Sunday, March 29, 2015

On The Rez

         The Indian Reservation that Arnold "Junior" Spirit calls home in the book is a breeding ground for alcoholism, drug use, poverty and depression. On a daily basis he wakes up in a place where the only goal people have is to forget where they are in life, whether it be through substance abuse or physical abuse onto Arnold. Broken, angry and depressed people emerge from their trashy trailers and rundown homes to go about the day in a place where no one cares what happens to them. And this setting is not fiction, I've been to a place like it.
          Last June my family was visiting other relatives in the Tennessee/North Carolina area of the country. We took a rode trip through Appalachia. It was the most depressing trip I have ever been on. We passed through towns that were crazy tourist attractions, theaters and show rooms and restaurants that seemed very... glamorous. Eventually we would drive past the bustling town to see the real town of just old houses or trailers held up by sheet metal and decaying wood. Everyone lived in some small cage that looked nearly abandoned. They worked in the "booming" town for the tourists, but actually lived ten miles away in trailer parks and hovels, the yards littered with bottles and random, rusting farm tools. We passed dozens of liquor stores and fast food places, and they got a lot of business. Everyone was overweight, everyone looked like a seasoned drinker, and everyone was poor. There was just nothing out there for anyone but the tourists. The locals just scraped by. I never knew what white trash looked like until then. Just like on the reservation, which is all poor Indians, that area of Appalachia is all poor white people. Both groups cater to tourists and both groups suffer from the same problems.

Sunday, March 1, 2015

Native Sons

  Bigger Thomas is a very complex character. His race and the society that he lives in molds who he is, and it did a terrible job. He is a hateful, paranoid and stupid person. Bigger himself does not fully understand his motivations and will to live, and I dislike him for it.
  Bigger is an idiot. His insecurities, selfishness and ego put him and those that care for him in danger. His emotional temper tantrums take his anger out on his friends. Attacking a person that you call your friend just to convince yourself and the others in the group that you are not scared is not only being a jerk, but it shows Bigger's complete lack of coping skills that make a sane person. He is also just plain old crazy. He managed to convince himself that by accidentally killing a white girl, he is special, powerful even. His twisted mind turned an unfortunate death caused by alcohol and bad decisions into some mystical experience that made Bigger able to "see" people for what they are. Instead of remembering Mary's murder as a night of mess-ups and regret, he turns into something fated and good. Bigger is so messed up that he even hates his mother for wanting him to work to improve the family's living conditions.  My only opinion on Bigger is that he is just a power hungry, angry, insane, miserable person.

Monday, January 19, 2015

A Principle To Keep

One principle that I believe every person should hold themselves to is to respect your parents. Parents teach their kids how to be human. They show them what is allowed and what is considered unorthodox. Parents teach humanity. After they teach you to walk, talk and be safe, they teach you what makes a person human. Parents are the ones that teach compassion, sympathy and empathy. If people were to stop respecting those that make them human, then humanity is lost. If parents are ignored then all the emotions that make a person human would go extinct.
  In The Road, the son is the most compassionate character. He was born in an unforgiving, desolate world. If anyone were to be cold and heartless, I would expect the son to be. The only reason that he is compassionate and empathetic is because of his dad. He has no one else at all in his life, and the environment he lives stripes away the humanity of people. His dad is the one that has made him caring, and if it were not for the boy's deep respect for him, the boy would be a heartless survivor.