How Is Jay Gatsby Selfish

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Gisselle Hernandez English 1302 Sellars April 14, 2024 Jay Gatsby is seen as a wealthy smart man yet is a bumbling fool. He has obsessive behavior with Daisy throughout the whole book. He becomes delusional over her and she becomes the only goal he wants to go after in his life. Jay Gatsby foolishly believes that he can recreate his and Daisy’s relationship from the past, even though she is already married. Scott Fitzgerald wrote, “He knew that when he kissed this girl and forever wed his unutterable visions to her perishable breath, his mind would never romp again like the mind of God.” He knew once they kissed it would carry out his long-desired dream of being with his love. But his imagination would now be limited and would now become reality; his mind could no longer imagine “like the mind …show more content…

He would spend so much money recklessly organizing the parties. He wanted to reunite with Daisy, although she was already married, having no care that he would ruin her marriage. Gatsby's worst decision might of been when he was talking to Tom about Daisy, telling Tom that Daisy never loved him and she was always in love with Gatsby. His delusional behavior causes his outbursts, but with these outbursts, he is trying to obtain Daisy’s love forcefully instead of willingly. Gatsby's overall goal is to recreate the young romance they once had, and he won’t stop at any cost. Even if that means he destroys a marriage as long as he has his hard-to-reach goal. In the end, Gatsby is rejected even though he did everything in his power to win Daisy back. He was the perfect example of living the American dream, but he had something missing in his life. Despite all his success and money, he wanted something that he couldn't re-live, something impossible to recreate. Gatsby refuses to accept his reality and is consumed with old memories of the

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