Into the Wild Christopher Johnson McCandless, a young American man who graduated with honors, from Emory University, and dropped out of sight in the summer of 1990. He changed his name to Alexander Supertramp, gave his entire balance of a twenty-four-thousand-dollar savings account to charity, abandoned his car, burned all the cash he had in his wallet, and decided to go into the wild and a new life for himself. He visited many places and ended in Alaska. Some people may believe Chris McCandless went into the wild because he had a mental illness, but I believe the real reason he left was because of literary influences, family problems, and he just happened to be a very stubborn man. He was a unique man with a different plan. There were a few authors that Chris admired. Thoeau, London and Tolstoy were the name of a few authors. Thoeau supported that you can live a simple life in the wilderness, he believed Man could come to terms with his own existence and find a higher purpose. London wrote about the powerful, individualistic men who worked in harsh, …show more content…
He was stubborn in many ways. He refused to listen to others. He disliked authority and refused to follow it. He states “how I feel myself is none of the government's business. F*** their stupid rules” (Krakauer 6). The statement he mentioned showed a bit of his character. For example he worked at McDonalds for some time and Chris had a thing about socks. McDonald's had a rule, like any other restaurant that employees must wear appropriate footwear at all times. Chris would go against the rule. Chris did not like to wear socks, causing an unpleasant smell from him every time. The managers advised him to bathe more often, they would ask if he needed any soap or anything. Those comments from the workers made him mad. Finally, about three weeks later he walked out the door and quit. Chris would simply refuse to let people tell him what to