Direct Characterization Of Winnie The Pooh

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“I have a rumbly in my tumbly” (Milne). This quote is one of the most identifiable sayings from Winnie the Pooh. The Winnie the Pooh characters are some of the most iconic cartoon characters from anyone's childhood, however, these characters are not without their issues. A.A. Milne, the author of Winnie the Pooh, unknowingly wrote about many mental disorders corresponding to certain characters' personalities. Pooh, the main character, is a friendly, chubby bear who is always kind to his friends. Pooh is extremely fixated on honey, and his need to obtain honey in any way he can leads him to engage in problematic situations, such as getting stuck in honey jars, therefore a very sticky situation for Pooh. Pooh also obsesses over anything honey …show more content…

Owl’s friends will always come to him for advice or for help with something educational. Owl believes he is very smart and well-educated, and so do his friends. But this is not the case. Owl’s knowledge is very random and doesn’t align with anything he can use to help his friends. He thinks he's giving the right advice to them, but always goes wrong or it doesn’t work. Owl’s advice is very convoluted and never makes sense. Although Owl is portrayed as the brains of the bunch, Owl has a hard time reading and spelling out words and rarely gives out the right advice for his friends in the Hundred Acre Wood. Owl shows very high intelligence in the books but is unable to read, spell, or write correctly, which shows signs of dyslexia. Dyslexia is where someone can have normal or high intelligence, but has a hard time reading, spelling, and writing at a beginner level (Mayo Clinic). Owl shows signs of having a hard time with all of those, especially with spelling. Most of Owl’s advice to his friends is confusing or wrong. This can be because he gets mixed up a lot from his dyslexia, although he has all intentions of saying the right things for his friends so he can help. “Owl saw that Christopher Robin said he was going to ‘s-c-h-o-o-l.’ To Owl’s eyes, that spelled ‘skull.’ And that, Owl added, spelled danger for their friend” (Milne). Owl mixes up his words when he reads and misspells many words. In this …show more content…

Christopher Robin has an extremely imaginative mind. All the characters in Winnie the Pooh exist because of Christopher’s overactive imagination. He created all of these characters, and all of their personalities relate back to something he feels in the ‘real’ world. Christopher Robin is the only human in the Hundred Acre Wood and he plays with these stuffed animals he made up in his mind. All of the characters can represent a specific feeling Christopher Robin may have, such as Eeyore with his depression, or Piglet with his anxiety. The whole story of Winnie the Pooh is based on Christopher Robin’s imagination and how real he believes these characters and stories are. Christopher Robin shows signs of schizophrenia. Schizophrenia is having a very real imagination to the point where you believe in the imaginative scenario or characters you have made. Schizophrenia is also experienced when someone has many hallucinations and delusions that mess with their daily life (Mayo Clinic). He has a faulty perception of what is reality and what isn’t, and he usually likes to stick to his imaginative world, the Hundred Acre Wood. Seems to be Christopher Robin can’t differentiate reality and fantasy. Every character in the Winnie the Pooh book comes from Christopher Robin's hyper-realistic imagination and