What she means: Why don't we talk more about Naomi? I mean, we scoff and call her another one of Heaven's bureaucrats like it's a bad thing but she was doing the best she could. Heaven was in complete chaos and with the archangels gone she had to do something to keep it from falling apart completely. Meanwhile she had Crowley breathing down her neck, a prophet that's unfindable translating the tablets without any sort of supervision except for the Winchesters who are less than reliable when it comes to not fucking shit up and keeping people alive, and on top of all of that, she wanted to help. She wanted the gates of Hell to be closed. She wanted to help the Winchesters despite the fact that she knew it would probably kill her. She didn't care. And yet, at she same time she wasn't purely good. She drilled her way into the heads of countless angels, restarting them as many times as she could in some vain attempt to restore Heaven to the paradise it was when God was still there. She wired Cas to kill Dean just to make sure that the angel tablet didn't get into the wrong hands. Her idea of the 'greater good' required the deaths of many, but she didn't care as her vision was realized. Supernatural writes these subtly morally ambiguous characters that make you realize that even in a world where good and evil are as easily defined as Heaven and Hell, you find shades of gray on both sides.
My grandchildren: "grandma? What was the happiest moment of your life?? Was it your wedding day?
Me: *looks up from my knitting-places the needles down slowly to think* my dear grandchildren.. your grandmother has lived a life of great moments... but the happiest moment of my long life was the moment I found out about NCIS being on netflix...
Eldarion was the first and only son of Arwen and Elessar. In the year 120 of the Fourth Age Eldarion was given the tokens of kingship by his father, who then willingly gave up his own life so that his son could become the second King of the Reunited Kingdom. A hundred-and-five years after the fall of the Dark Tower, the king encountered a renewal of Morgoth-worship during his reign. Eldarion stopped his people from turning to evil practices. He afterwards ruled peacefully for an unspecified amount of time well into the Fourth Age of Men. Little else is known of king Eldarion and his reign, save that he left heirs to continue the House of Telcontar after him.