Most Important Word in “White Lies” Cleanse is the most important word in Natasha Tretheway’s poem, “White Lies” because it supports the mood and tone. In the poem, the narrator goes to a school where she is one of the odd ones out, and she tells little lies to other students. The first reason is because she tries to be something shes not. For example she has homemade clothes and chooses to say that they are of top brand material. In the text it states, “ I could act like my homemade dresses came straight out of the window of Maison Blanche.” This shows that The girl would tell other's untruthful things just to fit in because she didn't want to share that she lived in a low income area and couldn’t afford expensive clothes. She wanted to Cleanse
There comes a time when a doctor, minister or politicians and an individual will tell a lie. It could be a white lie or big lie; most people almost generally resort to lying in certain situation. Often times a lawyer will lie in order to protect his client, or vice versa, a client will tell a lie in order to avoid being incarnated. There are many situations an individual will be placed in, and at some point in a person’s life they will need to tell a lie. Is it appropriate to lie? This is what Sissela Bok writes about in Lying: Moral choice in Public and Private Life. Bok acknowledges that despite numerous religious and moral statements against lying, people will still lie in certain situations. She will discuss and
“Coming Clean” is about a girl's life story starting at age six, her dad was a paper hoarder. Their house was always full and there was no room except a little place on the bed that was cleared off for them to all eat and sit. They never had anyone over or let anyone see the inside of the house. Her mom had spine problems and her mom never in her earlier years of life cared about fixing her back so she did later on. Once she got done having a surgery, she started buying things all the time online because she was stuck on the couch and had nothing to do but buy more things than they needed. They didn’t even open half of the things that they ordered. Now both of her parents started hoarding and Miller the daughter couldn’t handle it anymore she
It is clear that Blanche DuBois is willing to do what she believes is necessary to get what she wants. This often includes deceit. She feels that she needs to lie about herself in order to seem more appealing. Because Blanche is so afraid of aging, she keeps her age to herself. While she is dating Mitch, she often deceives him by never letting him see her in bright light in order to conceal her faded looks. When she comes to New Orleans, Blanche does not tell her sister that she was fired from her job; she says that she is merely taking a vacation from the job. She says this in order to keep up the fake persona she holds. Blanche is very open about her lies with her sister. “I know I fib a good deal. After all, a woman's charm is fifty per cent illusion, but when a thing is important I tell the truth.” (69) This shows that Blanche’s lifelong choice of avoiding harsh realities leads to her breakdown. With all of the lies and deceit Blanche tells, she is living an unreal existence.
her household she resorts to outside sources, making herself a victim to boys, which creates a
as mortal human beings, it’s our utmost desire to fit in, to be accepted at times we are willing to do whatever it takes to achieve this even though we may lose a great deal in the long run. in the short story, anointed with oils, alden nowlan introduced Edith who was ashamed of many things such as hygiene which she tried to fix by taking constant showers and wearing fancy clothes. Even though Edith thought all these changes would draw less attention to her, they made her even more noticeable. Having come from the shacks, Edith never really liked herself and felt her life was miserable. Along with having those negative feelings about herself, her parents did not make a good support system.
This distancing shows how she is different from society; perhaps society pushes her away because she is different, or perhaps society sees her as different because she has segregated herself from the typical lifestyle of civilization. Either way, the voice of society chants, "A woman like that is misunderstood" (Line 13). Society must get rid of her because it cannot see her point of view.
fear of the unknown; the fact that she does not know Frank well enough; and
Blanche repeatedly lied to make herself look pure to others. It only served as a masquerade to hide her dirty, sinful reality. She lied about her age, alcoholism, promiscuity, and why she had to leave Laurel. When Stanley asked her if she wanted a shot, she replied, “No, I—rarely touch it” (Scene 1, page 1548). She could not confront her reality, so she retreated to her world of illusion. This was Blanche’s most prominent flaw. If she could have accepted things for what they are, she could have salvaged her sanity. If, from the beginning, she had been truthful to Stanley’s friend Mitch, he could have forgiven her. Dismally, Mitch would not trust her after finding out everything she said was fabricated. “I don’t want realism. I want magic! Yes, yes, magic! I try to give that to people. I misrepresent things to them. I don’t tell truth, I tell what ought to be truth. And if that is sinful, then let me be damned for it” (Scene 9, page 1590). Blanche feared lights which symbolized her fear of reality. She claimed that with Alan’s death, all light had gone out of her life. “And then the searchlight which had been turned on the world was turned off again and never for one moment since has there been any light that’s stronger than this—kitchen candle.”
This low self-esteem and her fractured relationships with her mother and father could be a cause of what appears to be all of her distant relationships with all the people she meets, from the boys she goes out with in the alley who she shows no actual interest in and doesn’t appear to be with them for more than one night to the friends she goes out with that the
The daughter is bored with her mother's dreams and lets her pride take over. She often questions her self-worth, and she decides that she respects herself as nothing more than the normal girl that she is and always will be. Her mother is trying to mold her into something that she can never be, she believes, and only by her futile attempts to rebel can she hold on to the respect that she has for herself. The daughter is motivated only to fail so that she may continue on her quest to be normal. Her only motivation for success derives from her own vanity; although she cannot admit it to herself or her mother, she wants the audience to see her as that something that she is not, that same something that her mother hopes she could be.
She selfishly praised quilts as "priceless" (91) whereas she thought the same piece was old fashioned and out of style when offered to her for college. By carrying the quilts she claims to carry the heritage, however, she shuns the lifestyle of her family, which is of course a part of her heritage.
Throughout the poem, “White Lies”, Natasha Tretheway was able to show the difficulty of growing up biracial by using different literary elements that include puns, irony, and flashbacks to demonstrate how self-love is required in order to find one’s identity. By using first person, the author was able to connect with her audience on a deeper level by letting them experience what she did by taking them on a journey as she reflects back on her tough childhood.
The first time she tells a lie in the poem is the place where she gets her clothes. She had told all her friends that she gets her clothes from Maison Blanche line number 13 and line 14. It says, “I could act like my homemade dresses came straight out the window of Maison Blanche.” She says the clothes are homemade which would be the truth, however she then goes on to say they are designer.
She is a single mom to her four year old daughter. Because of this, she does not have a job and stays home as a working mom in order to care for her child. She is also portrayed as lazy since she is very overweight and states that she does not leave the house very often. Another stereotype that is reinforced is feeling powerless and worthless. She mentions that the reason she pretends to be other people is because she is not happy with her current life.
She derives from the typical stereotype that everyone should be the same. She shows a girl whos trying to be herself, but she's judge for it. She tries to change herself and become the typical girl, but she falls into epidemic of anorexia and self harm. She displays