Themes In Into The Wild, By Jon Krakauer

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Into the Wild
Being in the wild is a great experience, it opens doors and bridges inside one’s mind. It allows people to be inspired, to find hope. It gives people a sense of direction and helps people conquer challenges that they never thought they would achieve. The example left behind by a young man named Christopher McCandless in Into the Wild by Jon Krakauer demonstrates how living on the road and surviving off the land can prove to be a pilgrimage and help enlighten others to go out in search of their own philosophical ideals. Whether it is being away from home and travel all across America, not settling down in one place, but staying long enough in one place and have an affect on someone else, or being with your family hiking up a mountain and be able to look at the scenery that nature brought forth.
People often misjudge the wild, and feel that they can survive with little to no equipment. Such As Christopher Johnson McCandless, where he had strongly in his mind that he was going to Alaska. he goes, but he does with nothing but his car and his .22 Rifle. He had graduated From Emory University- which has an acceptance rate of 26.8 percent, it’s …show more content…

In chapter 8, there were numerous comments of people stating that what he did was pointless and some calling him a “kook.” A kook is a crazy or eccentric person, that sounds like an accurate portrait of him considering the fact that they weren’t in his shoes, they didn’t understand how he felt. For instance if I was to go skydiving, I would have that one family member to call me crazy for jumping out of a moving plane that is suspended in air. That is how the people who commented with negativity are. McCandless was only sixteen years old when he climbed Mt. Mckinley, which makes him the third youngest person to climb the peak of the highest mountain in the whole continent. That sounds like an accomplishment more than it does an action to be later called a

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