Chris Mccandless Ambition

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In the play Macbeth, William Shakespeare depicts the idea of date, placing destiny in Macbeth's life. Allowing his own ambitions and desires to drive him insane in order to achieve it. At the beginning of the play, Macbeth portrays himself as a good man who decides to commit a series of bad actions that only he had the power to control. Ambition and control validate the way one controls their life. Desire of making things true is what creates a burning need in one's mind. The only thing they can think about is having what got them hooked onto. The three witches are linked to Macbeth as they state him the prophecies of his future. Macbeth takes the prophecies as a sign of ambition and the desire of achieving those prophecies. What is unsuspected …show more content…

McCandless views his life as pointless and not enjoyable, that there is more than a suburban lifestyle and American materialism. Christopher decides by choice to reject the lifestyles that his parents had laid down for him. He detaches himself from his family, leaving behind his parents and the upper middle-class suburban setting in which he was raised. As well as, donating his college savings to charity, abandoning his car in the desert and burning his paper money on the desert floor. McCandless's energy, vision and arrogance drives to kill his perspective of life. Ultimately leading him to leave the nurtured world he was raised in to gain new viewpoint of what life is and what it could be for him. It was up to Chris to leave behind the safe environment his parents had raised him in, it was his decision and his control that drove him to do such questionable actions. He had chose to give up what was made for him; leave behind college money that could have given him a great education, to abandon his car that could have led him to a new beginning and burn his money that was his source of income. Christopher McCandless had control of what he owned, and decided himself to continue with life they way he wanted it to be and with the way he viewed the world …show more content…

Although Macbeth is stricken with guilt after committing the murder of Duncan, he does not learn from his mistake. But rather continues, hiring two murders to kill Fleance and Banquo. As well as seeking revenge upon Macduff and his family, depicting more of free will. Macbeth by choice had ambition of completing such murderous actions, that the witches had awakened. Macbeth succumbs to pressure himself and indulge in such terrible crime, that his actions were all of his own free

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