Scared of the Monsters Inside of Our Heads Up in the northern part of America, the legend of monster still haunts tribal people to this day. This monster was known for coming out during the darker time of the year, to kill and eat any person it could find. It was denoted that it had the face of a deer, but the body of a human. As piles of snow softened the forest floor, its big thumps could be heard resonating through the woods. When the tribe members heard about its whereabouts, people immediately became frantic. For there was nothing that could be done when the monster ransacked the village and ate all the villagers. However, one day, a brave man decided that he was going to slay the monster. He and a group of villagers devised a trap to …show more content…
While surely this monster seems quite fictional, the amount of recurrence of the legend only makes it seem more concrete. In Franz Kafka Metamorphosis, a normal man transforms into an insidious bug. The main character, Gregor, faces a change in lifestyle and must spend his days in confinement. Even though Gregor does not try to harm anyone, people in the story get fed up by his issues and fail to discern he still possess human qualities. For example, when Gregor listens to his sister play violin, how “ was he an animal if music could captivate him so?” (Kafka 73). Again, in the story of the Wendigo, the wendigo’s metamorphosis was brought out by a man who was so consumed by hunger in the winter that he would resort to cannibalism. This change from human to monster created a lumming burden on villagers, and people decided they had enough. At some point, villagers banded together to trap the monster and roast it on an open fire for days. The same reasoning was made by Gregor’s sister who started to believe that the family “can’t [could not] carry on like this… [and that they] have to try and get rid of [the monster] it.”