of being a wallflower, hence the title, but he chooses to “participate” in life instead after undergoing new friendship.
of being a wallflower, hence the title, but he chooses to “participate” in life instead after undergoing new friendship.
The first perk of being a wallflower displayed by Charlie is the ability to observe. Since Charlie was more of an outsider, he was able to stand back and pay attention to his surroundings. When a person is not bothered by distractions, that person is able to notice considerably more than a person who is constantly interrupted by others. “You see things. You keep quiet about them. And you understand” (37). This quotation spoken by…
Charlie started off as a confused boy living in poverty. After Charlie’s fathers passing he was unsure about his role as man of the house. With his mother slowly withering away, and his brother only a baby, he felt he had to take all the responsibility, in order for his family to survive. “…so confused sometimes (he) didn’t know who it was (he) was supposed to be.” He was still at the grieving stage from his father’s passing, and was forced with the expectation of filling his father’s shoes. “Wearing them was easy’ but ‘filling them was a different story altogether.” Throughout this novel, Charlie’s father’s boots are used as a metaphor to link Charlie to his father. “He had given me the boots as I sat for the last time on his bed and listened to the wheeze and crackle in his chest.” Charlie escapes and numbs his pain by running; this is how he later gets involved with Squizzy Taylor. “When I felt the cold dull ache in my bones, I headed out into the dark damp streets of Richmond, and... I ran’. Charlie is doing anything he can to survive at the moment. Survival is the main theme throughout the book. Charlie knew that it was getting to the point where he and his family would be unable to cope. “No. We can’t keep scroungin’ off the neighbours, Charlie. It ain’t right.” For these reasons it is obvious that it would be scarce to find happiness living within people so poor. ‘True, (he) lived in a city that was home to every imaginable evil, but for (Charlie), there was always something else. For (him) there was hope.” As…
Both The perks of being a wallflower and The Outsiders establish a controlling idea about conformity. An influence involving a change in belief or behavior in order to fit in with a group. The author Stephen Chbosky in The perks of being a wallflower discusses conformity when he writes “ We got to the house where the part was, and Patrick did his secret knock.” Here the author wants the reader to know that Charlie begins to feels peer pressure placed on him, because to follow his friends would make him more integrated. The author S.E Hinton in The Outsiders discusses conformity when she writes “ We beat the Socs.” This quote reveals that as a greasers they were conformist with winning the rumble and still have separated territories which…
‘The Perks Of Being A Wallflower’ is a film set in the early 1990’s and addresses the problems that Charlie, the main character, faces while attending high school after his best friend from middle school had committed suicide only months before…
Charlie is a wallflower and he is befriended by a senior named Patrick. Patrick is gay and is dating a football player secretly. Patrick introduces Charlie to Sam, Patrick's step-sister. Charlie is attracted to Sam, but says nothing for a while. He is absorbed into their group of friends and can begin to control flashbacks he has had about his aunt Helen dying on his birthday.…
Another example of Charlie being happy was that he was thankful for the chance he got. Charlie wrote to Miss Kinnian saying, "If you ever reed this Miss Kinnian dont be sorry for me Im glad I got a second chanse to be smart becaus I lerned a lot of things that I never even new were in this world and Im grateful that I saw it all for a littel bit." (page 21, paragraph 217). This shows that Charlie was thankful for the operation even when everything eventually faded away. Although at the end Charlie was happy, he hasn't always been.…
I tried so many different things just to be liked and none of them worked. I tried wearing more makeup and doing my hair. I tried smoking cigarettes and being rude to my teachers just to stand out and get attention. None of it worked. I was always going to be known as the girl who could never fit in. I was trying so hard that I made everyone who was always there for me not want to be around me anymore. I hardly ever talked to my parents or the rest of my family because there was only one thing on my mind which was ‘I got to find a way to fit in and stand out.’ In the essay I mentioned earlier the author brings up a little nine year old girl who has so much going on she didn’t have any time to be a kid and play (207). In a way, that’s how I felt. No time to do anything else but to try and be part of the “in”…
The movie Charly and the book Flowers for Algernon have similarities such as the tests that Charlie takes and differences like Miss Kinnian helping perform the test and Dr. Strauss being a female. All the tests shown in the film and the text were all the same. In both Charlie had to race against Algernon, imagine a story for a picture and do an inkblot test. One major difference however was Miss Kinnian performing these test. In the book all she did was recommend Charlie while the doctors did them, but in the movie she is doing them herself.…
Charlie, a lonely kid that finds friends that give him purpose and help him enjoy life. Holden on the other hand has none of these problems. Charlie goes through struggles most people go through in high school. Once again everyone's high school experience is different but most people go through the struggle of making friends and finding a date. In Perks of being a Wallflower, Sam tells Charlie, “I like Craig. And I know that I told you not to think of me that way. And I know that we can't be together" which goes to show you some struggles that Charlie goes through. The girl he is deeply in love with telling him that they can't be together is a thought comment to deal with. Most people have dealt or are dealing with a relationship problems like Charlie which makes him relatable. Holden doesn't have any typical high school problems which make him un-relatable. Being relatable makes you more likeable because people understand what you are going through and how you feel which is why Holden was never good at experiencing his feelings to…
