Father Son Relationship In Siddhartha

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A bond between parents and children can be easily broken. The struggle relationship between father and son is a common theme throughout “Siddhartha”, written by Hermann Hesse. The book not only started with Siddhartha left his father to seek wisdom, but also ended with Siddhartha’s son left Siddhartha for freedom. In the end, Siddhartha learned dreams can’t be a force onto other people, and love can also bring the pain. Siddhartha achieved his dreams by choosing a difficult path. He wanted his son to have the same goals without all the harms and difficulties. Siddhartha tried to protect his son with his lifetime experiences, but his son refused to become what Siddhartha had wished for. Siddhartha was lost, and his good friend, Vasudeva questioned him, “which father… could prevent [his son] from living his own life, from soiling himself with life, from loading himself with sin, from swallowing the bitter drink, from find his own path?” (Hesse 121) Siddhartha reflected back to his own father’s wish, the path that his father tried to guide him on. Even though his father wanted him to stay, Siddhartha still left his parents and never saw them again. Siddhartha realized he couldn’t simply force his son to follow the same dream because his son created his own path that …show more content…

Siddhartha believed love will always bring him joy, but his wounds were created by his love, and it would not heal. He asked Vasudena and the River for help. From the river, Siddhartha saw his passionate for his son did more harm to himself than to his son. He also saw “his father, lonely, mourning for [Siddhartha]” (Hesse 134) when Siddhartha felt he hurt his father just as much or even more than his son did to him. Siddhartha learned that he never love anyone as much as his son, which created happiness. This love also blinded Siddhartha’s judgments and created wounds deep down his

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