The more Dany finds a place for herself, the more determined Viserys is to demean and reject the Dothraki. For the first time in many years she feels comfortable, and she can’t understand why Viserys won’t at least try and join her. She fully begins to embrace their customs by dressing as they do, learning to speak Dothraki, and respecting their sacred beliefs. And being Khaleesi also gives Daenerys a certain sense of place it’s never going to be home to her, but she belongs there much more than she’s ever belonged anywhere else.
![spbu pasti prima spbu pasti prima](https://images.bisnis-cdn.com/posts/2017/08/16/777674/130617_spbu-bbm.jpg)
![spbu pasti prima spbu pasti prima](https://www.pertamina.com/media/545184/pertamina_spbu_pasti_prima_315x234.jpg)
When Daenerys embraces the khalasar, she suddenly becomes very powerful as long as Khal Drogo is alive, all the men must follow her commands or risk their Khal’s wrath. Once her relationship with Viserys starts to fall apart, Daenerys’ relationship to being a Targaryen starts to change. Viserys has lied to her (unintentionally, since he is delusional, but…) and made her think she’s only been one step ahead of assassins her whole life, and then turned around and abused her for things out of her control (like her mother Rhaella dying in childbirth, or how he sold their mother’s crown to feed her): A couple of her traits really shine through in these first chapters, like how much more intelligent and perceptive she is compared to Viserys and some of the adults around her, because her others characteristics have been put on hold but it’s really just tragic to read about Dany’s life up to this point. Living under Viserys as she grew up, constantly dancing around his “dragon”, she had no space to be the bold, fierce, avenging girl she ends A Game of Thrones as. But for the first few chapters, Dany has almost none of the character traits that later define her, because fear has suppressed them. Once Dany finds her place and begins leading as a Khaleesi, we start to see her true personality come out and she is a person again. Fear is such a heavy element in Dany’s story, partially because it really sets up the decisions she’ll make in her final chapters, but mostly because it is the reason for her character growth. The header has a hopeful sound to it, and the tail end of Dany’s first chapters do as well, but the first part of her story is incredibly bleak. She doesn’t have the same murderous vengeance as Viserys, but she has that same passion for what was taken from her a sort of blinding desire that gets in the way of seeing things clearly, especially when it comes to understanding that the Iron Throne wasn’t stolen from her family – they murdered it away chasing dragons. So while the house with the red door represents childhood and innocence, I also think it’s important to recognize that it also represents Dany’s longing for her life of royalty. Safe, comfortable, and well-off princesses have their own room with a lemon tree outside. Having her own room also means that Daenerys was well off. And trees also need peace to grow you have to love and care for a lemon tree. To watch the lemon tree grow, is to spend years in the same place. The lemon tree is a bit more complicated A Dance With Dragons will really start breaking down Daenerys and trees and all the imagery that goes with her arc, but trees is what Dany wants to want.
![spbu pasti prima spbu pasti prima](https://carusermagz.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/05/SPBU-Pasti-Prima-Pertamina.jpg)
The first is very important, because being a princess is what Viserys has filled her head with – it’s the childhood Daenerys knows she was owed by blood. The things Daenerys remembers fondly about it are important Ser Willem calling her “princess”, the lemon tree, having her own room. But what, from a Doylist perspective, is this house with a red door supposed to be? Daenerys thinks it is home, but the symbolism of this house is childhood and innocence.