Obi-Wan was not disappointed in how his story turned out. Quite the contrary, despite the warnings by the librarian, he was not entirely displeased with the protagonist of his book. Perhaps that was his introspective Jedi nature. He understood that people grew with time and changed with experience. He was no different. He knew that he had been a difficult Padawan, in his own way, and he knew that he had made some mistakes. Chief among them was the way in which he handled raising Anakin. He had always thought that if Qui-Gon had lived to raise Anakin in the ways of the Jedi that Anakin would surely have lived up to his destiny as the Chosen One. And reading those events in a book brought back all of those memories.
But it didn't disappoint Obi-Wan. He knew that he had his flaws. No one was perfect. Nor was he concerned about his death at the hands of his young Padawan or his transcendence with the Force. None of that worried him. Because if that was his destiny and his path, then he would trust the Force to take him there.
What worried him was what came later. Because in his world, in the world of the Force, life continued after death. And Obi-Wan saw a glimpse into his far future, beyond the days of the Death Star and the battle on the Endor moon. A future that reached out to a new generation of Force users and a rebirth of evil. A future where he was still watching over Luke who had since grown into old age and isolation; something that Obi-Wan understood all too well.
And that's where he found himself concerned.
But he didn't say any of that to Dolores. He simply listened to her, quiet and collected, nodding his head as she admitted how she was not the same as the rest of them. That she wasn't human. And, coming from a world where human was just one of many different examples of life in the galaxy, Obi-Wan showed no surprise at her revelation.
"Is that important?"
It was a simple question that had no easy answer. Maybe it didn't even have an answer. It wouldn't have been the first time Obi-Wan had proposed a query that was only meant to stimulate the thought processes and open up one's eyes to another vision of reality. Apparently, he would become very good at that. If the books were to be believed.
"I have seen many things in the universe. Much of it I will never understand. And I have met many kinds of people. Some human, some alien, some mechanical. They were all bound together in the Force. They were all, in their way, forms of life with meaning and purpose and choice. Does it make you any less of an individual because you are not exactly the same as those around you? Is being human more important than being yourself?"
Obi-Wan had his own thoughts on the matter, but he didn't share them. He just offered the observation to Dolores as something to ponder.