Odysseus's Journey

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We all change throughout our lives as we learn from our experiences and Odysseus is no exception. Odysseus lives though some crazy things and through his experiences, he learns more about himself and some of his traits change—for the better—by the end of the Odyssey. Odysseus’s experience with the Sirens shows that he’s learning to trust people outside of himself and that he’s learning to be a better leader. Throughout the epic, we see Odysseus struggles in accepting the “gifts” that the gods give to him. Odysseus likes to be in control of what happens in his life, and because the gods are a higher power than him, he does not have complete control and learns to accept this through the course of his journey. Odysseus’s experiences facilitate his learning and changing into a better person and leader; by the end of the epic, he is more accepting of the twists and turns that are thrown at him by the gods and more trusting of people. Odysseus starts his journey relying on himself more than others. He does not distribute responsibilities but rather does everything himself as he is not trusting of people. Odysseus not trusting others is a sign that he is failing as a leader. He does not trust his wife Penelope to be home alone all those years without him while he is off with Calypso (which is why he wants to return home to her) and he does not put any trust into his crew members, whom he will be journeying onwards with for many years in the future. His lack of trust in others is seen when he receives the bag of winds from Aeolus as a parting gift and he does not allow the men in his crew to open it and refuses to inform the men what is in the bag. This obviously backfires once the crewmen open the bag and strong winds that are suppose... ... middle of paper ... ...is how life in Odysseus’s world works and by the end of the epic, he has acknowledged this and accepted this fact of life. Odysseus most definitely changes throughout his epic journey. His experiences shape him in becoming a more trusting person, which aids in his ability to lead his crew in the right direction and allows his crew to reciprocate their trust in him. Odysseus faces the obstacles that the gods put in front of him and overcomes them, eventually making it back home to Ithaca and his wife Penelope. He learns to accept the gods’ words as they are the highest power; in this way, he learns his place in relation to the gods. By the end of the epic, Odysseus is less stubborn and learns to accept the “gifts” of the gods with peace. He changes as a person and truly becomes the “one who [knows] the world” (Book 18, line 144). Works Cited The Odyssey by Homer

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