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Yellow Wallpaper Madness

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The Yellow Wallpaper is a story about a new mother who cannot climb out of the pits of depression. Her husband is very supportive, to the point of relocating to a summer home in the country. The new mother is the narrator of the story, and through her own thoughts, written on paper, we see her fall into an insane state that consumes her life. Despite all her and her husband’s efforts, the battle with her depression is lost. To properly relate the narrator’s madness and creativity, her behavior must be first dissected to discover the source of her madness. The relationship between creativity and madness has been a very visible characteristic of great men since the beginning of written history. The inner most workings of the brain are still a …show more content…

The child’s life being in danger is never formally stated, but the need to keep the mother away from the child is obvious when the mother herself states so herself, also from the absence of the child. The mother was not contagious, and this is proved by her interaction with her husband and other relatives throughout the story. The mother also shows signs of fatigue, loss of appetite, and anxiety in the beginning of the story. She openly admits that she is not eating during the day and lying to her husband to lead him to believe that she is improving. Her symptoms continue, and evolve into insomnia, paranoia, and ultimately hallucinations. The symptoms stated can all be residual damage from Post-Partum Depression, which affects millions of women today. In the most extreme cases, a child may lose their life at the hands of the very mother who bore them. Andrea Yates, of Houston Texas, was a mother who suffered from postpartum depression and postpartum psychosis. On June 20, 2001 Andrea Yates drowned her five children in her home. The narrator showed many signs of not only postpartum depression, but also postpartum psychosis. She can justifiably be classified as mad, without …show more content…

Yes, and no; she did in fact have an outlet that would have provided her a release for her anxiety, but as she acknowledged, “…if I were only well enough to write a little it would relieve the press of ideas and rest me.” (Gilman, 1892), she was not able to perform the therapy of writing. The narrator had time to write, the narrator’s writing time was crippled by the fatigue from her depression. The narrator can feel the flood of emotion that is building within her mind. In the end the narrator no longer exists, “In spite of you and Jane. And I’ve pulled off most pf the paper, so you can’t put me back!” (Gilman, 1892), the view is switched from the first person and the narrator is lost to her

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