The Path Imagine a child waking up in the hospital with no recollection of how he ended up there. Alone in the room with no parents or nurses around he may instantly feel alone. Not even able to remember his name, he cries out for a nurse, but when a nurse does not appear he gets out of the hospital bed and goes to look for one on his own. In a confused state he approached a nurse in his gown. He asked her his name and she replied, “Billy! Get back to your room! You are not in a state to be walking around!”. Billy Rendal recollection of anything was nothing. After being sent back to his room he wanted to get out of there. He unlocked the building window, looked down and jumped. Falling down, he groaned in pain. When he landed, everyone shrieked in fear. The kids screamed at the top of their lungs and ran. From that moment he did not …show more content…
What happens when a parent shuns a child? What happens when a parent abandons them? The profound encounters this has on a youngster is something that is discovered across Victor's abdication of obligation towards his creation. His recoiling in horror and next escaping from it aid to craft a sense of despondent dissonance in the being, something that becomes widened after the being fully understands his own anguish and forlorn condition in the world. It is across Victor's deeds whereby the being is repudiated the modeling of nurturing and care, and rather fully grasps the meaning of being betrayed alongside alongside the damage of ruptured bonds. It could be compared to nature vs. nurture, Left on his own, lacking each nurturing, the being becomes a monster. Lacking nurturing, he kills a youngster, Victor's friend, and Victor's wife. By the conclusion of the novel, he finds meaning merely in tormenting Victor. Victor fails to be accountable and fulfill his act as a nurturing impact for his conception, and the monster is the