My greatest influences are my parents and my brother. My brother suffered from Guillain- Barre Syndrome when he was eight. He lived in the hospital on an artificial ventilation for 97 days and later he had to continue physical therapy for at least ten years as he was completely paralyzed. My parents and my brother devoted their few years completely for his treatment. Today, my brother is a successful engineer working in the bay area. I learned that with dedication, determination and diligence we can achieve our dream in life…
Throughout the book, Jeannette has gone through much adversity and has overcome almost impossible odds. However there was a price to much of what happened. The Walls children were neglected and beaten, and were raised by alcoholic and selfish parents. Yet, after all the strife and turmoil, Jeannette forgave them. She still doesn’t see them as parents now that she is older and can reflect more on her childhood in a more mature way. As they grew up, the horrors the children faced got worse. They faced racism, sexual, verbal, and physical abuse, neglect, and poverty.…
Jeannette Walls was the first to be interviewed out of the children and claims that the family has many problems with obtaining and keeping money. Over the summer she had been given two-hundred dollars, which should have been enough to support her father, brother, and herself, until her father started asking for money to buy alcohol. She ended up having to get a job to…
The family was constantly moving from town to town. Jeannette’s father, Rex Walls, always found the way to cheat the system. He was always running from bill collectors and the children never been able to stay in one place. While the children waiting for their father’s promise of building them a glass castle to finally call home. The dad gave them the idea that…
The physical struggles mentioned above also come together to form the large struggle of finaical insecurity. Walls expresses in the novel that she along with the rest of her family went without food for weeks because of the lack of funds. Jeannette describes a scence where in her elementary school bathroom she would pick out the leftover food that the other children would throw out. Jeannette shows her lack of understanding when her peers “tossed away all this perfectly good food; apples, hard-boiled eggs, packages of peanut-butter crackers, sliced pickles, half-pint cartons of milk, cheese sandwiches with just one bite taken out because the kid didn’t like the pimentos in the cheese” (173). She points out that sometimes there was more food in the trash then she could of eaten, this is when she begins to take some of the food to her brother to ensure that he was eating as well, but she does not take any home for her mother. With the state of the Walls’ finaicial insecurity comes the the undeniable fact that they were unable to pay rent. Therefore the Walls family moved quite often to avoid the bill collecters or as her father…
She got enough money by babysitting and jobs that she was able to go to college out there and was able to start her own life. Once all the kids got old enough to move and go to New York they made their way out of Welch and up to where Lori was living. When arriving the kids were still needing some guidance so Lori helped them grow up and be a parent to them. Sooner than later, Rex and Rose Mary made there way to New York in a van that had many issues on the way there. Just after a little while in New York the two end up homeless. Although the kids attempt to help their parents they were not able to do anything for them. Therefore, the couple becomes a squatter in abandoned houses and apartments until Rex dies of having a heart attack. By the end of the memoir, Jeannette has been married twice and is living the life she has always dreamed of. Although growing up might of been hard, it made her realize how much she helped her family and how much responsibility she took on helping to raise her younger siblings. This memoir explained a lot about how growing up on your own and how much of a big responsibility it is. These kids practically raised themselves together and set goals for themselves to get through everything. It makes people realize how you have to be thankful for what you have and appreciate your family and not take anything…
Having the luxury of great health and family, it can be difficult for me to see outside the realm of comfortability and see the daily hardships people experience. There are so many people without housing, stability, and monetary resources, and these people often find themselves wondering where they can find help and figure out what to do next during trying times. One place people can reach out for assistance is Ronald McDonald House Charities. The nonprofit provides housing and food for families with a critically ill child in the hospital. The forty-two room house aims to provide comfort and support for families living through their worst nightmare. The charity provides this support by its network of staff and volunteers who prepare food for…
Jeannette Walls’ memoir The Glass Castle, documents her childhood which is surrounded by poverty and inattentive parents. Both of the parents of the Walls children were self-absorbed in their own lives, the children learned that they must depend on each other to meet their own basic needs. Even though Rex Walls was an alcoholic and Rose-Mary was indulged in her paintings, they managed to teach their children the most important life lesson that well-rounded adults must know. The memoir expresses Jeannette’s feelings towards her parents, which follows a quote by Oscar Wilde, “Children begin by loving their parents; as they grow older, they judge them; sometime, they forgive them.” As the memoir starts, Jeannette writes about how she loves her…
