Reckless People
Into the wild is more morbidly fascinating than anything else. It is a journey into the psyche of a young man who, with seemingly all of the advantages that late Twentieth Century America can arm one with, decides to disappear into the flotsam of the country playing the part of an enlightened hobo (he takes the moniker 'Supertramp' as a way to christen his new identity). When I read I this book I was infuriated with Chris McCandless. It is normal to want to create a reality where it is you versus them. Who wants to work forty plus hours a week for a boss who would just as soon fire you so that he or she could keep their indoor pool heated during the winter? Who would want that really? No one. But that is where discipline comes in. This is what Chris lacked..." I went on and on this tangent. And for the most part I believed it. I honestly felt that Chris was a coward and an egotist. Chris McClandiss is thought by some to be an idealistic reckless youth.First off all, Why, I asked, would Chris take photos of himself if he planned to rough it for the sake of roughing it? Are photos not for the benefit of others to shuffle through while nodding in amazement? "You really killed a moose and ate it? Wow!" I saw Chris as a poseur. Ch
" When he is found frozen to death in an old bus no one is certain if his death was intentional or a mistake (Smith). Whereas he helped people suffering of hunger by donating all of his college money, he forgot to help himself. He was a basket case and completely lost. He has family, money and a great education that will soon be his great future but he thinks that everything related to wealth is sinful. McCandless' wish to be one with nature and to "rough it" isn't a lifestyle that necessarily precluded calling home every once and a while, especially since he'd occasionally return to civilization to work. In conclusion, I felt terrible for the family he neglected for his own selfish reasons, as there was no apparent need for him to totally divorce himself from those that loved him. He also tried to travel by using his instincts in life by living naturally without other's aide. In fact, because there was so little by way of journal entries, the best the author can come up with instead is relating passages of books McCandless was reading that he underlined or highlighted (!). And that is the point, isn't it? Yes, it is safer to live by the rules our fathers and mothers laid down (a reader). But for some people, people like Chris; to live by the rules is a slow and painful death. Others fulminated that he was a reckless idiots, a wacko, a narcissist who perished out of arrogance and stupidity- and was undeserving of the considerable media attention he received (Krakauer 3). Second of all, McClandiss is thought by some to be an idealistic reckless youth. Chris made a journey to search for the true meaning of life and escaped it pressures. Chris' attitude can be seen in the teens searching for the meaning of life, taking risks, rebelling to authority and not thinking of what lies ahead. ris' death is tragic and there is considerable talk of the waste of potential due to a 'lack of respect for the power of mother nature.
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