Hm...nah.What Twilight does here is forcing down her idea of what to do and what "the right thing" is into Spike's throat.Was it the "right thing" to donate her money to pay away her guilt?Yes, in her mind it was.But that is a subjective interpretation that is not a truth in any way.Because another interpretation could easily be:Nobody was offended by her bringing the book back too late and nobody wanted money from her for that.The book was back, the woman in charge informed and that woman decided no fee would be needed to pay.So there was no problem at all - aside in Twilight's mind.She was paying for a guilt that didn't exist anywhere else but in her own mind and that made her pay - nothing else.She paid for an illusion.And now she is forcing her illusory guilt-driven fantasies onto Spike, who was clearly seeing that there was no problem.Well, without Twilight's thinking there was no problem.Thousands of people go to people like Byron Katie who helps them see all their problems exist in their own mindsand they only project them onto the world - they see a smudge, but its actually not on the world, but on the projector -the mind:I would sit down with Twily and do the work with her thought "Spike didn't do the right thing".Or "I had to pay the fee in one way or another" ...or look closer behind the thoughts of that urge and do the work on that.With the thought believed - stress, having to teach Spike a lesson, making Spike feel guilty and wrongWithout the thought - bying a new quill, no stress or drama involved. Simple as that.Also she would leave it up to Spike to decide for himself what is "the right thing to do".If I think I owe someone money and they clearly say I don't the right thing to do in my eyes is simply saying thank you.Maybe I would be as generous to others but not because I feel guilty that I have to, but because it feels nice to be that generous.Twilight is doing the exact opposite to Spike than what that wonderful generous library pony did to her.Oh well, no wonder Twi freaks out so much at nothing. She might be the princess of friendship, but she is not the princess of wisdom.