ATKM CCQC 2
How is Jack’s
philosophy on life evolving?
Jack’s
philosophy began to change drastically when he learned about Anne’s affair with
Willie Talos. Anne was a girl that jack
had an extensive and complex past with, as we learned throughout chapter
6. Jack had known Anne Stanton since a very early
age. They had countless memories
together. “And always there was Anne
Stanton”. (380) They played together
when they were little and swam together and played tennis together, until it
turned into a romantic relationship when they got older. “Then there came a time when the nights were
Anne Stanton…. That began the summer
when I was twenty-one and Anne Stanton was seventeen”. (381) They nearly made love one time, but ended up
not because the parents had returned home, and because of some doubts Jack
had. As you can see, Jack and Anne’s
relationship has much more of a past than we knew of. When Jack learned that Anne was in a romantic
relationship with Willie, he felt a sense of betrayal, which he was not ready
for. “That was the Anne Stanton whom
Willie Talos had picked out, who had finally betrayed me, or rather, had
betrayed an idea of mine which had had more importance for me than I had ever
realized”. (430-431) This made Jack
rethink everything that had ever happened between him and Anne, in turn, it
made him rethink life as a whole, and his philosophy on life. He claims that Anne never really loved him,
that she just “…had a mysterious itch in the blood and he was handy and the
word love was a word for the
mysterious itch.” (431) He had convinced
himself that Anne was never a part of his life, that the words Anne Stanton had
no meaning. From these thoughts, he
created his new philosophy on life. “First,
that you cannot lose what you have never had.
Second, that you are never guilty of a crime which you did not commit.
So there is innocence and a new start in the West, after all. If you believe the dream you dream when you
go there.” (434)
We can also see a shift in Jack's outlook on life during his trip west. For then longest time, Jack had been living off the idea of the Great Sleep. For example, when his "marriage" to Lois began to crumble, he decided to deal with his problems by avoiding them, and as the name states, sleep them off. However this changed in chapter 7. On the way home from Long Beach, he briefly meets an old man with an aggressive twitch on the left side of his face. Jack was fascinated by the fact that the man could not control it, and was practically unaware of it. As Jack stated, "The twitch can know that the twitch is all. Then, having found that out, in the mystic vision, you feel clean and free. You are one with the Great Twitch"(439). The twitch can be seen as a way of coping with problems for Jack. With this philosophy, he believes that life is just electrical impulses. He proved his theory by watching one of Adam Stanton's brain surgeries, and proving that a human is just a hunk of meat with a brain.
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