When Pi’s life is put in serious danger, he has to adjust his wants and needs of many different aspects of his life. Pi was living what he called a perfect life. From spending most of his days with animals to practicing swimming, he learned to love everything about his life. However, things changed when a ship that his entire family on sank in the middle of the Pacific Ocean. Pi was able to escape onto a lifeboat, but had to learn how to adapt to his new and scary circumstances. Instead of freaking out and feeling sorry for himself, Pi learned that if he wanted to survive this horrific accident, he needed to change his wants and needs of his life. He needed to change his lifestyle, his views on religion, his eating habits, and what he …show more content…
Even though Pi was living in the perfect life, the ship sinking caused his whole lifestyle to be flipped upside down. As one can imagine, being alone with a very scary animal in the middle of the Pacific Ocean is extremely terrifying. At the beginning of Part 2, Pi felt very helpless and was extremely scared of his circumstance. “I looked out at the empty horizon. There was so much water. And I was alone. All alone. I burst into hot tears. I buried my face in my crossed arms and sobbed. My situation was patently hopeless” (169). As expected, it takes a lot of time for this big of an adjustment in a person’s life to take place. However once Pi adjusts to this different lifestyle, he becomes very comfortable and is able to calm himself down. He remembers, “I kept myself busy. That was one key to my survival. On a lightboat, even on a raft, there’s always something that needs doing” (190). He then listed a schedule of twenty two different activities that he did every single day. His mindset was if he was able to keep himself busy, which would force himself to stay focused, he would be able to keep himself calm. As a child, Pi’s lifestyle consisted of being able to do whatever he wanted at any given …show more content…
Early on in the book, it was very apparent that Pi took religion very seriously. His childhood, however, was about trying to find that perfect religion for him. Pi said, “I am a Hindu because of a sculptured cones of red kumkum powder and baskets of yellow turmeric nuggets, because of garlands of flowers and pieces of broken coconut, because of the clanging of bells to announce one’s arrival to God” (47). Through Pi’s childhood, he was brought up at a Hindu mostly because of his parents. As a child, one does not usually get to decide what religion he/she is. Instead, one most likely follows his/her parents are. If necessary, a change in religion usually does not happen until adulthood. For Pi, this change happened very early on in his childhood. Pi found Christianity to be incredibly interesting and wanted to be a part of it. When talking to the priest Pi said, “Father, I would like to be a Christian, please.’ ‘You already are Piscine- in your heart. Whoever meets Christ in good faith is a Christian. Here in Munnar you met Christ” (57). Pi was very surprised to find that he was welcomed into Christianity almost immediately. Throughout Pi’s childhood, he bounced around from religion to religion trying to find a perfect match for himself. When Pi was put in a situation when he needed to survive, he had to change how he saw religion. In his
Sense after reading "life of Pi" Pi is a teenager born in India and at the same time believing in Christianity, Islam and Hinduism. His father runs a zoo, so he knows the habits of animals. Frankly speaking, the beginning of this story is not attractive, mixed with a religious belief in a teenager's growth experience. Then the story officially entered into the "fantasy draft". Pi family take boat to move to Canada with their animals, Pi's father wanted to bring the animals to a foreign country in order to sell a good price.
Pi continues his journey by learning how to live in a small space with these animals and even training one of them. In the end Pi reveals another story with people replacing the animals that were on the lifeboat before. Pi had initially used animals which best represented the people who were really in the boat. This showed how throughout the story, since these people were put into a life threatening situation, they had revealed a more primal side. Life of Pi is accompanied with various symbols, with each
Pi’s life changing traumatic event came while aboard a ship with his family. The ship sank and all but himself and few zoo animals survived. Pi lost his family and had to survive under the worst of circumstances. He was without a great supply of food and water. Also, Pi was without a family.
Thus lead Pi to gather up food and head back on his voyage home. The road back to Pi’s somewhat normal life begins after he leaves the uncanny, floating island. Pi has felt many levels of fear and wanting death to come his way but this was the climax of his tolerance for life.
