Self Control In The Yellow Wallpaper

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“The Yellow Wallpaper” is a short story by Charlotte Perkins Gilman, published in 1892, and written from the first-person perspective of a woman living in that era. The narrator is bound to a room in an attempt to treat her depression, after recently having a child. Unable to express herself in any other way, she begins journaling her experience spending time in the presence of the room’s wallpaper, with which the existence of slowly takes a toll on her mental state of mind. I believe the purpose of this story was to convey that limiting, restricting, or confining a person can only make something like depression worse, and lead to a fixation on or obsession over someone or something. This is a concept I not only understand, but have experienced firsthand. After moving into a “colonial mansion” for the summer, John, the narrator’s husband husband and a practical physician, believes the best way to treat her depression is to use rest cure by confining her to a room until she gets over her “temporary nervous depression-a slight hysterical tendency” with self-control. “John does not know how much I really suffer. He knows there is no reason to …show more content…

Obsession starts to set in and the narrator starts to notice changes in the wall’s pattern, mostly at night. “I don’t sleep much at night, for it is so interesting to watch developments, but I sleep a good deal during the daytime.” From its unescapable odor, to its shifting lines, it’s troublesome. The narrator compares the changes to “a woman stooping down and creeping about behind that pattern.” Eventually, she begins to believe there is an actual woman behind the pattern of the wall, and this wall woman is the one who is responsible for changing it up. “She just takes hold of the bars and shakes them hard.” The wallpaper is her confinement and the woman behind the pattern is herself trying to break free of that

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