Who found Auron too lecuring?

I don't really think he lectured at all ...
He was the warrior to begin with .. and besides he only taught the rest of the party (especially tidus) about the pilgramage (I know tht is not how its spelt nut I'm too lazy to fix it).

Auron's My Fab character from FFX.
 
Auron too leturing? Heh heh heh. I think he has a right to be since he basically knows everything in the game; yes I fully support that claim.

Want to call him the "Legendary Guardian"? It's no doubt that whenever Auron is called by that label, he feels the resurgence of bitter emotions kept deep within him. Whenever he is looked upon with stares of respect, honor, and admiration, he can't help but want to cry out. He is blown away by the desire to want to yell that they're false and reveal the whole truth about himself.

The fame and glory that was given to him is all due to the fact that he had served as Summoner Braska's guardian. It was because Braska conquered Sin and became high summoner that Auron is raised in high regard as the brave soul who protected Spira's hero throughout his journey/pilgrimage and fulfilled his duty as a distinguished guardian.

However, it isn't the case that he wanted all that tribute. Auron became Braska's trusted guardian because he was enthralled by Braska's character above all else, and because he approved of Braska's honest and bona fide intention to vanquish the suffering of the people of Spira, terrorized by Sin.

They went on a pilgrimage to attempt to change a world that was tormented by pain. Braska, a summoner who chose the disciplined path of obtaining the Final Summoning, even while he acquired the Temples' displeasure for marrying an Al Bhed. Auron, a warrior monk who wandered from a successful career path by refusing a marriage proposal that guarenteed him of a future promotion, but had no relation at all to Yevon's teachings. And Jecht, who accompanied them on their pilgrimage with the dream of going back to his hometown but nevertheless, gave it up to instead harden his strong determination to fight Sin ultimately.

However, the pilgrimage that Braska, Auron, and Jecht had risked their lives for was not able to change anything after all. Sin was certainly conquered by Braska's Final Summoning, and the people of Spira were excited beyond measure over the arrival of a Calm after a long 90 years. Braska had his statue enshrined in all the temples as high summoner, and the people forgot all their past sorrows, thrilled with the brief period of peace. They were intoxicated with the "all-too-short" celebrations that took place before Sin returned.

And then, just as everyone had known, Sin was reborn. The Calm passed on like a quick dream, and Spira was once again surrounded in unjust death and abstruse sorrow. Everything returned back to the way it was before the Calm. No matter how many sacrifices were made, the brutalo cycle was only mercilessly repeated...

A world where nothing was changed. A pilgrimage where they weren't able to alter anything. Whenever he looks back on how he could not prevent Braska or Jecht no matter how hard he tried, Auron is overcome by feelings of intense remorse and regret that tear him apart. Thanks to that pilgrimage, being labeled "the greatest guardian ever" and gaining the public's support and respect was an agony that was hard to bear.

If it was possible, he'd want to do that pilgrimage all over again once more. That defiant pilgrimage where he, along with Jecht and Braska, would bring about a liberating change; one not bound by the conventional wisdom of Yevon's teachings.

But those dreams were not realized. Summoner Braska's pilgrimage ended, and so did Auron's story. Unable to subdue sorrow from its source and only able to let the people to turn their gazes from it momentarily, much like how it had been until then, the cover closed on the legendary guardian's unsuccessful story.

Now, Auron was similar to an actor left hanging in the wings of the stage where his role had ended long before. A figure who could have left that place whenever he liked (if anything, Auron was forced to leave). What ties him to this scene of the battle are his emotions, which simply can't accept the conclusion of his life-story, and the promises that he must fulfill to 2 the closest people in his life. An adamant will that does not desire for the young men and women, who will acquire the next age, to meet the last scene of the play following the same cheap script as he had done - that will is what bends all rules and principles to allow Auron to stay on.

Jecht and Braska had both entrusted Auron with their children that were left behind: Tidus and Yuna.

These two people, who live in entirely different worlds, were indirectly introduced by Auron 10 years later. It wasn't as though he had planned all of this out beforehand. But just as if they had been steered towards their destinies by the blood flowing through their veins, Tidus and Yuna are to travel the same paths their fathers did 10 years prior. Yuna became a summoner; and with all the expectation of being Braska's daughter placed upon her shoulders. And Tidus, who drift onto the beach of Besaid Island that same day, ended up pilgrimaging with Yuna. Auron was the one who later guided him into officially becoming a guardian, however, the tides of fate had already been settling out before then.

Auron did not intend to allow Yuna to repeat the same mistakes as him and his friends previously. But at the same time, he knows all too painfully how much resolve summoners take on in order to face their pilgrimage. It is not a journey which an outsider (even Auron, who knows everything) can selfishly keep them from doing.

If he tells her everything he knows abou, maybe he can make Yuna stop at once, by her own will. Or maybe she will no longer be able to proceed as she has before. Except Auron knows. For Yuna, who loves her father Braska and has inherited his will, the happiness and well-being of the people of Spira is her life's desire and her dream. Even if Auron tells her about his own pilgrimage where they were not able to change anything, it would be meaningless to her. If Yuna doesn't learn about the truth about this world first-hand and with her own eyes, and moreover, does not pass judgement on it herself, then a real life will not start for the young lady who Braska entrusted Auron with.

That was also the situation for Tidus. For the young man who, like Jecht, went on pilgrimage without knowing one thing about Spira, the truth that Auron knows is probably harsh and severe, like a powerful medicine. In the place where he had lived for over 17 years, there were always only easy choices for him to make. However, Jecht didn't wish for his son to live that way. A life where he would experience its harsh realities one by one, and could start to passionately express his own views about things occuring in his life. If there was anything Auron could give Tidus, it was just leading him into this world in order to weave his own story. Into the prologue of a story with no remorse or regrets, which Auron wasn't able to achieve.

Here is where Auron devotes himself to playing a major supporting role, a prompter. The leading roles on this pilgrimage are respectfully given to Yuna and Tidus, with the young men, women, and beast (Kimahri) trying to protect Yuna as the actively serving guardians. Auron only helps them in moving the story forward. By no means does he try to force the script of his design onto them. For that is the essence of the Summoner's journey: discovering the truth about Spira and deciding whether or not to rewrite the story is a privilege reserved only for those in the process of their pilgrimage.

And at the moment when the director of that never-ending spiralling story, which Auron now wants to spit on, appears on the stage, he simply takes charge of his past leading role which had been cast off to someone new. In order to tell the young actors with him that now is the time to make a choice. In order to clearly show them the opportunity that he himself had missed.

The young leading man, whom he had intended to watch over in Zanarkand and on the journey, prepared the play's climax for the retiring actor as well. And the best script where he could truly become the legendary guardian.

Auron's story...turned into Tidus' story. Auron's the previous narrator; not a lecturer.
 
He didn't lecture and hardly guided.

He simply was there to do his job. Sure he offered advise, but he only offered as much advise as anyone else would. The fact that Auron's words were more experianced is all that made him seem like he was a teacher.
 
ye Auron didnt really lecture , anyways he hardly spoke

Mod Edi: Put more effort into your post.
 
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Auron is a legend and one of the greatsest characters ever I reckon, infact I went around for quite a long time with my arm in my jumper and i giant sword hanging of my shoulder, anyway both he an d Jecht saw in tidus the kind of qaulity needed to really shake spira up and although the boy didnt ealise this at fist he was in need of some guidance and the guy said some funny stuff also remember in death truths not apparent in life may be revealed and ignorance is the ultimate suffering
 
Auron did go on a little bit lol but he did add more to the story instead of just yuna's pilgramage
 
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