her” and that it was just her being sick. John told Elizabeth that he came forward and…
In John’s case it had hardened his voice and attitude towards others mainly from the regret of his own actions. John also had difficulty bringing up the issue of adultery in his life. seen when John was asked to say the ten commandments and forgot adultery. John’s regret made its appearance in the conversations with his wife, Elizabeth. John was very angry and frustrated with his past seen through his voice. Also john was very firm with Mary Warren, when he was trying to plead his case and convince mary to go back to the court with him. So…
While John’s treatment of his wife’s depression is wrong, he does not necessarily do anything to make it worse. Just by ignoring her he is mistreating her. The problem with John in the story is that he holds all of the authority. He is her doctor as well as her caretaker. He is also stubborn and so sure he knows what is best for his wife that he disregards her opinion as just a symptom of her illness. His overly rational disposition and ignorance towards her proves him to be dangerous. John treats his wife more as a medical case than a person. He wants her to get better but ends up just making her situation a lot worse. It is this counterproductively that makes John’s character ironic.…
John’s mother stated, “I told you how secretive he was-you never knew what was thinking-and it just got worse after his father hung himself”…
Firstly, John's soldiering in Vietnam caused him to return home traumatized and suffering from post traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) which leads to their marriage falling apart. Like other victims of this disorder, John suffers from one of the symptoms called intrusion which is the unwanted recollection of experience. Michael Barton, a real-life spouse of a victim describes the sight of his wife in terror, "To see your wife laying on a bed, grabbing her ears and basically screaming out to make it stop or something like that, it does something to you."1 Similar to Michael, Kathy feels useless because she cannot help her husband due to her lack of understanding because she does not know what he is going through. In addition to, Kathy is frightened by his cries during his sleep. Next, in Vietnam John witnesses many killings and blood…
John was a secretive man in a sense. He never really told anyone how he felt. He was cold. We see how cold he is when other characters ask him how he feels, or if anything is wrong. When Jess asks him a question like this, the reply she receives is "Nothing's the matter, ... Everything's okay. Everything's all right." (Laurence, pg. 195) He's secretive and cold about his emotions and he won't let anyone in. Even when he cries, if someone reaches out to him, he pulls back. We are shown an example of this when John is crying once. "But when I tried to put an arm around him, he pulled away, clattered upstairs to his own room and locked the door." (Laurence, pg. 131) John is portrayed as being cold and secretive with his emotions.…
The narrator and her doctor husband, John, have leased a house to those mid year thereabouts that she might recover from a “slight insane propensity. ” In spite of the storyteller doesn't think that she is really ill, john is persuaded that she will be enduring starting with “neurasthenia” Also prescribes those “rest cure” medicine. She may be limited with cot rest for a previous nursery room and will be taboo starting with attempting alternately composing. The spacious, sunlit space need yellow wallpaper – stripped off clinched alongside two puts – with An hideous, riotous example. The storyteller detests those wallpaper, Anyway john declines will transform rooms, contending that those nursery is best-suited for her recuperation.…
Within the room that Jane spends most of her time, one of the first things she describes in detail is the wallpaper. Jane believes the “wall and paint look as if a boys’ school had used it” and she continues, “I never saw a worse paper in my life” (Gilman, “The Yellow Wallpaper, 610). As the weeks pass, Jane spends more and more time in the room, where she is locked away from society and social interaction. Gilman writes that Jane sees that the wallpaper has, “a recurrent spot where the pattern lolls like a broken neck and two bulbous eyes stare at you upside down” (“The Yellow Wallpaper” 611). Jane begins to see patterns and images within the wallpaper because she is confined by her husband’s treatment. When John stripped her of the opportunity to write, Jane was forced to find a new way to engage her mind and express herself. Jane wants to keep this new found way of expressing herself out of the hands of her husband and his sister, Jennie. Gilman writes, “I have watched John when he did not know I was looking, and come into the room suddenly o the most innocent excuses and I’ve caught him several times looking at the wallpaper! And Jennie too. […] I am determined that nobody shall find it out but myself!” (“The Yellow Wallpaper” 615). Jane slowly comes to the realization that there is not only a pattern within the wallpaper, but also a woman trapped behind it. Rula comments on the woman within the wallpaper and how it affects…
