Chris Mccandless Life In Into The Wild

626 Words2 Pages

Never did Chris McCandless feel so alive than when he abandon his wealthy lifestyle to live the life of a vagabond. Wealth has been associated with happiness, even though this is not always the case. Money may make the world go round, as well as have the power to manipulate and control situations towards one’s favor, yet as much as people crave it they despise it as well. People, such as Chris McCandless, have proved that while riches may give one a comfortable lifestyle, it will not always be a fulfilling one. Life is not going to revolve around one’s paycheck. Society has marked those who do not accept the accumulation of either money or power as the purpose of life to be exiles. Throughout Jon Krakauer’s Into the Wild, the depths of Chris …show more content…

As a recent graduate with honors of Emory University, Chris McCandless had his whole life ahead of him, yet he choose to led the life of a tramper. Up until graduating from Emory, McCandless experiences went as far as camping with his father at a young age and the spontaneous road trips he would take during breaks while he was in college. Having limited credibility with being on his own, McCandless’s confidence in being able to survive the life on the road,especially in the wilderness, seemed out of place. His confidence is shown by his immediate actions after graduation, stated in the very first page of the book is, “ He changed his name, gave the entire balance of a twenty-four- thousand-dollar savings account to charity, abandoned his car and most of his possessions, burned all the cash in his wallet” (1). By carrying out all these actions, it enforced the idea of abandoning society altogether, with negligible intention of returning. For McCandless, he had little use for money, in fact he despised it and it value, according to one of the journal entries he wrote,“Tramping is too easy with all this money. My days were more exciting when I was penniless and had to forage around for my next meal” (33). Despite minor

Open Document