It sounds like something that you two should work out together. One doesn't get married everyday, after all, so you both should have what you truly want for it, not just what you think that you "should" have.
*can't entirely conceal his reaction (surprise? happiness? fear? love?) to hearing himself being included in that worry and gratitude, but mostly brushes it over*
Then hold onto that while you're here. And take of it what you can when you return, even if it's only a reason to continue fighting. Even that is no small thing.
No sense in refusing the help, as it were. You'll probably be able to find someone who can reproduce this design quite easily, as well as modify it as needed. And here we are.
Plenty of ideas, but quite honestly, as you've already been able to conclude, I haven't had much practical experience dealing with telepaths other than myself.
*lifts his hands in what is probably a familiar gesture of being about to reach to touch another person's head*
We need to start somewhere, though. Let' have a look, shall we?
[He crosses through the surface area of worry. And into the place where all her protective feelings and worries are. Her love for her family; her concern for their safety; her love for Scott; her worry for the mutant kids in Camp...
*that's all very lovely but of little surprise, and he's not in here for feelings. instead, he begins tracing memory pathways, searching out anything connected to her powers.*
[That is yielding more success. Going backwards, from her power's sudden growth to the unusually long period of her powers lying dormant and weak...
Then, much deeper in, in a part of the mind where even Jean barely remembers is her childhood - The first time she met Charles and Erik as a child (how unusually strong her powers were even then) to the first time her powers manifested as a child while her friend Annie lay dying. It's here that Charles will encounter the various mental blocks that's been placed in her mind. Many are gone now, releasing some of her power, but they are still clearly holding something in place.]
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