Pi, lost at sea where food and water are severely scarce, puts him down all the way to the bottom of the pyramid of physiological needs. * From the moment the ship sank, all that was on his mind was to find all sources to survive before worrying about anything else. His ethics of being vegetarian and Hindu were clearly disregarded through the savage butchering of all the animals he comes by, which he must do to survive. In the beginning, the first sign of this was when he lost all sense of fear and safety to go on the boat and find sources of water, as he was becoming dehydrated. “Now that the word had popped into my head I couldn’t think of anything else, as if the
There is one moment in the story where all his developed instincts were challenged. He was met with a school of flying fish that would jump out of the water and into the lifeboat. He had wrapped one fish in a blanket and intended to kill it with a hatchet. He could not bring himself to kill this fish with a hatchet, but ultimately cannot go through with it. Pi ends
In Yann Martel's Life of Pi, the story's hero runs into a significant loss of innocence throughout the book. This loss of innocence can be seen in a few different ways in Pi’s life, such as his devoted convictions, his recognition of the world, and his general worldview. Firstly, Pi’s loss of innocence can be seen in his devoted conviction. At the beginning of the novel, Pi may be a sincere follower of three very different religions: Hinduism, Christianity, and Islam.
Not everyone can stand eating or drinking unpleasant substances, survive while being blind, and live next to carnivorous creatures. Pi on the other hand withstands all this misfortune for nearly a year. Additionally, another theme that comes to mind is that survival instincts result in some
Pi’s family makes a decision to move to Canada. During there stay in India, Pi’s father had a zoo and his father taught him about animals. During the trip to India, Pi’s ship that is taking them to India starts sinking. Pi is able to survive and now Pi is alone on a lifeboat in the Pacific Ocean along with some animals and is questioning his survival: “He would come at me like a typical cat, without a sound. Before I knew it he would seize the back of my neck or my throat
Life of Pi takes the reader through Pi’s life and frequently turns back to his faith as a means of survival. As a young child Pi was deeply affected by the way people treated him because of his religious beliefs. Love, the core part of the christian faith, contributed to Pi’s survival during his journey on the lifeboat. During the endeavor on the lifeboat Martel makes various references to the christian religion. Throughout the book as Pi aged he became deeply rooted in the faith.
Pi indicates, “You may be astonished that in such a short period of time I could go from weeping over the muffled killing of a flying fish to gleefully bludgeoning to death a dorado” (Martel 89). This clearly states that Pi is a dynamic character through this time span. At first, his religious values made it hard for him to kill the flying fish, but when the dorado was killed “gleefully” he goes against his religious values. Conclusively, people may think that Pi does not change as a person, but evidently, he is looked upon as a dynamic character after the actions of killing the flying
These realistic events are not the only examples that show Pi ignores all his morals in order to survive and over the course of the book these events can be seen to get more unbelievable. In addition, this progression could relate to the continuous loss of humanity inside of Pi. Most evidently, in Part 2 an almost direct progression to become more and more magical and unbelievable can be found. Beginning with the shipwreck, then along the way, finding another blind man on the vast ocean and finally to come across a floating island
He is unable to understand why the Lord isn’t listening to his prayers and why everything is detrimental to him. Keeping his religious beliefs at sea is very challenging for Pi, this leads him to experience feelings of disbelief towards God. Despite his doubts, Pi continues to pray and practice his religions. He eventually comes to the conclusion that once everything is taken away from him and he is in complete darkness, he will always have his faith. He admits that loving God is difficult, but it’s something he must do if he is to survive his journey across the ocean.
It is easy to see why Yann Martel's 2001 novel, Life of Pi, was widely praised and went on to become an international bestseller. Martel tells a story both striking and unique, the life story of Piscine Patel. When he was growing up in India as the son of a zookeeper, Piscine was teased unmercifully for his name, so he shortened it to Pi, as in the mathematical symbol π. This change of name is only the first of several fascinating changes Pi experiences. Some are more or less under his control, like his pursuit of truth by simultaneously studying Christianity Hinduism, and Islam.