Teenage Resilience: Lessons from The Cask of Amontillado

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Being a teenager is hard, sometimes it feels as if the entire world is fighting against you. Every day the world seems to bombard you with stress, and you become irritated, frustrated, and enraged. In Edgar Allen Poe’s, The Cask of Amontillado, depicts a madman driven by his desire to get revenge. This madman becomes obsessed with this want, and lets it override his thoughts. By examining teenager’s life, while in class, doing homework, and working in groups, one can see that a teenager must remain calm and take negative aspects of life with a grain of salt, rather than to overreact.

One can see by observing a teenager’s life during school, that it is more productive to take negative scenarios with a grain of salt and endure it, rather than let it consume them. Teenagers have to take tests, exams, and pop quizzes, and sometimes on these exams they test for materials that they have not yet learned. This is a stressful scenario, that can aggravate teenagers, and make them act under the influence of stress, which they will inevitably regret. The main protagonist in The Cask of Amontillado, Montresor, overreacts due his friend has insulting him, “[I] would be avenged … I must
Unlike Montresor from Edgar Allen Poe’s The Cask of Amontillado, one must never lose it, but learn to control their emotions, and pick themselves up after they have fallen. The most dreaded parts of a teenager’s life, the tower of papers that are called an exam, the depressing backpack full of homework, and the constant criticization from others. To succeed in life, one must make the most of the present, and what they have, as Oogway said to Po in Kung Fu Panda, “You are too concerned with what was and what will be. There is a saying, yesterday is history, tomorrow is a mystery, but today is a gift! That is why it is called the

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