Distraction and Human Nature: A Literary Perspective

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Humans are creatures that spent more time looking for the distraction from work than actually working. Humans are naturally easily distracted and need something to help us focus on the tasks at hand. Two stories that clearly reflect this are "Stopping by Woods on a snowy evening" by Robert Frost and "Effort by Distraction" by Josephine Miles. In Frost 's story, it shows how humans are easily distracted so we need something so push us forward the goal in mind. Mile 's poem supports this by explaining on how humans focus more on trying to distract themselves than actually working and paying attention. My artifact extends the meaning of my poem because it analyzes how humans are naturally lazy and how we need to push ourselves to continue working. …show more content…

Everyone at certain times is extremely lazy and rather not do the goal in mind and just ignore it. Sometimes it does not affect them as much, but that type of thinking can really affect them in life. Since humans are born with the mindset that pleasure comes first, we tend to usually follow that instinct in us. However, this instinct can really get in the way of bigger goals in life. If a person just follows that instinct, they will never reach a goal in life. They would just keep putting everything off and never actually work hard enough to ever be something in life. That is why we all need to find the "horse" in us. The "horse" is that part of us that motivates us and drives us to succeed. With people having their "horse" they can really start to focus and succeed in whatever goals they have, they do not need to be big goals, they just need to be goals in order to start changing the lazy attitude to a more work oriented attitude. As people grow older our "horse" grows more in us, due to the fact that, the older you are the more responsibilities you will have. Then at some point in our lives the horse shifts and become the most prominent part in our personality. It becomes such a big part since we have to be responsibly in order to feed ourselves and our families. Children do not have this sense of urgent responsibility because they do not really …show more content…

Mile 's describes the human in Frost 's story. The human is searching for a distraction in the landscape around him, completely ignoring the fact that he has a lot of ground to cover. "My little horse must think it queer to stop without a farmhouse near Between the woods and frozen lake The darkest evening of the year" this line shows the two completely different sides in humans. Even though they are unsheltered he decides to stop just to stare. And this is where the horse 's role is really determined, the horse wants to find a safe place for them to stay and pushes the owner to find that safe place. In the end we can see the connection between these two stories completely, how humans are naturally distracted creatures that need a push to see the final goal in mind. In the end if we all try to find our “horse” it will really benefit us for the

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