You climb up the ladder to the high dive. Your heart is pounding and you’re going through the infinite possibilities of what could go wrong. You could hit your head on the board, your swim trunks fall off when you hit the water, or you belly flop. With all these possibilities, why even consider jumping? You’re perfectly safe on the ground with your friends. But you decide you’re going to risk it and jump anyway. The definition of courage can be interpreted in different ways, because different people find different things frightening. For some people, jumping off the high dive could be a simple task, and for others, they wouldn’t even consider climbing up the ladder. Courage must do with risk for reward. If there is no risk or fear, then there …show more content…
For instance, moral courage or physical courage. Moral courage is when an individual makes a statement and stands with his statement regardless of the backlash or other people’s opinions on the topic. Physical courage is when someone places themself or something of value on the line in order to receive something else of greater value in return, whether that be a physical object, praise, or honor. Both types require someone to place themselves, something, or their well-being, in a position for it to be lost, which is what makes it so frightening. To have courage is to have the ability to make a tough decision regardless of all negative possible …show more content…
The Trojan war lasted 10, and his journey, another 10. Back home, on the Island of Ithaca, his wife Penelope, awaited his return. Over the course of the vicennia, various suitors accumulated to claim Penelope has their wife to replace Odysseus in his absence. Upon his return, Odysseus was not pleased with the suitors and before confronting his wife, conjured up a plan with his son, Telemachus, and his servant, Eumaeus. They planned to kill every suitor. It was a brutal fight, but they did not let up. Odysseus showed courage by standing his ground while risking his life to fight off dozens of men to reclaim his wife, his kingdom, and his