In the story, The Painted Door by Sinclair Ross, the protagonist, Ann suffers from many mental issues caused by isolation and depression. She is first revealed as a farmer’s wife, insisting her husband, John to stay with her during a storm, but John ultimately makes the decision to leave and visit his father. This act made Ann feel insignificant because she felt that she is “as important as” John’s “father”. This is the not the first time John was not there when Ann needed him most, seven years married and he “scarcely spoke a word” during meals. Ann who is his wife and the only living person within a “2 mile” radius is constantly rejected the simplest freedoms and of all people, her husband.
Sinclair Ross’s “The Painted Door”: An In-Depth Analysis of the Moral Judgement Concerning Ann's Actions When applying the three branches of moral judgment to Sinclair Ross’ “The Painted Door,” it can be proven that Ann, the wife of John, had reasoning behind the acts she committed, later causing the death of her own husband. Throughout the story, Ann shares an extensive amount about her displeasure in her relationship with her husband and shares the struggles of being a farmer’s wife. When given the opportunity, Ann compares her husband to another man, Steven, and further realizes how unhappy she is in her current relationship, leading to an intimate act between the two while John is away at his father’s house. This act was blown out of the
The Glass Castle, by Jeannette Walls, tells a story about a dysfunctional family and the hardships they faced in what we call the journey of life. Throughout the book, Jeannette Walls re-encounters her favorite childhood memories spent with her father, Rex Walls, in spite of Rex's recklessness and destruction onto different parts of her life. Rex is a skilled electrician whose alcoholism often gets to the best of him and his decisions. His profusion of alcohol led his family to poverty because instead of paying off bills and buying necessities for survival, he spends most of their income on liquor. Therefore, his children lacked the simplest things such as food and clothing.
The protagonist in “The Painted Door", Is Ann who is struggling for happiness in her marriage and inner satisfaction, Ann feels that she is simply an adjunct on her husband, Since she is a farmer’s wife, she feels an increasing isolation especially during the winter month. And on the other hand the fire seems to comfort Ann from the sense of isolation and protects her from the cold; the fire also seems to bring her a sense of security. When the silence becomes too much for Ann to bare, the fire seems to help her cope. "It was the silence again, aggressive, hovering. The fire spit and crackled at it."(50)
In Ross’ short stories, “The Painted Door” and “One’s A Heifer” both leading characters prove to be isolated and lonely. Particularly in, “The Painted Door” Ann demonstrates a lonely and isolated character due to her husband, setting and social life. John is a hardworking man who believes his hands are made for work. John tries his best to make Ann happy by providing her with clothes, a house and companionship. He provides Ann with all these things by constantly working, leaving Ann home alone.
Synthesis Essay In life, human beings are given the gift and curse of free will. We use this free will for trivial everyday choices such as what cereal to eat in the morning or what clothes to wear. Conversely, from time to time every human being comes across crucial life decisions that must be made and ultimately, the decisions we make are completely in our hands, but we should bear in mind the viewpoints of others. Taking into consideration the opinions of others could only benefit us.
In both of his short stories, Ross clearly shows how both of his characters suffer from alienation and loneliness. Particularly, in “ The Painted Door” , Ross shows how Ann is isolated in her marriage, as well as of social events. Ann is a farmer’s wife who lives isolated from civilization because of both the distance between her and her neighbours, as well as the harsh winter weather. Ann is often forced to stay alone, where “ the distant farmstead she could see only served to intensify a sense of isolation” (Ross 289) . This physical separation can be directly linked to social isolation.
London also says, “He should not have built the fire under the spruce tree he should have built it in the open.” (22) which is about to be supported with, “the tree under which he had done this carried a weight of snow on its boughs” (22). These two things is what resulted in the thoughts later mentioned and shows the biggest mistake he could’ve ever made and shows why thinking intelligently is a perfect thing to know and to have the knowledge to prevent the error in the future. Emotional control also helps in situations better than physical needs because of “Sea Devil” By Arthur Gordon, the guy after getting tanked by the noose tied around his wrist to the rope to his fishing net which caught a jumping ray and being stuck underwater while trying to get out desperately, Gordon mentions, “he had some heart left but not enough” (36). Having some heart left is enough for you to survive, having calm emotions will help you live as the man who survived this encounter.
Heart vs. Mind Synthesis Essay Heart vs. mind is one of the most common yet complex internal conflicts of man. Shakespeare’s being one of the most well-renowned authors and playwriters of all time, his literature would mainly consist of the theme heart vs. mind. With this theme of heart vs. mind being internal, it would start to conflict the character in difficult times. There’s a saying that goes, “the heart wants what the heart wants” and this includes going against what’s good for you or your mind.
To better understand each of those perspectives, the quote will be applied to each perspective starting with biopsychological. Biopsychology is the perspective of psychology that focuses on our brain and nervous system. This perspective also explains how biology affects our behavior and says that the cause of a behavior is our brain. Applying the quote to the biopsychological perspective would explain that the chicken would cross the road because its brain sent electrical impulses down to its feet. This caused the muscles in the chicken’s legs to propel it forward and thus cross to the other side of the road.
Like other specialty in nursing, a GCNS has a few key roles to perform. One of the key roles that a GCNS needs to fulfil is to mentor and clinically educate junior nursing staff with evidence-based practice in evaluating and using research finding to implement best practice of care with the patient and their families; and another one is to collaborate and participate in the interdisciplinary care of the aging population which is the most fundamental practice of a GCNS (Conley, Burket, Schumacher, Lyons, DeRosa, & Schirm, 20). A nursing profession requires a continuing professional development in order to maintain a high standard of care. These can be done by participating to an ongoing nursing education and professional development that will
There is only one approach in psychology that studies thoughts, feelings and behaviour. The biological approach believes that the way we are is due to our genetics and physiology. They believe that the activity going on our nervous system’s is what affects the way we think, feel and behave (Sammons, 2009). The physiology in the biological approach looks into how the brain functions. The brain is a very complicated machine as such, the brain is what controls our every move, every feeling and every action.
However, due to the limitation of skills, most of the researches done are not well designed. A main limitation of psychology as a field of study is that it never captures the nature of consciousness (Willig, 2013), as human mind is bound up with meanings and interpretations which differ from one individual to another
Time is one of the most basic elements of life: Humans live in the present, dwell in the past, and fear the future. Life is just a constant and consistent march towards the end, an end that is forever unknown. Time, though, for all it dictates, is nothing more than a human construct. The idea that everything exists in a neat line and that all events happen from start to finish is nothing more than a common figment of imagination. One may argue that this linear idea is the foundational problem with humanity.
INTRODUCTION Have you ever thought on how people explain about behaviour? How do we know when learning process has occurred? Learning is permanent change that happened in the way of your behaviour acts, arises from experience one’s had gone through. This kind of learning and experience are beneficial for us to adapt with new environment or surrounding (Surbhi, 2018). The most simple form of learning is conditioning which is divided into two categories which are operant conditioning and classical conditioning.