His conditioning made him change because certain things that he would have done, he refused because he was conditioned to think of those events as bad things. “Get out of my sight or I’ll kill you” (131). He has been conditioned to associate sex with humiliation and pain. Conditioning like this makes it impossible for him to fit in, thus causing him to have to change. If his past life hadn’t conditioned him to think of some things as negative instead of positive, he could've fit in with the rest of the people in the civilization, and may have not had to change his view on people, and possibly could have fit in. His conditioning might also be the reason why so many people came to visit his home towards the end of the novel, and unfortunately cause his suicide. There were many things that were shown throughout the novel that caused John to turn from a boy who didn’t fit into a person who didn’t want any human contact. His conditioning was a major reason why he made this change, but all the elements contributed majorly.…
Instead, he takes another woman out on a dinner date. John betrayed Mary, she felt…
jealousy, and she was willing to do anything to get John back to her own self.…
John –In the early stage of their marriage, John’s obligation is to take on his farming duties without any help just to prove his devotion to Ann. John also wanted a mortgage-free farm, a new house and pretty clothes for Ann, but Ann disapproved. John tried his best to keep Ann happy; however, Ann doesn’t seem to appreciate it. Their marriage has neither communication nor happiness. This leaves John bewildered. One day John was to walk five miles just to help his old father, Ann moodily began to act selfish. John wanted to reassure her that she will be fine, but she would lash sarcastic comments and showed no support of his walk. John also wanted to make sure Ann would be safe and have some company while he was out helping his father with chores, so he dropped in at his friend Stevens place on the way to nicely ask him to drop in later in the evening for a…
John is rather a cold character showing no understanding or even wanting to understand his wife’s illness. He does not see it even as an illness but rather as her needing to pull herself together. He is almost fearful of any mention of mental illness and when she suggests her body is well but not her mind he gives her “a stern reproachful look” and describes it as a “false and foolish fancy”.…
Throughout the story Ann always talks bout how she is unable to receive the attention she desires and is simply not cared for by John. Due to her lack of social interaction within the environment she lives in she tries to seek attention from anyone. When talking to John just before he leaves for his father's farm, Ann begs him to stay and keep her company yet he refuses to do so. “'It isn't right to leave me here alone. Surely I'm as important as important as your father...[John] But there is nothing to be afraid of even if it does start to storm. You won't need to go near the stable....I'll be back at the latest by seven or…
Nevertheless, the lack of social interaction has big repercussion in someone’s life, both emotionally and physically (Secrets of a Wild Child). Jane is isolated in her room with no social contact that can take her mind from thinking about the wallpaper. Moreover, John refuses to take her out of the house to interact with other people, perhaps because he feels ashamed of her condition. Two times Jane asks her husband to let her visit her cousin Henry and Julia, but he denies answering “he would as soon put fireworks in [her] pillow-case as to let [her] have those stimulating people about now.”(Gilman 92) and Jane also says “he said I wasn't able to go, nor able to stand it after I got there; and I did not make out a very good case for myself, for I was crying before I had finished.” (Gilman 95). Although, he expresses that it is for her own good, it almost feels like he does not want other people to see her because he feels embarrassed of her illness. This isolation eventually separates her from the real world and she gets lost in the patterns. With nothing to think about during the day, Jane constantly stresses about every little detail of the yellow wallpaper. She does not have a single moment of peace and she starts to act in a possessive manner towards the pattern, not allowing others to touch it or look at it. Additionally, her condition worsens as she starts to have sleep problems. At the end, she isolates herself…