Imagine being responsible for your best-friend's death. Along with the seventh man, this is how a lot of survivors that have been through traumatic experiences feel. “Blameworthiness, here, depends on the idea that a person could have done something other than he did. And so he is held responsible or accountable, by himself or others.”(The Moral Logic of Survivor's Guilt). The Seventh Man spent 40 years of his life living with survivor’s guilt for what happened to K. In order to accept the reality of what happened on the day of the typhoon, the seventh man must forgive himself for not being able to save K. “I’m getting out of here!” I yelled to K. He was maybe ten yards down the beach, squatting with his back to me, and looking at something. I was sure I had yelled loud enough, but my voice did not seem to have reached him.” (The Seventh Man). The Seventh Man should stop blaming himself for what happened to K, because he made an attempt to get K’s attention before the wave came. Even though he could get K. to safety in time, he still yelled for him to get off the beach. The seventh man wasn’t only …show more content…
Get out of there! The wave is coming!” This time my voice worked fine...He tried to run, but now there was no time to run. In the next instant, the wave had swallowed him. “(The Seventh Man). Some may say that the Seventh Man should feel guilty for turning around as soon as he couldn't get K’s attention and letting him get swallowed up by the wave, however he did what he could at the time and spent 40 years of his life regretting his decisions. “At the end of the year I pleaded with my parents to let me move to another town. I couldn’t go on living in sight of the beach where K. had been swept away, and my nightmares wouldn’t stop. If I didn’t get out of there, I’d go crazy”.(The Seventh Man). The Seventh Man thought about not being able to save K. He was consumed by guilt and regret to the point of not being able to stay in his own
On paper, survivor guilt seems to be a completely irrational concept. Why should you feel guilty if someone died and you survived if you had absolutely nothing to do with that person’s death, or if you tried to save someone’s life but you physically couldn’t? Without context, it almost seems silly. However, in the real world, people will form strong emotional bonds with each other and will feel responsible for their friends and family if all goes wrong, even if you had nothing to do with what has occurred. Similarly, if someone you have strong emotional connections to dies from an incident and you do, the resulting regret, grief, and guilt is known as survivor guilt. In “The Seventh Man” by Haruki Murakami, a tsunami strikes the narrator’s hometown, during which he and his friend K., while in the tranquil eye of the storm, go to the beach they spend lots of time together to assess the damage from the first half of the storm. While there, a loud noise is heard by the narrator, and sees a gargantuan wave speeding toward the shore, and tries to pry K. out of the path of destruction, alas, he was too invested in an object upon the sand. The narrator speeds away from the wave in an attempt to save his own life, and soon sees K. inside the second wave after being swept away in the first. Throughout the rest of the narrator’s life, he deals with horrible nightmares and a guilty conscience as a consequence of his traumatic childhood event and tries to rid
The narrator was most likely told time and time again: “Get as far away as possible if you see signs of a big wave”, or something like that. The feeling that he gets when he follows his gut and not his thoughts, and leaves K. to drown, is what’s known as “survivor’s guilt”. Survivor’s guilt, as quoted by “The Moral Logic of Guilt”, is a feeling along the lines of “[taking] responsibility in a way that goes beyond what we can reasonably be held responsible for. And … feel the guilt that comes with that sense of responsibility” (Sherman 154). The mix between the narrator’s gut feeling and K. being too focused on something to hear the narrator made a tragedy that was out of the narrator’s control. There was no doubt that the narrator felt responsible for K.’s death, but that doesn’t mean he was actually responsible; heck, not even K.’s family held him responsible. The narrator should realize that this whole thing was out of his control, and learn to forgive
He often had nightmare of his friend K being swept away. What happened to the Seventh man was traumatic. What the Seventh Man went through what is called survivors guilt. Survivor's guilt is a guilt that is a common response following loss or traumatic experiences with significant victimization. This guilt may come when someone, dear to somebody dies and a person feels guilty for the death of that person even if they have not caused the death. We often associate this type of guilt with the battlefield. Soldiers that come home may have this guilt when during a battle some of their buddies died, and they feel like they could've prevented the deaths of their fellow soldiers. But survivor's guilt is not just associated with the battle field. Just like in the Seventh Man’s story. The Seventh Man should forgive himself for the death of K.
However, I believe that my views on the situation are the correct ones. For starters, I had said about how Spinoza wrote about things going unexpectedly wrong, but even though things went wrong the Seventh Man still could have run over and grabbed his friend K. In a previous paragraph I had said about how K. found himself running in the opposite direction away from K., this is another piece of evidence that shows that the Seventh Man could have saved his friend K. The other side believes he is innocent because he had nothing to do with the wave and did not physically harm K. However, he knew the wave was coming from previous signs, he knew K. could not hear him, and he knew he had time to run over and grab K. to keep him from being submerged by the wave. The Seventh man easily could have saved his friend K. from being engulfed by the
“Guilty” “forgiveness” two words you will hear sometime in your life. Everyone has had to have made a choice at some point in their life, whether it be what shirt you’re going to wear or if you’re going to risk your life saving someone else’s. In the story, The Seventh Man, a young boy comes face to face with a decision that changes his life forever.
