Creating Contentment In Tennessee William's The Glass Menagerie

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Creating Contentment
Learning how to remain optimistic and fulfilled in a rough situation is one of the most important skills a person can develop.. In Tennessee William’s The Glass Menagerie, the Wingfield family has trouble separating what is real and what is not, but they always manage to stay pleased with themselves. Laura spends her time with her glass menagerie and trinkets. Tom uses art, literature, and substance abuse to distract him from his current situation. Amanda indulges into the past and lives vicariously through her daughter as to not be in the moment. When an individual is forced to comply to a certain standard of living, then they must artificially escape their reality, because if they do not, they will never be able to sustain …show more content…

He is a family man after his father and takes care of his reclusive sister and delusional mother. When he is having trouble keeping a level head he leaves for a show. Tom explains it to the audience like this, ”I go to the movies because—I like adventure. Adventure is something I don’t have much of at work, so I go to the movies.” At the movies, anything is possible, contrary to Tom’s home and work life, which seems repetitive and mechanic. Nothing new happens in real life and that is just about as opposite to adventure as you can get. Depriving someone of their basic wants and likes will tear them apart mentally because they will encounter zero enjoyment without them. The movies seem to get old, fast for Tom. Near the end of the novel, during a fight between Amanda and Tom, Amanda chastises Tom’s behaviour and yells, ”[...] People don’t go to the movies at nearly midnight, and movies don’t let out at two A.M. Come in stumbling. Muttering to yourself like a maniac![...]” His mother implies that Tom had not been taking nightly trips to the movies, but to the bar instead. Substance use is something that comes up for Tom more than once during the play, therefore the movies are not enough to help Tom leave his reality. He needs to go on real adventures to experience the feeling he has been lusting after, but never quite grabbing ahold of, for so long. Tom lets the audience know his creative side clashed poorly with his heavily repetitive job, saying, ”Not long after that I was fired for writing a poem on the lid of a shoe-box. I left St. Louis.” Craving to be his own character, away from the manufacturing world, Tom releases his responsibilities and moves on with life. Tom finally leaves because his need for happiness was so great, movies, poems, art, alcohol, and literature were not enough

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