Board Thread:General Discussion/@comment-32930821-20170823152312/@comment-28517148-20170905092623

Second, how would Chara come back to life in the first place, if that were the case? Chara actually has never died because of nature of human Soul: ''...it is the strength of their SOUL. Its power allows it to persist outside the human body, even after death...'' - Ancient glyphs about human Soul. Also, the Soul actually is the person, even without body: ''Frisk, when Chara and I combined our SOULs together... The control over our body was actually split between us... They were the one that wanted to... ... to use our full power. I was the one that resisted'' - Asriel. As we can see we have here two different and sentient beings sharing the same, physical body. When Chara ate poisonous flowers, it was their body that died because of it. Their Soul (it cannot be just poisoned) stayed intact and later was absorbed by Asriel. During the incident in village it was Asriel and his body severely injured and died due to physical attacks: ''The humans attacked him with everything they had. He was struck with blow after blow...'' - unreliable source od onfo :p Chara's Soul once again stayed intact and survived only to be later absorbed by Frisk (entrie narraChara theory and Genocide ending relies on this). Opposite situation occurs when Frisk enters any fight: Soul that they are carrying is target of attacks, not their body. If Soul shatters, then it is the end - the person actually dies. Thus, in order to kill a human, you must to destroy their Soul, otherwise they will survive. And that's what happened to Chara - they never died. And before someone asks: than why Chara's Soul wasn't absorbed by any of six humans that fell before Frisk? The answer is: ...a human cannot absorb a human SOUL... - Entrry #7.

The Mirror. When a sentient being looks in the mirror, their proper reaction should be: That's (it's) me!, not It's you! (Neutral, Pacifist) - those are Narrator's words, and wo is Narrator? Even Still just you, Frisk (True Pacifist) are not Frisk's words. It should be It's me, Frisk, but it isn't. Only during Genocide, the Narrator, who has sticked to Frisk, reveals themselves and describes their reflection: It's me,  instead of It's you!.