Confinement Kills People of the world have a situation on their hands. The situation is considered armed and dangerous. It has multiple confirmed kills. The situation, better known as Isolation, attacks the mind and body of its victims. In the short story “The Yellow Wallpaper,” Charlotte Stetson writes a story about a woman name Jane treated for postpartum depression. On the contrary, in the article “How Extreme Isolation Warps The Mind” Michael Bond describes many different circumstances in which isolation engulfs the body and mind of people in close quartered areas. Isolation slowly creeps in and attacks the health of one’s body and mind in a confined area. While confined in a room, isolation depletes Jane’s health. In “The Yellow Wallpaper” Jane suffers from postpartum depression. Her husband John, who is a doctor, decides to exile her to a room with pale yellow walls. Overtime, Jane begins to obsess over the wall and its features. She mentions, “The patterns, the yellow, the slight coat of dust, and the roughness of the yellow wallpaper.” Jane becomes completely infatuated. She begins to spend all of her time touching, watching, and talking about the wall. Jane once hated the wallpaper. Confinement within this room triggered her obsession. Her obsession with the wall drives …show more content…
Isolation in a confined area can cause mental health problems even if it is a place where a person wants to be. “Montalbini spent a year underground in a NASA space mission simulator, only to believe he had been down there for two hundred and nineteen days” (Bond). Montalbini’s isolation caused him to lose track of time: an early indicator that he was losing his mind. As well as loss of time, “Montalbini reported periods of mental instability” (Bond). Montalbini differed from Sarah and Jane because he loss track of time. However, all three of them experienced mental