Tim O Brien's The Things They Carried

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Everyone encounters some type of battle or challenge in their lives. Some have to deal with something like passing a class, some with the stress of not knowing when their next meal will be. Some have to cope with the after-effects of the war. All war veterans have to bear the mental weight of the events that occurred while at war, feelings of fear and guilt, and sometimes the thoughts don’t seem to go away. We see this looking through the psychological lens in the book The Things They Carried by Tim O’Brien. Almost everyone will go through a range of reactions after trauma, and most people recover from the symptoms on their own. Those who continue to experience problems may be diagnosed with PTSD. In the chapter “Spin” O’Brien states “the bad stuff never stops happening: it lives in it’s own dimension, replaying itself over and over” (32). This shows that the things that happened at war are …show more content…

They have a lot of pressure and stress from the things they did in the war and carry guilt from it. During a war there will no doubt be death, and it’s a kill or be killed mindset. This wasn’t good enough for O’Brien when he killed a man. After he did so that’s all he could think about and Kiowa tried reasoning with him saying “No sweat man. What else could you do?” (126). However this did nothing to make O’Brien feel better so again Kiowa tries advising him explaining to him that is was “Nothing anybody could do...Tim, it’s a war” (126). He was trying to rationalize telling him that it was either going to be him or the boy. He did this by asking if he would like to trade places with him. All O’Brien could do though was sit there and stare at he body as he described it over and over. He was thinking about a good person the boy must have been and about what life would have been like for him if it wasn’t for this war. He couldn’t get over his guilty conscience that he took that away from him. The guilt doesn’t end

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