Charlie in the story wanted to be smart to have more friends and make people like him, what we the readers can assume as fitting in. Though Charlie probably didn’t know what fitting in meant before his surgery, it shows us how he was desperate to be smart even though it might hurt him tremendously, or even just be temporary. This example shows us that he was putting a mask, and obscuring himself and being somebody completely different, not even realizing what the end result might be. Keys wants to explain how the people in the world want to change themselves completely just to fit in and get liked by others, an example would be people trying tattoos and being punk to be like the people around them when they, from the inside, dislike tattoos and being…
Sometimes a person is guilty but, tend to blame others for their actions. In the short story Flowers for algernon by Daniel Keys Charlie is having trouble trying to fit in. Charlie is an ambitious and friendly developed disabled adult who wants to be smart. A scientist did an experiment on rat named algernon and the experiment worked.The rat was smarter and professor Nemur thinks it could also work on Charlie. Charlie was the first human to ever do this experiment. Charlie is confident that he will become smart like everyone else. He was put through an operation. Charlie had a journal where he wrote everything that happened to him. Through the events that happen he has been through rough times. Many people find a way to accuse him from everything.…
Each film includes the ideas of a protagonist who is forced to find themselves after being lost in their adolescent stage of life. The theme of identity includes the idea that the protagonist must first some to love themselves and recognize their worth before they can be loved by others. In The Perks of Being a Wallflower, the protagonist, Charlie struggles with finding him true self after he believes that he is not as good as his siblings and is lost in sea of people who surround him in high school. Charlie faces many decisions in which he is able to choose who he becomes friends with and how he behaves. In the end, Charlie realizes, he must stay true to himself and do what he loves, before trying to make everyone else around him…
“Welcome to the island of misfit toys,” Sam says to Charlie. This line is spoken when Patrick declares Charlie as a permanent part of the group, and encompasses the feeling that Charlie has throughout his life, as well as the rest of the people in the group. Several of the characters within the movie feel as though they do not belong, but reach a sense of belonging when they are with this group of people. These characters experience situations that can be analyzed using five important themes in social psychology, including: conformity, persuasion, self-justification, aggression, and prejudice.…
This poem makes me think of my favorite book called The Perks Of Being a Wallflower by Stephen Chbosky. It is the story of a boy named Charlie and his not-so-average life. The story is written as letters to someone he has never met, but heard was a good shoulder to lean on. This book is my favorite because I can really relate to Charlie. Speaking of Charlie, that is my puppy's name. He is a chihuahua and dachshund mix. He is my best friend and is always at my side. He is probably the coolest puppy ever, except at three in the morning when he is sitting outside my door whining, then he can be someone else's best friend. This poem is probably one of my new favorites because it actually made me feel something and that is really important to me when reading. I really enjoy how the poet talks about words people never use because I have an extensive vocabulary, but rarely use any of the words I know because most people I know would not understand me at all. The reason I am so educated in words reminds me of my grandmother, who is one of the most intelligent people I know. When I was about six or seven, she would say words to me that no Kindergartner knows and I was expected to spell them. Most of the time, I was pretty close and when I got it right, she would tell me what the words meant. At that age, I was more interested in the taste of my boogers than in learning boring words I never thought would matter. Looking back, I cannot thank her enough for that small effort to help me in life. I am sure without her, I would be using words like "ain't" and phrases such as "don't got no" instead of knowing how to speak like a civilized human being. my grandma is awesome, and as soon as Meya (my daughter) starts school, I plan to use this same technique on her to ensure she grows up to make something of herself. Might as well end this with things about Meya. She is the most beautiful child, and she is so intelligent, it is…
In the beginning of the film, Charlie struggles with making friends in the first couple of days of his freshman year. Charlie adapts and interacts well with people and is able to make friends easily and quickly. Chbosky portrays this idea in the wide angle shot of the large crowd in the football game, when Charlie approached Patrick and says “Hey Patrick”. "Hey, you're in my shop class”, says Patrick. Eventually Charlie is told to sit next to him and they continue their friendly conversation and with time meets a girl named Sam. From then onwards they made good friends and was later introduced to more people. Chbosky highlights the fact that Charlie becomes easily able to seek a conversation with someone in front of a large crowd, from which then lead to an invitation to his first ever party. At the party Charlie became emotional after realising the fact that he was being noticed and appreciated by the group of his presence. Patrick raised his drink and asked everyone to do the same. “To Charlie” and the whole group said, “To Charlie". Chbosky shows in the wide shot angle of when Charlie was drinking his milkshake and sitting on a lower level than his two other friends, that he has become recognised by the group, being the centre of attention by being himself, he gains the trust of others and is told important secrets compared to his original life. Charlie demonstrates the benefits of being a wallflower…