The Human Condition Of Love In The Odyssey

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From birth, humans are given unconditional love from their mothers, who through nurturing establishes a standard of love for which their young will psychological seek as they filter their interactions into adulthood. They will gravitate towards this feeling of familiarity and base their life decisions upon it. Love is almost supernatural in the sense of how extreme it can manipulate one’s existence. In its prime state, love is a sensation of the highest pleasure, however when deprived of this pleasure one can be left with an extreme void. Nonetheless, despite which duality is received, personal growth is insured from either outcome. As the human condition of love has transcended every art form globally, proving how inspirational and destructive …show more content…

Within his journey Odysseus is faced with several dangerous instances which requires cunning tactics and decisive action. His will to survive is only strengthened by the thought of his family which he reaffirms by stating, “There is nothing more admirable than when two people who see eye to eye keep house as man and wife, confounding their enemies and delighting their friends.”(Homer) The love waiting in Ithaca is what motivates him and enables him to face life threatening beast like Scylla and Charybdis. (Homer) Furthermore, this yearning to reunite with Penelope grants him the temperance to restrain his rage as he watches the suitors infest his home and handle all of his possessions. (Homer). As well as, Penelope the whole time has been enduring Odysseus’s arrival as she has been waiting a decade since no man can compare, and even confirms her stance, “How I wish chaste Artemis would give me a death so soft, and now, so I would not go on in my heart grieving all my life, and longing for love of a husband excellent in every virtue, since he stood out among the Achaeans.” (Homer) The love present in “The Odyssey” is a positive one. Concluding with the reuniting of a family and the massacre of enemies, Homer displays the importance in how humans overcome the seemingly impossible when both sides of the marriage maintain …show more content…

When operating on a team, balance is an essential element, and even more so in a pair. This dynamic, transforms Gilgamesh completely as Enkidu teaches him how satisfying life can be when love is present. This love begins as a brotherhood as Enkidu’s very existence rivals Gilgamesh’s and grants him a sense of completion.(Sandars) The tyranny that once oppressed the kingdom of Uruk ceased because of Enkidu’s influence and is confirmed by Gilgamesh’s mother. For example, she states “You loved him and embraced him as a wife”, implying that their relationship transcended brotherhood.(Sandars) However, the real reform of Gilgamesh’s heart doesn’t occur until after Enkidu is dead. Gilgamesh is unable to properly handle the grief of his loss and ventures out seeking answers that might satisfy his emptiness. For example, “Since he went my life is nothing; that is why I have travelled here in search of Utnapishtim my Father.” (Sandars) This loss begins to have a greater sense of meaning as his life has returned to solitude, but after experiencing such a love his perspective on that past is much different. In this case, Gilgamesh physically adopts Enkidu's appearance as he searches for his answers, transforming himself both internally and externally as he grieves for his desired love.(Sandars) Love can reform one's mind during and after life, but if the

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