Examples Of Mental Illness In The Bell Jar

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Henry 1 Kelsey Henry TBJ: Final Essay 3/26/24 19.86% of adults are experiencing a mental illness, according to Adult Prevalence of Mental Illness (AMI) 2022. Mental illnesses can be defined as health conditions involving changes in emotion, thinking, or behavior (or a combination of these). In today's world, mental health issues are talked about more than ever. People affected are encouraged to speak out and stand up to these once-condemned thoughts and emotions. In Slyvia Plath's novel entitled The Bell Jar, main character Esther Greenwood grapples with numerous hardships such as mental illnesses and social pressures geared towards her as a young woman in general struggling to figure out exactly where she fits in. When Esther was just 20 years old, she …show more content…

Esther's frame of mind overburdens as the weight of societal pressure to fit in with women pushes her to unhealthy methods of coping. Esther's fixation on other women in her life defines how she views her individuality. Esther is constantly talking about how jealous she is of other women surrounding her in her life. She's constantly comparing herself to them and wondering why she isn't more like them. Women at the time can be viewed as two types. The first is the “mother-women” figure; she bows down to her husband, cooks, cleans, and looks after her children while staying pure and docile for him. The second image of women was the anti-patriarchal one. She has sex with who she wants, responds to herself only, and might not want kids or a husband. In one of her early Henry 2 experiences with the girls at the hotel, Esther was observing each girl and stated “I'm so jealous I can't speak. Nineteen years, and I hadn't been out of New England except for this trip to New York. It was my first big chance, but here I was, sitting back and letting it run through my fingers like so much water.” (Plath

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