Failure Of Consciousness Analysis

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Coming to terms with war and its moral consequences is burdensome. War is filled with death, pain, bullets. Tim O'Brien, a military veteran and author, believes that the “nightmare of Vietnam” was not the bullets and the bombs, but the failure of nerve and consciousness. I believe that the failure of consciousness means that you act before you think, as shown in Ambush and Of Mice and Men.
For me, failure of consciousness is when you act before you think, which usually leads to bad decisions, and in the case of a war, death. The reason Tim O’Brien thinks that failure of consciousness is so disastrous, is because when you are in war or any part of life, and you dont think logically and morally about your situation and your decision, you might end up regretting it for the rest of your life. For example, say that you are in school and forgot to study for a math test. If you fail to think about the future you might get caught cheating on the test and ruin your chances of getting into a good college.
In a war a failure of consciousness …show more content…

This single event avalanches and caused the rest of the melancholy ending, which eventually led to his demise. In Of Mice and Men it states, “Suddenly his anger arose. "God damn you," he cried. "Why do you got to get killed? You ain't so little as mice." He picked up the pup and hurled it from him. He turned his back on it. He sat bent over his knees and he whispered, "Now I won't get to tend the rabbits. Now he won't let me." He rocked himself back and forth in his sorrow.” This quote shows how Lennie's anger got the better of him and he killed the dog. If Lennie had pet the dog softer, he wouldn’t have gotten into this mess and he would have been alive to have his dream come true. Unfortunately, because of Lennie’s failure of consciousness, he had killed the dog, and inevitably, killed

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