Maureen is often forgotten throughout the entire story of The Glass Castle written by Jeannette Walls. We are very tragically reminded of Maureen’s presence when she stabs her own mother while living in New York. Reflecting back to the beginning of the story, we can see why Maureen has a mental breakdown. She is born into a world of violence, her parents fail to care for her, and she lives her entire childhood in neglect.…
As for a lot of people, many of them have some type of story to tell. Some people aren’t okay with telling their story but others are okay with it. As for Jeannette Walls when writing her book The Glass Castle, she was very open about her story. With her story, many people noticed that the way she was raised and brought up wasn’t a normal way to be raised. She went through a lot and not many people realized the struggles she had. Just like everyone else, she had struggles and she overcame them to make a better life for herself. Between her story and mine, there wasn’t a lot of comparison, but the thing that did match up was the ‘Struggle’ that she went through. In my story, friends of mine were struggling and they wanted an easy way out. But…
Jeannette Walls’ memoir, The Glass Castle, gives a vivid description of what life is like growing up in a poor family where parental negligence and limited supervision is common. Walls grows up with a high tolerance for hard times and bravery that is unmatched. Her self-sufficiency and education helped Walls escape her difficult childhood and poor family life growing up. Walls’ memoir clearly refutes the statement made in The Great Gatsby by Daisy Buchanan that "the best thing a girl can be in this world, [is] a beautiful, little fool” (Fitzgerald 17). In Walls’ eyes, the best thing a girl can be is strong, motivated, and, most importantly, educated. Throughout The Glass Castle, Walls uses anecdotes, figurative language, and a repetition of words that proves her stance is one that plainly contradicts Daisy’s statement about what furthers the life of women.…
Walls uses characterization in her text to describe her parents’ personality and who they were to her during her childhood. Jeannette’s mother, Rose Mary, was portrayed as a mother who did not want to be a mother. She was usually neglecting them to spend her time with more enjoyable things like painting to be an artist or writing to become an author. Throughout the text, she is self-centered and doesn’t act like any normal nurturing mother would. When her husband lost his job, her children were starving for food and be willing to eat anything, then Brian discovers she was sneaking herself large Hershey bars without offering any to her hungry children. Then she attempts to justify herself, “I can’t help it. I’m a sugar addict, just like your father is an alcoholic.” (174) Mary Rose usually made herself the victim, especially when she pitches a number of excuses to make herself seem less guilty. Another example of her selfishness is when Brian and Jeannette find a two- carat diamond ring that was worth more than their house. Rose Mary decided to keep the ring to replace her pawned wedding ring even after the kids argued it could get them a lot of food, and replied to them, “self-esteem is even more vital than food.”(186) Jeannette’s father, who adored her very much, was Rex Walls. Rex Walls was a dreamer just like his wife, but instead he believed he would someday strike gold with his invention, “The Prospector.” He favored Jeannette most out of his three children and even had a pet name for her, “Mountain Goat.” They also dreamed together about building their dream house in a large desert, the…
In this both heart wrenching and slightly humorous memoir, successful journalist Jeannette Walls tells the bittersweet story of her rather dysfunctional and poverty stricken upbringing. Walls grows up in a family trailed by the ubiquitous presence of hunger and broken down homes. Throughout the memoir she recounts memories of moving from one dilapidated neighborhood to another with her three other siblings, insanely "free sprinted" mother, and incredibly intelligent yet alcoholic father. The author focuses on her unconventional childhood with somewhat unfit parents much too lazy and self-absorbed to even obtain decent jobs. Although Walls's childhood gushes with heartbreaking tales of searching through dumpsters for food, she remains as unbitter as possible and instead views her youth in an almost comical light. While most in similar situations observe experiences like these through unforgiving eyes, Walls views her unfortunate experiences through the transparent walls of the "glass castle" and recalls how although not rich with money, she learns to overflow with not only strength, but the determination to succeed as well. Although her parents put her through very difficult experiences, she manages to optimistically accept her past and create a much better life for herself.…
We walked into the lunchroom, through the double doors Food mopped off the linoleum floors. I walked to my table with my tray Chicken again today… yay! I bite into my mashed potatoes Some kid next me had halos I eat the chicken cold and dry I should have gotten deli, I don’t know why I sat with my friends, Jim and Tom…
The day was happy at first, but it ended sadly. Me, my cousins and their parents, my grandparents, my family, and my aunt Emily had just come from dinner to an ice cream shop called “The Cone”. Once we’d all ordered and got our ice cream we sat down while my dad and uncle talked, my aunt Lynn told us about their family’s trip to Maine. Once all the kids finished their sweet and cold ice cream we went to the little rides to mess around. The sky was a brilliant orange and pink from the sun setting. It was beautiful. All of the reds and yellows and other colors of the rides shined like a freshly washed car. The first one I went to look at was the “Batman The Animated Series” ride. It was the grey, dull, rocky outside of the Batcave. The only colors…