Willy is the only one who takes actions of desperation and hopeless. It is his hubris, his inflated pride and ambition to consummate the American dream that leads him to his destructive action, his inability to remember the value of his own life. He thinks that he can’t longer maintain his family’s future, and that he is worth more dead than alive.
Pressure society also can be blamed for Willy Loman's demise, claiming to be the best of all in the salesman or business world and earning great amounts of money... Willy Loman was just another man stuck with this dream but in some way the salesman or business world took a big part of his life from him. When he became a salesman at an age around eighteen or nineteen and he stayed in this business up to the point of his death, which is the same day he was finally fired by Howard from the company where he was working as a salesman. When he was fired he was at the age of sixty-three this unfortunately happened. This means that he put a greater amount of