The Glass Castle Research Paper

1348 Words3 Pages

More than half of American children have experienced at least one major trauma that leads to future struggles, such as alcoholism, drug abuse, and even suicide. In the memoir The Glass Castle by Jeannette Walls, the Walls family children, Lori, Jeannette, Brian, and Maureen, are victims of abuse in several cities in America during the years of the 1960s to the 2000s. Rex Walls has caused many issues, such as physically and verbally abusing individuals in public. The family is always on the run from the law, causing them to have loose relationships, dangerous interactions, and no stability in their lives. The children have to live with constant change and mental abuse from their parents, while taking on the role of raising each other.Through …show more content…

This contributed to the way that Maureen's mental health evolved, changing her childhood as well as her adulthood. RoseMary mentions that Jeannette had nothing going on for her other than the fact that she always worked hard. She speaks positively about all the other Walls children, but has nothing to say about Jeannette. In the book, The Glass Castle, written by Jeannette Walls, it states, “‘No one expected you to amount to much,’ she told me. ‘Lori was the smart one, Maureen, the pretty one, and Brian the brave one. You never had much going for you, except that you always worked hard,’” (Walls 270). The words that a parent says to their child can affect them forever. As a child, Jeannette was never viewed as “something”. Her mother never thought of her as her own person, always as someone that took the place of Mary Charlene, who was her late older sister. This pushed Jeannette to be the hardworking person she is and to get to the success she acquired in order to prove her mother wrong. RoseMary’s neglect to properly acknowledge her daughter caused Jeannette to hold herself back from opportunities because she “wasn’t

Open Document