What Makes Willy Loman Successful

937 Words2 Pages

People all have their faults--it’s just human. And for humans, it’s hard not to get caught up in all the false dreams and fantasies of fame and success that come with everyday life. These illusions create a promising falsado on what is actually there, and one must not get too lost in their own world, otherwise the result can become too overwhelming to bare. It is best to just face reality, no matter how difficult it may seem.
Success doesn’t define a person; It doesn’t just come by the snap of the fingers. Success does not come from from pure luck, status, or personality. To many, this fact of success is already understood, but this is not the case for Willy Loman. All throughout the Death of a Salesman, Willy tells his sons that in order to …show more content…

Sadly, this reasoning simply sets Willy and his family up for failure. Good luck and being well-liked will only get you so far in life. The true key to success is tireless aim and lots of hard work. Willy never learns this, nor do his sons either, and they are consequently failures at the game of life. In act 1, Willy speaks of his older brother: “What’s the mystery? The man knew what he wanted and went out and got it! Walked into a jungle, and comes out, the age of twenty-one, and he’s rich! The world is an oyster, but you don’t crack it open on a mattress!” (Act 1) Willy is convinced that finding success is as simple as wanting it, which reveals his complete faith in the idea that he can get rich quick without really …show more content…

Ultimately, it is Willy’s denial of reality that eventually leads the way to his undoing. If he would have just looked a little closer at what he could’ve had, he would have realized that he had it made already: a wife who (more than) loves him and two growing sons out searching for who they really are. But Willy throws all this away by making his sons lie to him so he doesn’t have to face the truth.
In the end, Willy chooses to escape from reality altogether by driving away from his problems and killing himself. He figures that the only way he can be of any worth to his family is if he dies. Instead of facing his problems, he runs from them. Sure, his death allows his wife to pay off the mortgage, and she says that her family is free. Willy does become sort of a sacrificial lamb for his family. But he has forever robbed his wife of a husband and his sons of a father. He could have solved these problems without killing himself if he had confronted them head on. Don’t avoid the responsibilities of decisions that were made, no matter how serious the consequences. Be courageous and full of honor by confronting the problems

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