Fear. It’s instilled in everyone. Everyone is scared of something, whether it’s the dark or heights. What most people realize after going on a high rollercoaster or going through a haunted house is that fear is the larger obstacle than the original one. It is harder to get over being scared than it is to do the element that scares you. While reading The Alchemist by Paulo Coelho the main character named Santiago faces many things that he is scared of but learns along the way that the only thing to fear, is fear itself. First, the things that scare Santiago may not seem scary to others but everyone is different. Santiago gets scared when he sells all of this sheep to follow something he has only dreamed of. He gets scared when he visits the
While people come in all shapes in sizes, underneath it all we are still flesh and blood. Even if people have a different skin color or orientation we are all humans living on this earth. This idea, no this fact was really driven home to me when I was traveling with my family around the world. We met people in Thailand, Cambodia, Laos, and Ecuador and though they looked and talked different they had the same needs, concerns and wants. I found a quote by Santiago, a boy in The Alchemist, written by Paulo Coelho that really explains this better than I ever could, “I have inside me the winds, the deserts, the oceans, the stars, and everything in the universe.
When it comes to fear in the book The Alchemist is seen so many times. You start out with Santiago talking about how he was telling his stories to the Merchants daughter “He went on telling stories about his travels, and her bright, Moorish eyes went wide with fear and surprise. ”(p.6) this young lady had fear from just the stories that Santiago was telling. She did not fear because it was insanely scary but because it was different. A little later in the book there is more fear when Santiago is talking to The Crystal Merchant.
Coelho promotes this thought of change numerous times throughout the story through the use of literary techniques. However, two of the strongest examples of this are through his usage of metaphors and foreshadowing during Santiago’s quest for the treasure. A metaphor is defined as a comparison between two things that are otherwise unrelated. For example the text says, “The desert is a capricious lady, and sometimes she drives men crazy.” The author used this to define the importance and how dangerous the desert can be for travelers.
The poem “My Fear” by Lawrence Raab, discusses fear and how it is seen in the perspective of the victim. The personification is when the speaker in the poem refers to fear as a man and calls it “Mr. Fear”. Raab put the personification here to emphasize the feeling a person receives when they are frightened. It’s also used to create more vivid imagery and a situation similar to real life for the reader. This in turn allows the reader to be able to read the poem more in-depth.
Conquering our fears. In the book A Wrinkle in Time, the main character, Meg, has to overcome her self doubt and insecurities to save her and her friends. Meg has to overcome fear,doubt, anger, and hate to defeat the thing that took her father away from her. She has to learn to be self-reliant instead of always wanting someone to do the work for her, and if she fails the whole universe might be taken over by a dark evil thing. Meg’s father was a physicist and when he didn't come home from his job one night his family started to worry, he was eventually pronounced missing.
In the novel “The Alchemist” by Paulo Coelho there is a young shepherd named Santiago who is in search for his personal legend. Santiago’s personal legend is to find the treasure at the pyramids. Throughout his journey, there are a lot of emotions especially the emotion fear. Santiago encountered a lot of challenges like crossing the desert, being in a war and turning himself into the wind. He learned the different levels of fear; fearing fear, being in fear, and overcoming fear.
Home is where people get comfort, but that’s not the case for Aphonso or just “Zo”. He lives in an unsafe community where there are burglars. When the burglars are at his front doorstep he is terrified. He doesn’t know what to do, but eventually he stands up for himself and fights his fear. In the short story “Fear” by Terry Trueman, Zo, the protagonist, is completely terrified in his house, alone, but he has a spark of confidence to stand up for himself and take action.
… The boy was shaking with fear, but the alchemist helped him out of the tent. … the alchemist continued, “usually the threat of death makes people a lot more aware of their lives.”” (Coelho 140 6 8, Coelho 142 2) Just like before Santiago is afraid and doesn't know what to do in a situation of adversity. But he does not give up he perseveres and developes
The Hidden Fear “Our spirit is often led astray by its own delusions; it is even frightened by its own work, believes that it sees what it fears, and in the horror of the night sees at last the objects which itself has produced”(Voltaire). In Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein, Victor Frankenstein, The man who studied for years before he used his newfound science and technology to invent and create the first controlled human invention. Otherwise known as the “Monster” or “Creature” After the experiment Victor was completely and utterly terrified of the creature he just made. He cannot fathom how horrid and scary it truly is. It was so awful he ran out of his own house.
Everything you’ve ever wanted is on the other side of fear. As this anonymous quote elucidates, fear acts as a barrier that essentially traps us in our comfort zone, limiting our experiences and holds one back from achieving his or her potential. In The Alchemist by Paulo Coelho, the protagonist must overcome his own fear through obstacles that he comes across as fear diverts one from their purpose. To begin with, Santiago displays his fears throughout the book, and these fears are what hinders him from achieving his Personal Legend. Santiago displays an immense terror of failure.
Fear is an unpleasant emotion caused by the belief that someone or something is dangerous, likely to cause pain, or a threat. In Dracula, by Bram Stoker, Stoker creates an atmosphere and setting that causes fear and dread throughout the story. Jonathan travel to Transylvania and the evil feeling causes fear, Lucy’s tomb causes fear in the people in town, and the on the way to the castle and where it’s at causes fear. First, Jonathan Harker travels to Transylvania for a business trip and ends up trapped in Count Dracula’s castle. On his way up to the castle, Jonathan gets offered objects to protect himself against evil.
Since the dawn of humans, we have always had fear, whether it be in the form of actual life-threatening situations, or man-made fabrications to scare us. The root of the fear generated from invented tales could be stated as just humans being scared of “monsters” or the “unknown”, but it’s much more complicated. We as humans are afraid of what we don’t understand in any sense, we are given a set idea of the laws of our world that the world's itself needs to follow, and when presented with another addition to our beliefs, we instead fear from it, believing it to not be true or some sort of outer force affecting our laws. History has shown us this, and stories in general have demonstrated it, from “The Fall of the House of Usher” to
Humans crave horror to re-establish our feelings of normalcy. We let our fears cover our bodies. We’re too afraid to face them. Our emotions are what hold us together. Every emotion is different from the one before.
In this brief reflection, I will discuss two main concepts examined in Chapter Two, by David Rapoport in the article Fear and Trembling: Terrorism in Three Religious Traditions. The first concept, martyrdom, will explain how the Assassins and ISIS are similar and the second concept, their main objective of each group, will examine how they differ. Similarity First, Rapoport (1984) describes the Assassins as individuals who deeply believed in martyrdom. The individuals carrying out the martyr acts coined themselves as the fidayeen to release themselves from guilt and sins and a reassurance that they would enter paradise (Rapoport, 1984, p. 59). As a comparison to ISIS, McCants (2015) discusses in Chapter Six, how British jihadists used martyrdom to recruit more individuals to join “the cause” (p. 130).
The one fear that made your whole body shakes uncontrollably to the point where you couldn’t take it anymore. Now imagine having to live with that fear every single day of your life. Imagine being a child whose biggest fear is whether or not he is going to starve to death.