Tim O Brien's The Things They Carried

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In Tim O’Briens book “The Things They Carried” he demonstrates the emotional and physical struggles the soldiers faced throughout the Vietnam War. Throughout the novel the reader learns about not only the physical pain the soldiers face but, the reader also sees the emotional weight they carry through the lens of guilt. Through the eyes of Lieutenant Jimmy Cross and Norman Bowker, the reader is able to see the source of guilt, how guilt looks different depending on the person, and how guilt can stay with a person. Throughout the book, the reader learns about the struggles the soldiers faced during the Vietnam War. A lot of these struggles are more obvious, like a broken nose or being shot, but the soldiers also carry mental injuries with them. …show more content…

In the book it says “He felt ashamed”. He hated the man himself. He had loved Martha more than his men, and as a consequence Lavender was now dead, and this was something he would have to carry like a stone in his stomach for the rest of the war.”(O’Brien 16). This shows that the pain and weight he is experiencing from the death of Ted Lavender is something that will not pass easy for him. This feeling of guilt originates for Jimmy Cross because he feels, since he was in command, that it is his job to make sure his soldiers are safe. By letting his mind wander about Martha, he was not able to keep Ted Lavender safe. Norman Bowker is another character in the book that is deeply affected by guilt by the death of a soldier. Bowker is affected by the loss of his friend Kiowa. Kiowa started to sink in the mud, so Bowker grabbed him by the boot and attempted to pull him out. In order to save himself, Bowker let go of Kiowa and let him sink into the mud. Norman Bowker says “There is no place to go”. Not just in the immediate sense, but in the larger, cosmic sense. It was like I could not escape the awful symmetry of what I’d done”(O’Brien …show more content…

Jimmy Cross tries to own up to his mistake in an attempt to overcome the guilt he is facing. In the end, both characters struggle with the guilt. Even after the war, the soldiers still hold onto the guilt and pain they faced. The guilt becomes something the soldiers cant control and it becomes part of their identity. Norman Bowker and Jimmy Cross both attempt to control their guilt in an effort to move forward with their lives and put the war behind them. On page 246 O’Brien says “They carried all they could bear, and then some, including a silent awe for the terrible power of the things they carried”(O’Brien 246). This quote demonstrates that the soldiers have to carry a lot that they don't want to carry. This includes the guilt and pain they gained from the war. At the beginning of the war, most soldiers “carried” things with them like good luck charms and memories from home. These are things that helped them get through the war and remember the times before. Throughout the war, the soldiers begin to pick up pain and guilt from the war that they add to the things they “carry” with them. This change shows how the soldiers can't control everything that sticks with

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