I believe that Christopher McCandless was influenced by a great deal of circumstances, according to the information I have encountered during my time with the book called “Into the Wild,” one of those conditions was apparently his philosophical beliefs. I felt that his beliefs of being able to survive on his own without anybody’s help was only one of the foolish mistakes he had made throughout his whole escapade. There was a great deal of help offered to him in order for him to survive longer or even just make his adventure much easier than it would’ve been. According to Krakauer, “Gallien, a union worker who was the last person to see McCandless, offered to drive Alex, McCandless, all the way to Anchorage, buy him some decent gear…’No thanks…
Christopher McCandless or Alexander Supertramp should be admired for his courage and noble idea to drop everything and go into the wild, with nothing but a backpack and in it was a book of Tolstoy, a book about native plants and berries, a .22 rifle with 400 rounds of ammunition, a writing implement, a journal, a camera, a 10 pound bag of rice, a small cooking utensil, matches, a knife, and some fishing twine and a hook, and the few clothes he had on his back. Chris was trying to find himself by leaving everything behind, yes Chris might have been a little reckless but you have to be a little reckless to go into the wild and hitchhike around the world. This quote support that's chris was just living and trying to find himself was, “...McCandless pitched his tent in the puny shade of a tamarick and basked in his newfound freedom. (Krakauer 27)” this is saying that McCandless was happy to finally be by himself and start life in the wild,…
I agree with the author that Chris McCandless wasn’t a crazy person and he was seeking happiness for himself in the wild. There are many things that show that he wasn’t crazy, like getting along with people, having some knowledge of living in the wild, and he was very bright and made some good decisions. However, he did seem somewhat incompetent.…
After he came up dead and his story popped up in the newspaper many people gave their opinion on his decisions. One of the harshest of them said, “amounts of disrespect to the land… just another case of underprepared, over confident men bumbling around out there and screwing up because they lacked the requisite humility” (51). Most of these came from Alaskans who know how harsh the land could be but John Krakauer the author of the book Into The Wild believed otherwise. McCandless wasn’t crazy for what he did, he was just unfamiliar with the area but if he was crazy he wouldn’t have lasted in the wilderness as long as he did. (59)…
McCandless the main character “Into The Wild” is a reckless and selfish human being. In the novel it states that “his family had no idea where he was or what had become of him until his remains turned up in Alaska.” He made his parents suffer not knowing where their son was at. Chris McCandless actions was clearly a sign of stupidity almost suicidal. He had chances to survive and turn this around. His first mistake…
Chris McCandless is a man who chose to run away from society because he was tired of it’s corruption, turpitude and people’s dishonesty. He always had a dream to go into the wild and live off of the land. Chris was upset about the direction his life was going in. He knew he had everything any other person would want in life, he graduated college, didn’t have to deal with the struggle of paying for anything because his parents were wealthy. He didn’t want to be like his father, a man who had many affairs, got drunk, beat his wife and puts his reputation before his family.…
On a day in August 1992 a Man named Chris Mccandless was found dead on a bus from starvation. If you never heard of or Chris here an mental illustration of who he was. He wasn't some weirdo or mentally ill person with no goals. He was a very intelligent and was dedicated to a journey most people won't ever experience in their lives. How could something like this happen to him. Chris was a prominent and unique person. Although many people haven't heard of Chris and he isn't around anymore his philosophies and achievements are still known.…
It is said that Chris McCandless was a bright and ignorant person according to Cellarmans argument and maybe others point of views. In my perspective I agree but disagree as well although I agree with the argument that was said by Callarmans. As I state a quote that was said by Shaun Callarman “ had no business going into Alaska with his Romantic silliness”. As it says “Romantic silliness” he was meaning that he wanted to die in a poetic but as well as a beautiful surrounding of love and happiness. He traveled to find himself into the wilderness to figure out who he is.…
Treadwell and McCandless both felt very constrained by human society and preffered to live out in the wilderness if possible. While Treadwell would return to human society for work and to raise money for his next outing or teach others about what he learned of the bears, McCandless tried to spend as much time as he possibly could away from other humans. In Chapter five of Into the Wild it was documented that McCandless had spent at least thirty-six days without seeing another human at one point and throughout the first six chapters it is documented that the most time he ever spent in one place was two months in order to raise money to go to Alaska. Furthermore, McCandless did his best to keep people distant from him by changing his name and giving false information. McCandless did his best to not tell anyone where he was going, cut off all ties with his parents, and took no one with him when he went to Alaska. Comparing this to…
decisions to leave his old life behind and start over. Chris’ decision to leave was…
Henry David Thoreau decided to remove himself from his ordinary life in society, and relocated himself to an area outside the town Concord. His once typical life now became that of a forest dweller. He built himself a quaint little home near Walden Pond. He chose to approach a life of simplicity by building his own home, living in the forest gathering his own food and fending for himself in essentially all aspects of his life. Ezra Pond makes a claim that Thoreau is demonstrating his indifference to humans and traditional societies, but that is not the case. Thoreau was merely trying to demonstrate just how unnecessary most societal desires were to live a fulfilled life.…
In this passage above it explains of how people are both drawn into nature and danger. It puts Christopher McCandless nature adventure into perspective. From my opinion I think that everyone has this sense of embracing danger in some point of their lives, Christopher McCandless just went to the extreme most don't dare to touch. His adventure to Alaska was the equivalent of most teen's rebellion against their parents in my opinion. He wanted to find himself in the world and do something that not only counted, but left is imprinted out there.…
"I went to the woods because I wished to live deliberately, to front only the essential facts of life, and see if I could not learn what it had to teach, and not, when I came to die, discover that I had not lived.... I wanted to live deeply and suck out all the marrow of life." (Walden)…
Passage: “The only difference is that McCandless ended up dead with the story of his dumbassedness splashed across media. His ignorance, which could have been cured by a USGS quadrant and a Boy Scout manual, is what killed him. And while I feel bad for his parents Such willful ignorance…amounts to disrespect for the land, and paradoxically demonstrates the same sort of arrogance that resulted in Exxon Valdez spill just another case of underprepared, overconfident men bumbling around out there and screwing up because they lacked the requisite humility. ” (Krakauer 72).…
When McCandless first left, he should've been more prepared and not foolish. Arrogance and ignorance are what got McCandless killed, his bright ideas is what led him to achieve what he wanted to. McCandless may have died achieving those ideas, but in the end, it was his family that had to suffer from his loss. McCandless was charismatic and idealistic, but he tried to remove his past, he made it seem like his family was non existent, this was one of McCandless's most arrogant choices. I do think that McCandless was just trying to find peace, but, leaving his family behind is the biggest mistake, and may even be his biggest…