Tuesday, January 17, 2017

Wild



                                                                       The Final Journey

By: Elysha Charyk

After reading Wild by Cheryl Strayed, and analysing it through three different perspectives, applying it to the archetypal literary theory, provided the most insight.  Applying the archetypal theory provided the most insight because you really had to think about what was happening.  Wild was about someone going on journey in hopes of rediscovering the old her before she had lost her mother and turned to drugs, but it ended up being about much more than what was just written on the back of the book.


Image result for wild book


It was about girl, who lost her mother and took a turn for the worse.  She had no family around, and her stepfather was busy with his new family, and she turned to drugs after the divorce with her husband.  She hit rock bottom in her life and wanted to change, she wanted to become the person that she once was, before her mother had passed away.  The hike of The Pacific Crest Trail, was meaningful to her in a way that she can be by herself and think about her thoughts, and also enjoy the hike.  Along her hike she met people who really helped her get through the tough parts of hiking, that she wasn’t prepared for.


There aren’t many people in this book, and when there are people they aren’t in the story for long, so you really have to think about who are allies, the enemies and how this story follows the pattern of a hero’s journey. Without really thinking about the book, and paying attention to the details, I never would have known that Strayed’s backpack was her enemy just by the name that she gave it “monster”.

Thursday, November 3, 2016

The Hero's Journey

                                    

                                     The Ups and Downs of Hiking the Pacific Crest Trail

By: Elysha Charyk

The hero’s journey, is a concept that was developed by Joseph Campbell. The hero’s journey is where a man or woman decide to set out on an epic quest to find one’s self or prove their worth. Like any journey the hero, must pass through these steps just like anyone would, when we meet the hero and then the call to adventure. In the stage the call to adventure, this is when the hero decides to embark on the adventure.

Cheryl Strayed meets the characteristics necessary for it to be considered a hero’s journey. Her mother passes away, her father is absent in her life, she is getting divorced, and now she is becoming a drug addict. She knows that in order to save herself, and become the person that she once was, she needs to hike the Pacific Crest Trail in order to find herself once again.

The hero’s journey starts with the ordinary world, where we meet our hero, and the problems that are going on. The author knows that her life is going south ever since her mom died. Her family is very distant, and busy with their own lives. She cheats on her husband, which leads her to do drugs with him, which ultimately leads to her divorce. Strayed knew that she only had one choice and that was to answer the call to adventure, and to hike the PCT trail. At the very beginning of her hike, before she even starts, she reaches the refusal of the call, she has doubts about actually being able to hike the PCT trail for three months without much training and is thinking that it’s not the best idea, but then she decides to push through her doubts and to start hiking. Along her journey she meets many allies and enemies. One enemy that she faces is backpack that she calls “monster", I believe this to be one of her enemies, because during her hike it causes her many problems due to the fact that she’s hiking alone and has to carry everything on her own. Albert one if the hikers that she met, had commented on her pack. “Jiminy Cricket,” Albert drawled when he saw Monster. “What you got in there, girly-o? Looks like everything but the kitchen sink.”(Strayed, 93) Strayed was on her own so it looked like her had more stuff then the rest of them. Later on she met up with Albert, and some other people that she had met on the trail, and he helped her remove some of the unnecessary weight that she had. “Looks to me like you could stand to lose a few things,” he said. “Want some help?” “actually,” I said, smiling ruefully at him, “yes”.”(Strayed, 106)

The next stage that the author came across is the ordeal, this stage happens near the middle of the story, when the hero confronts death, or faces his or her greatest fear. At this point in the story the author is walking through a desert “I spent the morning weaving my way through dry creek beds and bine-hard gullies, pausing to sip water as seldom as I could.”(Strayed, 191) Strayed was hiking a desert in a very hot and dry part of California where the temperature was already in the triple digits.  There was a water halfway through her hike and she already running out of water, not even close to the water. Trying to preserve her water until she reaches the next water source. “I forced myself not to drink the last two until I had the water tank in sight and by 4:30 there it was: the stilted legs of the burned fire lookout on a rise in the distance.”(Strayed, 193) “It wasn’t until I got up close that I saw they were tiny scraps of water… They said in various ways, but they all bore the same message: NO WATER.”(Strayed, 194) Now Cheryl Strayed only half way though her hike left with only two ounces of water, walking in desert, where the temperature is in the triple digits, she continued to hike.  She later found a dirty pond that had some water, and pumped it so that later on she could filter the water, and put an iodine pill in so that the water was safe enough to drink. I believe that his was a turning point for her in her hike, because if she could get through this obstacle, then she would be able to get through any other obstacle that came her way in order to fish the hike.

At one point during her hike she comes across a fox “This was his world. He was certain as the sky. “Fox,” I whispered… He raised his fine-boned red head, but remained standing… “Come back,” I called lightly and then suddenly shouted, “MOM! MOM! MOM! MOM!” I didn’t know the word was going to come out of my mouth until it did. And then, just as suddenly, I went silent, spent.”(Strayed, 144) I believe that at this point, because a fox is a spirit animal, that maybe she felt a connection with the fox and that the fox could possibly be her mother watching over her. I believe that this is very symbolic to the story because it means that she is not entirely alone.


Sunday, October 16, 2016

The Journey of The Pacific Crest Trail



                                               The Decision That Started It All

By:Elysha Charyk

Wild is a story that navigates us through the life of the author after losing her Mother, when she was only 22 years old.  In the beginning she starts to explain the process of planning her hike of the Pacific Crest Trail, which I believe that in the long run she will discover things about herself that she didn’t know. 

Throughout the story Cheryl Strayed, navigates us through the ups and downs that she has had to face in her life.  Which I think that we can all agree that everyone has gone through ups and downs in life.  I know when I was younger I had lost my grandma, even though it’s not the same as losing your mother, the person who brought you into this world, but I could relate too how she was feeling.



This quote really stood out to me because I think it’s very inspirational. This is a very inspirational quote because I believe that, she used the strength that she gained to help her through her mother’s death, to help her through the hard times of hiking the Pacific Crest Trail.
This story is easy to relate too, and very easy to sympathize with this author.  She goes into much detail about her hike on the PCT, and everything that happened in her life, that helped her become the person that she used to be back before her mother passed away.

At the beginning of the story she starts off with her, her mother and, her stepfather going to the doctor’s to find out what’s wrong with her mother.  When they find out that her mother has lung cancer, and because the doctor’s found it too late there was nothing that they could do, and she was given one year to live.  Her mother died just after a few months, which made me think about my grandma when, she was in the hospital.  Also after her mother had passed away she thought that because she was older, she had to take over the responsibilities because no one else would.  “I couldn’t leave Minnesota.  My family needed me.  Who would help Leif finish growing up? Who would be there for Eddie in his loneliness? Who would make Thanksgiving dinner and carry on our family traditions? Someone had to keep what remained of our family together.  And that someone had to be me.  I owed at least that much to my mother.”

Her decision to hike the PCT began when her mother passed and, she started to make bad decisions in her life.  After her mother passed away, and she got divorced from her husband, she started dating Joe.  Before she broke up with Joe, she did Heroin, and ended up getting pregnant. “I’m Pregnant,” I said when I came out, tears filling my eyes.  Aimee and I reclined on the bed talking about it for an hour, though there was nothing much to say.  That I would get an abortion was a fact so apparent it seemed silly to discuss anything else.”  After finding out that she was pregnant, and deciding to abort the baby was one of many events that had happened in life that led her to hiking the PCT.  This was just a few the things that helped her in deciding to hike the Pacific Crest Trail.