Christopher is a very special child because he hates being touched, even by his family and closest friends. To many people, this may look like he hates everyone, or isn't able to experience emotions, but I think different. I believe Christopher can experience very simple emotions, like hapiness, sadness, and fear. This is the reason Christopher can not experience love for human beings, because love is far too complex. Christopher takes everything very literraly because he needs everything in his life to be in order and have rules. Because of this, Christopher has narrowed love down to a small list or criteria. If someone meets the criteria, they love Christopher and he 'loves' them. For example, on page 87 of the book Father asks Christopher if Christopher knew that he loved him, and here was Christophers response,"...and I said "Yes." Because loving someone is helping them when they are in trouble, and looking after them, and telling them the truth, and Father looks after me when I get in trouble, like coming to the police station, and he looks …show more content…
But it is possible that Christopher can show love and emotions for animals. On page 182, Christopher jumps off of the platform onto a railway track in a subway station to chase his pet rat, Toby. As he is doing this, a train is coming and Christopher is unable to climb back onto the platform. The only thing that saved him is a man who was able to pull Christopher up despite him screaming from being touched. This part of the book is interesting in two ways. One, Christopher allows the rat to touch him even though he doesn't let humans do this. This shows that Christopher trusts and loves his pet more than he does his family. Two, Christopher was willing to risk his life to save a mere rat, he would not have jumped onto the platform if it was a
According to Walt McCandless, Chris caused him a tremendous amount of pain, despite having “so much compassion.” Causing parents pain is a part of growing up and becoming an adult. Getting jobs , moving out, and watching their kids make mistakes for themselves are just some ways pain is unavoidable in the growing up process.
and then he touches him and Christopher hits the policeman. Christopher's emotions are unstable and he can't control himself when he has a strong feeling about something. For this quote it shows an example it all means that Christopher has very strong and passionate emotions about simple things well some certain things. It just shows how hard it really is for Christopher to communicate his emotions in a healthy way. For my reasoning for how Christopher's emotions connect to his mom's the two quotes work together to get my point across and for this quote it's about Christopher's mom and how she reacts to certain small easy to fix
point of view on christopher is he is a brave good hero but in reality he is a paradox.
Chris is a charismatic young man, but takes extensive measures to ensure he does not become too close with anyone. By going out into the wild without so much as a letter to his parents,
It is impossible to fully apprehend what was going through Chris’s mind and how it worked. But we can grasp that his resentment towards his father was deep. He was predetermined to become someone so different from his father because Chris didn’t care for or look up to the kind of person he was. Although he respected how he came up from nothing and made something of himself.
Christopher is very different to normal people as he has Asperger’s Syndrome, a mental illness which deprives him of his social abilities and emotional interpretation. Christopher changes from an innocent unknowing boy to one of newfound truths and knowledge. At the start of the book he is very shy and protective of himself, only talking to those that he trusts. The author writes “It takes me a long time to get used to people I do not know. For example, when there is a new member of staff at school I do not talk to them for weeks and weeks. I just watch until I know that they are safe”.
Another burden Christopher’s family laid on him was a massive amount of guilt. As mentioned above, Chris felt responsible for the ‘abandonment’ of Walt’s ex-wife and her children. Carine writes, “From the time we were small children, still unaware of how children come to be, I remember Chris being consistently told through our mother’s tears that the family struggles began with his birth, when she became ‘stuck’ with our dad. Chris carried this unfounded guilt with him until the wisdom that comes with age resulted in feelings of betrayal and eventually anger. This mislaid blame was never rescinded, only ignored.”3 Carine, Chris’s youngest and only natal sister, believed that the painful and unbearable family life that they endured provided Chris with a just reason to abandon his life. She respected this part of his motivation for leaving,
2ND: When it comes to the sensing and intuitive preferences, Christopher was a sensing type of individual. According to the Temperament Type and Into the Wild Notes, sensing individuals attend to various events in the present moment. Christopher doesn't plan out the various details of his journey in a universal order, pack the essential necessities or set a planned agenda; he lives in the current moment. For example, when his yellow Datsun gets destroyed he decides to simple leave it behind. He doesn't scavenge to attempt to
Christopher was born with Asperger’s Syndrome, which limits his communication skills, interaction with others and his ability to read emotions that other characters portray. In addition to dealing with this, Christopher also struggles to come to terms that his mother “died of a heart attack and it wasn’t expected”. (P. 36) This dialogue between Christopher and his father
Father has murdered Wellington. That meant that he could murder me…”(122). For the sake of his own safety, Christopher decides that he must go to London to find his mother. On this Journey, Christopher's strengths and weaknesses have been challenged, but in order for him to discover the truth he must overcome these obstacles. Early into his journey, Christopher finds himself lost, frightened and alone. Considering Christopher rarely steps outside of his own hometown, he must learn to put his social anxieties aside as he experiences the pressures of London’s busy streets. When doing so, Christopher goes outside of his comfort zone, he ends up asking many people for instructions, and uses his own knowledge in order to figure out where to go. Christopher even risks his own life in order to save Toby, his pet rat. When doing so, Christopher overcomes these obstacles as he discovers the truth and realizes that maybe he is not so different after all.
Contrary to a computer, Christopher can feel emotions. He may not understand why he feels a certain way, but he knows what it feels like to be happy or sad. He recognizes that he felt sad when he found the dead dog (pg2), and he knows that he feels happy when he reads about the Apollo missions. The most important time in the novel that Christopher shows common human emotions is on page 112 when he first finds out that his mother is alive. He is very hurt and betrayed, but he does not know what he is feeling and cannot find a way to handle himself. Although Christopher concedes to having these emotions, he seems to just accept that he has them rather than to understand them.
Christopher’s lack of emotion does not end with his mother’s death. He absolutely hates being touched by others, he hits a person if they try to make contact with him. He also does not like strangers; anything unfamiliar to Chris is not welcome in his world as far as he is concerned. He hates the colors yellow and brown, and determines if it will be a good day by the number of colored cars he sees; 4 red cars means it will be a good day, but 3 yellow cars is a bad sign. This
The response that Christopher presents to his thoughts displays moral agency. Like any other child, many experience curiosity and inputs their actions that is the same for Christopher as he wants to investigate the dog's death, but his father has him promise not to. He believes that, "When someone gets murdered you have to find out who did it so that they can be punished" (Haddon 20). Christopher chooses to reason with his father's promise because he knows that it would be the right thing to do to search for the murderer. The way that Christopher reasons his promise are too literal and proves that not every kid can keep a promise; it is normal for one to find ways of making decisions. Before entering his father's room to find his book, he knows his dad would get angry if he messes with his stuff and resolves to placing things back to where they were as to not make him angry. He considers his actions as being wrong, but in the process finds letters from his mother and thought it appropriator to take a few because they were addressed for
Not even me!” in an attempt to make his son believe he can become whatever he wants. The scene captures the intensity of emotions within Chris.
Once upon a time there lived a lanky little rat named Rudy. Rudy’s fur was very dull and felt like needles. She lived in a tiny village where all the animals knew each other. Every afternoon she would meet with her friends at the riverbank to tell stories of their morning. One day Rudy scurried to the riverbank excited to share with her friends a cheesecake she had baked just for them, but when she arrived at the meeting spot, no one was there. Worried and confused, Rudy hurried in to town to look for her friends there. Just as she reached the main road, her body froze as she watched the most beautiful creature strolling through town. Rudy looked around and noticed she was not the only animal in the village mesmerized by this beautiful