Chris Mccandless Analysis Essay

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Into the Wild Children fool around every day with parental supervision always there to catch the youth when they are at risk of vulnerability. Without parental supervision, they need to be self-conscious of their own well-being. Once a child becomes an adult, they learn to take their own path through life with no safety net and to take responsibility for their own actions, unlike Chris McCandless. The novel, Into the Wild, by Jon Krakauer, exposes a cocky and arrogant, Chris McCandless, who is to blame for his own death, because he lives a life of taking risks, and depends on those that care for him to save him from the edge of disaster. Chris McCandless, a twenty-four year old man, shows his arrogance by not listening to others’ advice because …show more content…

Nearing the end of the journey and the start of Chris McCandless’s time in the Alaskan Bush, Chris meets a man named Gaylord Stuckey. Gaylord was driving up to Fairbanks, Alaska for business when he met Chris McCandless and allowed him to hitch a ride along with him. During their time on the trip, Stuckey mentions Chris, “wanted to do this since he was a little kid, he wanted to prove to himself that he could make it on his own, without anyone else's help" (159). His goal is to not prepare and survive; to prove that anything is possible and the hardest person to convince is himself. He believes this is the final duty until he will convince himself and the world that life can be simple and beautiful. After leaving Wayne Westerberg to go to seek out his lifelong dream, he sent a letter to him. Wayne cared deeply about Chris and is one of the few to trade letters with McCandless throughout the novel. The letter reads, “This is the last you shall hear from me Wayne…If this adventure proves fatal and you don’t ever hear from me again I want you to know you’re a great man. I now walk into the wild" (69). McCandless’s risky behavior makes those around him care more about life and what they own. Because Chris believed so deeply that life should be lived simply and that nature is beautiful, he goes to the extreme to prove to those he influenced along the way that he can …show more content…

There, Chris discovers that his father lives a double life with his ex-stepmother, Marcia. Chris rages about, “ divorcing them as my parents once and for all and never speak to either of those idiots again as long as I live" (64). With an untrustworthy family, he feels outcast and useless. He then only can relate to other outcasts for the remainder of the novel. When he gets a chance at conversing with ‘everyday’ people Chris rants about how ‘fake’ they are. Maybe his trip was his final destination because he eventually realizes he has nothing to come back to. He never plans for the future, just the present scenarios, like sending away $24,000 to charity. When the trip was coming to an end, it overwhelmed him, remembering all the things he still angers him. The trip to El Segundo, California, also arose a very dark: “Two years after Chris’s birth, Walt McCandless fathered another child with Marcia” (64). Chris feels tremendous rage and hurt by this secret. He feels his life is a lie because unveiling this unpublished mystery brings skepticism to everything else surrounding his inner circle and family. Lastly, Chris is extremely heart-broken that his father wasn’t satisfied enough by him. Chris is the type of personality that will go over the edge of sanity if no one is there to stop him. When he leaves his family for good, he was out in the

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