from that height.
Compared to the boundless magical elements stored in the boundless blue sea, the amount of magical energy in a Wizard's body was pitifully small.
What the Gods pursued was eternal life. What the Wizards pursued was more power. And now, Jon was facing the problem of increasing his own power.
Things like advancement couldn't be rushed. But if he could smoothly advance without rushing, Jon would have advanced long ago.
He fell into confusion and contradiction.
Then, he was pulled out of it by Cecatly.
He was a person who thought too much, but the more he thought, the more confused he was and the more he couldn't find the answer.
Helga knew what kind of person he was, so he left him such a reminder. However, in this world, it was often easier said than done. Jon himself didn't know what he should do to be able to make a decision.
Now, he suddenly knew.
It wasn't all of a sudden. During this period of time, he might have found the answer long ago. It was just that today, because of Cecatly's reminder, the answer appeared in his dream.
He was so lucky.
"So, I should give up, right?"
Looking at his illusory palm, Jon muttered to himself.
To be willing to give up, one must give up to gain. For a Wizard with a big goal, what he had to give up was definitely not something small.
Take Voldemort for example. He gave up his conscience in exchange for power. He gave up his body in exchange for the "indestructibility" of his soul. He had done a lot.
Jon wouldn't choose the same path as Voldemort. This answer was very troublesome for him.
None of the students at Hogwarts had a rapid breakthrough like Jon. They usually followed the school's established order and slowly advanced to the rank of Professor. After a long time, they had a relatively stable balance, and naturally, they wouldn't have as many problems as Jon.
For the Wizard, this breakthrough was a difficult problem. After this year's study, their magic research and accumulation had reached a considerable level. In this kind of place, everyone encountered different problems, but the stronger the foundation, the easier it was to break through.
Jon's foundation wasn't weak, but after all, he suffered a disadvantage in a short time, so it was more difficult. Plus, there was a pair of gloves hindering him … Oh, he forgot. This was a dream, and his gloves weren't here.
And not long ago, he figured out one of the most important points. The so-called giving up didn't necessarily require him to give up as much as Voldemort did. At the end of the day, the barrier between realms was a shackle on the soul. As long as he could find a way to break free from this layer of shackles and break free from the shackles of the outside world, he would be able to peek into the next realm.
This point was easy to say, but it wasn't hard to do.
It was just breaking the shackles. Wasn't Jon doing this all the time?
As long as he focused, found his position in the magic environment of this world, aimed at that position, and threw with all his strength, it was easy to pull himself out of the shackles.
As long as he confirmed his position in this world, the Wizard could let himself form a connection with the surrounding environment, and use the ubiquitous magic elements to improve his magic power and become stronger. It wasn't difficult to say, but it was also not easy to say.
But fortunately, Jon found the right way. He could give up on his advantage and break through from the weak point.
Next, it was time to practice how to throw himself out.
…
At dawn, Jon woke up from his sleep.
There was a difference in the flow of time between the dream and reality. A period of time in the dream was actually just a night, as long as a year. And this difference in time meant that there was no way for people to smoothly connect the two environments.
So Jon lay in bed for a long time.
But as he lay there, he realized a problem.
He seemed to have … broken through?
It was really as easy as Cecatly and Grindelwald said.
It was so easy that it made people speechless.
He put on the glasses as usual and was about to start working when he suddenly noticed something strange.
There was a change?
Jon looked at the side of the glasses. On the small side of the glasses, other than the name left by the original maker, Madam Ravenclaw, there was a line of meaningful words: "Sometimes, showing off too much cleverness is not a good thing."
What did this mean?
It seemed to be a change caused by his breakthrough. Jon wasn't sure. After all, this pair of glasses had always been the same since he got it. This was the first time such a change happened.
This sentence seemed to be related to Ravenclaw's school motto, but in the records, Madam Ravenclaw's education philosophy was written as follows: The students we teach must have superior intelligence.
It was a bit contradictory.
Jon lowered his head and extended his consciousness into the glasses.
Then, he was pleasantly surprised by the information flow contained in the glasses.
When Jon first received Ravenclaw's glasses, he knew that this thing was very different from the auxiliary alchemy equipment made by other alchemists.
This difference was not only reflected in the permanent solidification of Reality Magic in the glasses, which could break the effects of most illusions, but it also greatly increased the Wizard's range of vision. This part of the effect was just a side effect and was not the most precious part. And for Jon, the most precious part was the part that was revealed after his breakthrough.
[Legendary Witch's Blessing].
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