The only difference I can see is that Dean *isn't* dead this time, not like when he went to hell. At least that's the way I interpreted it. So maybe he would get hungry.
When Sam went to hell, I assumed the fall into the pit killed him.
Oz ,'First Date'
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The only difference I can see is that Dean *isn't* dead this time, not like when he went to hell. At least that's the way I interpreted it. So maybe he would get hungry.
When Sam went to hell, I assumed the fall into the pit killed him.
Well, we don't know how he landed. I didn't think of him falling and dying. I just thought he "ended up" in the Cage, with all the precision that fails to convey.
I thought a fall like that would stop your heart long before you landed. I guess I'm also assuming, though, that it's not a literal drop from Stull into an actual pit. I thought heaven and hell were closer to another dimension than a tangible place you could get to.
So maybe he would get hungry.
But I don't want Dean to eat Cas!!
I highly doubt that's what would happen.
I don't get why your minds are not in the gutter. What's (not) wrong with you?
There are better words for that than eating?
I'm all for them seeking shelter in each other's arms. And, you know, other body parts.
Unless you do mean he is eating him (out).
I initially thought the angel swords were just manifestations of the angels' will/aggression/power (hence why angels could only be killed by other angels). But they seemed to abandon that to let Dean use one to kill Zachariah, and Meg has used them since while referring to there being lots of dead angels to loot.
That still annoys me. In the beginning of S4, when Castiel is talking to Dean in Bobby's kitchen (in his dream), he says that several of his fellow angels had been killed in battle. So a) he knew angels could die, and b) if they were killed in battle, wouldn't he know *how* they were killed? The whole "we don't know how angels are being murdered" was so clumsy.