Apathy, and more apathy
While
reading the first thirty pages of The Bear, I came across an interesting sentence,
one that was pretty helpfully underlined anyways. On page 190, at the bottom it
starts, “Just like a man… when she done it.” While I am not completely sure of
what it might be that is going on, I am finding repeatedly throughout the
assigned readings for this class that there was a lot of passiveness and apathy
during the modern period, evident in literature. Sam says she (the dog) is just
like a man, just like folks, putting doing what dogs do, be brave, just long
enough until she HAD too. Too many times in my life I have seen the same within
myself, not deciding to consistently work at my passion and what makes me who I
am. Part of the reason I have done this, and evidently within the book it
states this, is that I am aware of the cost. The dog knew what it would mean
for her to be brave, and she got hurt, and I know the cost of deciding to work
at my dreams, and other areas of my life will suffer, and I could possibly lose
everything depending on how far I push myself into it. The society of this time
period must have seen life in the same way and decided to just follow the
system and get by, barely doing enough to be considered human. It is very sad,
and hopefully things get better in the book.
commented on ethan's and noah's
commented on ethan's and noah's
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