The narrator of the short story “The Seventh Man” should forgive himself for his failure in saving K. Because it is simply survivor's guilt, which is an unjustified feeling. Survivor guilt happens all the time to soldiers and firefighters and others in dangerous professions. Third, there is nothing he could have done to save him, no matter what he did K would be dead.
It wasn’t entirely the narrator’s fault that he couldn’t save the life of K. K. wasn’t paying any attention to the narrator when the wave was about to strike. “He might have been so absorbed in whatever it was he had found that my call made no impression on him,” (Murakami, 137). So, in a way, the narrator and K. equally share the blame.
In the story “ The Seventh Man”, The seventh man fails to save his friend K. K was like his brother and his best friend. “ He tried to run, but now there was no time to run. In the next instant, the wave had swallowed him”(Murakami, 138). This is how K died. It was not the seventh man’s fault, K died because of a natural disaster. What will be debated is whether or not you believe if the seventh man should forgive himself, but that is for you to decide. However, I believe the seventh man should forgive himself of his mistakes. He should forgive himself for not picking the correct way to get K away from the water.
One of the reasons why people might say this is because when K. was stretching his hand toward him he didn’t make an effort to get ahold it it and at least try to save K. Instead he thought about himself only and ran away toward a safer place. Although yes he didn’t help K, but would it really be worth it if the wave already had K? The only difference it woudve made was that they both would’ve died. The wave already had K in its traps so eitherway K would’ve died. People should understand that everyone makes mistakes and just because someone made a mistake it doesn’t mean that they have to be pointed at or feel guilty for the rest of their life. K suffered a lot because of his mental conditions, he was bullied and couldn’t live peacefully. K was resting after the wave took him and it wouldn’t be fair that K rested peacefully while The Seventh Man lived a miserable life. He said, “As he lay there in the tip of the wave, surely k had not been looking at me with hatred or resentment; he had not been trying to take me away from him. And that terrible grin he had fixed me with: that, too, could have ben an accident of angle or light and shadow, not a conscious act on K’s part. He had probably already lost consciousness, or perhaps he had been giving me a gentle smile of eternal parting.” This shows that K was already happy that he was getting to go to a more
The Seventh man should not forgive himself for not saving K. My point of view is supported by “The Cost of Survival” by Theo Tucker. For example, “People who take extreme risks should pay for their rescue operation” (127). Meaning, when the man says “Child though I was, I had grown up on the shore and knew how frightening the ocean
Mistakes are made every day. Some of them are monumental, and can alter your life and the ones around you. Others are tiny, but can still lead to terrible circumstances. How we choose to cope with our mistakes is our decision. When you hold the guilt in your heart, it can damage your entire life. In the story The Seventh Man by Haruki Murakami, a character who goes by the name of the seventh man has this situation occur in his life when his best friend K. dies right before his eyes. The seventh man takes the blame for the death and lets it haunt him for the remainder of his living. The seventh man should have forgiven himself for the death of K.
Survivor’s guilt can be life changing in a bad way. In the short story,”The Seventh Man” by Haruki Murakami, is about a boy who feels survivor’s guilt for not telling his friend that there was a wave going towards him, but then he saw his friend get swallowed by the wave, leaving him with survivor’s guilt. According to the text,”And it was always the same dream, down to the smallest detail. I would wake up screaming, my sheets soaked with sweat,” (Murakami 141). He feels like this because he feels guilt for not warning his friend about the wave insead saved himself. He has these dreams all the time and he shouldn’t do through this because it wasn’t his fault his friend didn’t see the wave, he shouldn’t feel guilt.
The Waves crash along the shore, their colors as blue as a summer sky and their force like a deadly storm. After pulling my hair out of my face I grab my board and sprint toward the crashing waves, just before I start to head out I am startled by a voice I know all too well.
He’s very lucky that he had “small” injuries compared to his brother. But, alas, he believes that there was no reason his brother died, he feels an overwhelming sense of guilt for wanting to live while his brother is watching him from above. He feels it’s inappropriate to want to live because if his brother’s tragic death. His want to live is what caused him to go to the shelter and leave his mom behind, who wouldn’t move from the table and put everyone who tried to help in danger. He was swarming with guilt not only after his mom came down to the shelter, but even before that. He begged her for forgiveness, but not for what she thought it was for. It was also forgiveness for wanting to live after the tragedy in their family. Guilt is an emotion you want to get away from, but can never manage to escape
I believe that the narrator of “The Seventh Man” should forgive himself for his failure to save his best friend K. it wasn't his fault that his best friend didn't see the wave and didn't move on time. So why would he feel bad about it?