How Does Holden Present Depression In Catcher In The Rye

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Picture those teenage years; the struggles of school, maybe a childhood sweetheart, and taking that final step into the adult world. Now, imagine a strong obsession with depression. Envision being terrified at any form of rejection from others. Holden Caulfield experiences all the mentioned aspects when he recounts his own adolescent years. J.D. Salinger's Catcher in the Rye, depicts Holden Caulfield’s life after getting expelled from Pencey Prep, a prestigious private school based in Pennsylvania. After leaving school two days early, Holden decides to spend his time exploring the streets of New York City. Along the way, he interacts with old teachers, nuns, prostitutes, and his youngest sister Phoebe. Throughout the narrative, Holden toys …show more content…

He asks a cab driver out to drinks, dances with women he’s never met before, and calls up people he doesn’t even like just so he doesn’t have to dine alone. The reasoning for this, happens to also be all over the novel. Notice how every time Holden thinks of calling up Jane, he has just interacted with another person. The first time is when he gets of the train after talking to Ernest’s mother. “The first thing I did when I got off at Penn Station, I went into this phone booth. I felt like giving somebody a buzz.” (59). Holden’s fixation of never wanting to be alone comes from his uneasiness towards rejection. At no time does Holden want to be on his own. After coming back to his hotel from a busy night in the streets of New York, Holden thoughtlessly decides to hire a prostitute. When Sunny, the prostitute, begins to get too friendly for Holden, he becomes uncomfortable. “Then she started getting funny. Crude and all. ‘Do you mind cutting it out?’ I said. ‘I’m not in the mood, I just told you.’” (970. Holden sees Sunny as a person and not an object because that’s what he really wants. When he casually hired a prostitute, he was just looking for someone to talk to. Finally, Holden’s most desperate and obvious attempt to avoid being unaccompanied is when he asks a New York cabbie out to drinks. After asking him about the ducks in the lake by central park, Holden asks him to join him for drinks. “He didn't answer me, though. I guess he was still thinking. I asked him again, though. He was a pretty good guy. Quite amusing and all. ‘I ain't got no time for no liquor, bud,’ he said.” (83). Holden’s fear of being alone makes him an outgoing person, but often it ends up putting him in uncomfortable situations. However, when Holden does happen to be by himself he casually talks of being depressed and doesn’t seem to care about anything else other than getting some

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