Plus the fact that Crabbe was leaving and she didn’t want to face the loneliness again. Living in the bush for a little over a year by yourself is VERY boring and you’re definitely going to get lonely so I understand where she’s coming from. A lot of people get depressed when their lonely or sad, after she was assaulted I know she felt like crap like it was her fault and in that short space of time all of that negativity made her depressed, the best way she knew how to handle her emotions was so stop it permanently-by killing herself. Honestly I think that’s the cowards way of handling your emotions because I believe that when you die it’s not completely over, there’s another life that’s waiting to be lived and you’re going to have to deal with the situations that arise there. And they could be way worst then the situations we face in this
The women in the novel are too shallow for our sympathy or admiration A character that can be described as being wholly shallow is Myrtle. We learn that she ‘lay down and cried’ after finding out her husband Wilson ‘borrowed somebody’s best suit to get married in.’ Myrtle is distraught after finding out her husband is not rich nor a ‘gentleman’, as he made little effort on their wedding day. In the broader scheme of things, this should not matter; however Myrtle seems fixated on this and concludes from this one situation that their marriage is doomed. The suit can be seen as being representative of Wilson – he will always be reliant on others to survive in his sorrowful world, as seen when Wilson is close to begging Tom not to sell the car elsewhere. Myrtle despises
The Bundrens have not form of civilized communication. They always end up disagreeing with each other. This has created intense barriers in their family life and has pushed away the possibility of being a normal family. In the novel, one realizes that Addie’s children resent each other and they are always competing for their mothers love. "If everybody wasn’t burning hell to get her there, with Cash all day long right under the window, hammering and sawing at that…" (6) Clearly from this statement, Jewel felt that his family was exaggerating the issue of Addie’s death.
[stopping Happy’s movement and reply. To Biff] Nobody dast blame this man. You don’t understand: Willy was a salesman. And for a salesman, there is no rock bottom to this life… (111) Once Willy is gone, his family and friend discuss the life in which Willy led. They discuss both the good and the bad.
Either she was too weak to figure out her situation, or a lifetime of having everything handed to her made her simply not want to. Tom and Daisy left the very next day. And through how a stressed Daisy ran over Tom's mistress, Myrtle, causing her husband, George Wilson, to shoot Gatsby out of grief and confusion, it caused his death too. It still wouldn't have mattered if he hadn't died-Daisy and Tom still would've left. His dream of reliving the past was all he really had.
In reality she’s aware that she wasted her life away more than any of them, but she can’t bear to face the ridicule from the woman so she remains in denial Pierrette: When I left home, I was head over heels in love, I couldn’t even see straight. No one existed for me but Johnny. He made me waste ten years of my life, the bastard. I’m only thirty now and I feel like sixty. The things that guy got me to do!
This is represented when the narrator says “We remembered all the young men her father had driven away…” (704). If he would not have done this, Emily would have most likely had someone to care for her and her to care for. Instead, he died and left her alone to try to fend for herself without any experience of independence. Even after her father passed away, that “crayon portrait” still had a large role in her life, and the effects of his neglect were still being felt. His neglect is still being felt because he has her living in the past.
The secret has eaten him alive and he is never able to recover and forgive himself. When his family finally finds out about the lie, they are astonished, shocked, and hurt. Paul says “Don't be bitter? We visited her grave!” (Edwards 382). Him and his mother can not forgive David because he has made them both miss out on the daughter and sister
His family abandoned, his son not even knowing what he was like had to ask his neighbors. A comment was made to his wife about missing him and she replied, “I already have. Missing him all these years.” (Goodman 398) It is important for a man to have balance in his life. Men can get so engulfed into their work that they forget to enjoy their life and before they know it, it’s over. Phil had a heart attack because he was so stressed out from work, and he didn’t have a life outside of work so he was always stressed out.
I am a huge burden on my family, Judy does what she can, but she has young ones of her own now and they need her very much. Funny, you can put ole Buster down, the family dog when you feel his life ain’t worth living, but me? No I have to suffer through “god’s intentions.” Poor ole Buster13 years old ain’t bad for a Lab, he had cancer and well, not much longer to live. I think people deserve the same right, don’t you? I am requesting to end my life because I have nothing left to live for, my memories don’t even feel like mine, this pain is unbearable, the cancer is going to take me anyway, the percentages on pancreatic cancer (stage 3) are very slim and