"Most fears of rejection rest on the desire for approval from other people" (Harvey Mackay). In Hosseini's novel, The Kite Runner, the protagonist, Amir longed for the approval from his father. As a result, he made Ali and his best friend, Hassan get kicked out from their house. Amir allowed his urge for approval to guide his actions. Seeking the approval of a person can make one make decisions that they'll regret in the future. As an adolescent, Amir wanted his father to notice him. They lived in the same house but it felt like there were in separate worlds. Amir's father was known for doing many great things in his life time and he hoped that his son would be the splitting image of him. As years went by, Amir's father saw that his son was more like his deceased wife, loving to read and write, rather than hunting and sports. Amir tried for years to meet his father's standards but it just wasn't who he was. When the kite running competition came around, Amir had made his father proud by winning first place. As a result, his father threw him a party. At the party was when Amir had made a decision that would haunt him do …show more content…
In Amir's mind, felt that he should lessen both Hassan's and his own suffering. He also knew that someone had to leave and that the person wasn't him. By letting his urge for his father's approval guide his actions, Amir waited to the next morning to planted money and his wristwatch in Ali's and Hassan's living quarters. When Amir's father confronted Hassan about the stolen gifts, he admitted to it, due to his loyalty to Amir. As a result, Ali had decided that him and Hassan should leave. Amir didn't realize he effects of his actions until he saw how his father reacted to Ali's decision. Looking out his bedroom window, Amir said, "That was when I understood the depth of the pain I caused, the blackness of grief I had brought onto everyone" (Hosseini
Even though Amir’s lofty ambitions send the kite flying on that spring day, Hassan’s practicality and unwavering loyalty helps Amir win his father’s affections for that month. Even though Amir believes that he can soar above the truth in his world, he and Hassan both remain grounded, forced into oppression by their
Hassan wanted things to go back to normal, but ironically, Amir, the one who had wronged him, refused. Hassan offered forgiveness, redemption, but Amir was too swamped in guilt to recognize it. In the end, Amir decided to get
In Khaled Hosseini’s novel The Kite Runner, the main character Amir has many concerns about his world. This may have something to do with the fact that even though Amir is a teenager, he still demonstrates many childlike characteristics. Amir’s father, Baba, does not give Amir the time of day which in turn, causes Amir to strive for Baba’s attention and acceptance. Amir is concerned that Baba does not love him or even think of him as a suitable son for their family.
He also pays more attention to what his father has to say. As a result of this, their relationship deepens. Amir’s adjustment represents a way to overcome a conflict with somebody else and this can be applied to everyday
You bring me shame.” Amir was never really that close with his father, not up until a few months ago. He finally had the relationship he had always wanted with his father, until that one question ruined it. His father thought of Ali and Hassan like family, so Amir figured the only way to get rid of them was to mess up, just as he did. He did the only thing he thought to do at this point, frame Hassan.
Everyone has heard the saying “nobody is perfect” and it is true we are all humans, we all make mistakes sometimes, but to what extent does someone stop forgiving when they have endured all the hardship a person gives them after they have been forgiven several times. There is a certain point in life when some people do not deserve to be forgiven because every time that person is forgiven, that person takes advantage it because that person knows they will be forgiven. There is one very prominent character in a story who fits the reason of why some people do not deserve forgiveness, especially when they've been given multiple chances to do the right thing. That person is Amir from the book the Kite Runner by Khaled Hosseini.
This is once again another attempt to relieve guilt from Amir’s life. Amir tries to become a good father figure for Sohrab. Amir’s father was rarely proud and happy for
The author provides the reader with mixed feeling about Amir. In his childhood in Kabul Amir comes off as heartless person. He is this because he has done evil stuff in his life. In the beginning of the story something bad happens to Hassan, Amir says,¨In the end, I ran.
In the novel the Kite Runner by Khaled Hosseini he illustrates the sacrifice one gives for love. Over the course of the novel Amir, Hassan, and Baba all face dramatic events that shape them to the person they are. Each one of them sacrifice a piece of their own happiness for the one they love. Hassan is loyal to Amir even though in their childhood Amir was not a good friend. Baba sacrifices his life in Afghanistan for Amir to have an education in America.
The saddest part was that Amir was there watching from a distance and was unwilling to help his best friend due to his lack of courage and inability to stand up for himself. Up until adulthood, Amir had to carry the baggage of betraying Hassan by not being there when he most needed him, this guilt tormented him to the point where he moved to America with his dad, Baba, as a way to escape his
The next morning, Amir mirrors an action he committed twenty-six years earlier with a different purpose. He “planted a fist full of crumpled money under a mattress” for Farid’s family to show gratitude and so they would be able to feed their hungry kids (242). As he reminiscences back to the first time he did this, his tone is no longer remorseful and abashed. In fact, the more selfless actions he accomplishes, the more he starts to embrace the changes in his behavior. Amir progresses to forgive himself for getting Hassan and Ali kicked out by counterbalancing it with his selflessness in giving Farid’s family
However, Amir’s selfish ambition of proving his worth to this dad resisted his urge to try to help Hassan as he wants to able to take the kite home safely. Moreover, Amir presumes that his betrayal towards Hassan is like a curse in his life since he will not be able to forgive himself for this deception or free himself from the guilt that has taken over his
His shame for being so selfish and cowardly, while Hassan always was faithful to him. Amir wanted to get rid of Hassan. Therefore, he planted his new watch and some Afghani bills under Hassan’s mattress. He thought Baba would condemn him for this. Although he knew that Amir betrayed him, Hassan said to Baba that he stole the watch and the money.
Amir is the main focus of the novel; it basically starts with his childhood all the way until he’s an adult. He was one of the most wealthy people in Afghanistan, until the Russian’s take over later on. His father, Baba, is very respected by others. Baba never paid much attention to his son, also his honesty with him was very poor. Therefore, Amir would spend most of his childhood with his servant, Hassan.
Thus, glancing towards either direction to make sure that ‘the coast is clear’. He deprives Hassan and Ali from the house they have served faithfully for a long time, thereby stealing the truth from Hassan and depriving them of a home they knew well. Amir is driven by both the greed for his father’s attention and the guilt of being helpless when Hassan was raped. The reason why he couldn’t remain under the same roof as Hassan was because he felt guilty that he hadn’t tried to stop the rape and save his friend. The reason why he couldn’t step in to save his friend was because he was not strong enough and wanted to please his father at any