In the story, “The Things They Carried,” the soldiers in war carry many burdens, from the objects they carry to the grief, stress, and fear the war causes them. To ease the burdens that follow, each soldier has a different means of evading and coping with the war, like religion, dreaming of a loved one, using drugs, or the ultimate escape through death. In the end, they all want to find some meaning behind their experiences, but some things remain unexplainable or unjustifiable. Thus, the burden of the soldiers extends beyond the length of their military service and is something they carry their whole lives.
To begin with, there are many burdens the soldiers bear in war. There is more meaning behind what they carry with them as well as
…show more content…
“There’s a moral here, said Mitchell Sanders” (O’Brien). They want their war experience to teach them something or to mean something. Meaning gives their lives purpose, but Tim tells us throughout the story that morals and meanings are not always present in true war stories. Those unexplainable and unjustifiable things the soldiers couldn’t identify are sometimes never found making it difficult to search for their meaning or purpose. The things that cannot be explained are also altered in the war story they experienced, making it become a story truer than the one they were apart of. A more believable truth to ease the trouble minds trying to recover what they lost in Vietnam. “I want you to feel what I felt. I want you to know why story-truth is truer sometimes than happening-truth” (O’Brien 179). Soldiers experienced things that can only be experienced in the flesh and opening up to the truth can be troublesome to achieve. O’Brien was expressing how sometimes it is easier for the soldiers to tell their stories with less of the burden of remembering the damaging effects of the war. Other times, soldiers would change or reshape them as funny or ironic. “The war was …show more content…
The soldiers physical and emotional beings were weighed down by unexplainable and unjustifiable meaning for their lives, becoming tortured by their own imagination of horror in Vietnam. All these burdens they picked up through the war never left their lives, and extends beyond their military service, becoming something they will carry for the rest of their existence. In the end, the one thing that seemed to bring the soldiers together were telling stories, whether it was about grieving for the dead or remembering who they are now and how they will survive. “We kept the dead alive with stories ... bringing body and soul back together” (O’Brien 69). This explains that stories were used to keep the dead alive, and were possibly life-saving for the dead and the
A storyteller invents comprehensible facts to fill in a story’s missing aspects. O’Brien continues to elaborate by explaining how “The pictures get jumbled; you tend to miss a lot. And then afterward, when you go to tell about it, there is always that surreal seemingness, which makes the story seem untrue, but which in fact represents the hard and exact truth as it seemed” (O’Brien 67). Again, as a soldier, especially in the Vietnam War, it proves difficult to realize what actually occurs and find the ability to remember specific details to completely and precisely retell it some time afterwards. Tim implies imagination’s role when he writes, “The thing about a story is that you dream it as you tell it, hoping that others might then dream along with you, and in this way memory and imagination and language combine to make spirits in the head.
Death Is a Powerful Motivator In “The Things They Carried”, Tim O’Brien, the author, portrays his own experience in the Vietnam War. Although O’Brien fabricated some of the stories and exaggerated some of the parts, the main idea O’Brien wished to display is present. He wanted to allow the reader a view of the war along with the physical burdens and emotional burdens the soldiers carried with them. These burdens effected the soldiers and helped define them as people.
Everyone goes through struggles in their life. Whether it’s being a part of a dysfunctional family or witnessing the terrors of war, people all live through a time in their life when they find themselves surrounded by unpleasant circumstances. In The Things They Carried, Tim O’Brien shares the stories of soldiers in the Vietnam War and the mountains they faced. No matter what war someone fought in, or what kind of soldier they were, everyone carried something. The idea of “carrying baggage” is a way to show each soldier’s internal problems and real-life giants.
In this book Tim O’Brien explains the difference of what he calls “story-truth” and “happening-truth”. “In any war story, but especially a true one, it’s difficult to separate what happened from what seemed to happen. What seems to happen becomes its own happening and has to be told that way” (71). Happening-truth is actual events that happened with real people in a real time. Story-truth may not have actually
Tim O’Brien’s "The Things They Carried" is a short story that explores the experiences of soldiers during the Vietnam War. The story depicts the physical and emotional weight that soldiers carry with them during the war, highlighting the challenges that soldiers face both on and off the battlefield. Through the items that the soldiers carry with them, the story reveals the emotional and physical burdens of war and the masking of emotions because of masculine identity. The story begins with a list of items that the soldiers carry with them, ranging from physical items such as guns and ammunition to intangible items such as fear and guilt.
The book, The Things They Carried by Tim O’brien shows us how a true war story should be told. This book follows a platoon of soldiers fighting in The Vietnam War and reveals the truth about war through their struggles. O’brien argues that “A true war story is never moral. It does not instruct, nor encourage virtue, nor suggest models of proper human behavior, nor restrain men from doing the things men have always done. If a story seems moral, do not believe it.
The Vietnam War, the war that took the lives of many soldiers and left them with emotional wounds and physical scars, while also leaving many innocents to suffer and over two million from both sides to die. In Tim O’Brien’s book, The Things They Carried, we read about the experiences of soldiers during this war and how some died, how some carried grief and guilt until after the war, and how some had to endure physical and mental wounds post-war. In this work of fiction, we get to dive into a deeper understanding of the fictional soldiers who lived through the war Although The Things They Carried is a work of fiction, it coveys truths about the Vietnam war through accounts of fictional characters who experienced the long-lasting impacts and
Throughout Tim O’Brien’s collection of short stories in the book The Things They Carried, Tim forces readers to question whether these stories are true while reading, this is due to Tim telling us to never trust a true war story in the chapter “How To Tell a True War Story”. This is partly because of the outlandish ideas being represented in the stories of war but, also due to the misconceptions caused by war. O’Brien’s goal in writing these stories in this confusing manner of skewed reality, while also telling us they are not true events is to cause the readers to feel unsure about what the truth of war is. To be clear Tim’s truth is not the happening truth, but
“A thing may happen and be a total lie; another thing may not happen and be truer than the truth” (83). The theme of “happening-truth” versus “story-truth” is a constant opposition Tim O’Brien uses to convey his “true war story” to his audience. Many times in the book The Things They Carried, O’Brien lies to the reader to attempt to give the reader realistic events, so they can relate to the emotions O’Brien felt during the Vietnam war. O’Brien makes it clear in the chapter “Field Trip” that a person who has not been to war cannot comprehend what it was like. He uses a fictional character, Kathleen, to be a stand in for the reader; she is innocent and free from the burden of serving in wartime.
The irony in Tim O’Brien’s The Things They Carried is crucial to understanding that the mental burden the soldiers carry are heavier than their physical burdens. Each soldier is required to carry their entire lives on their back throughout their tour in Vietnam. The soldiers carried not only weapons and the means of survival, but individual objects that are unique to them. While the individuality of the tangible objects that each soldier carried is supposed to keep them sane, it is these very objects that provides an even heavier mental burden of guilt and pain that eventually drove them to insanity.
In “The Things They Carried,” we can emotionally relate thanks to the author, Tim O’Brien’s incredible tone, as well as his choice of words. O’Brien is a US veteran who fought in Vietnam. Unfortunately he was discharged after receiving a shrapnel wound in battle near My Lai. He did, however, receive a Purple Heart (Mandell 392). This story focuses on both the physical and emotional burdens that these particular soldiers can and do carry.
The author was writing the story “The Things They Carried” expressed so many thoughts and feelings about what the soldiers had faced, they showed their feelings and duties, life or death, and overall fear and dedication. This story shows the theme of the physical and emotional burdens that everyone is going through in the war. By showing his readers what the soldier’s daily thoughts are and how they handle what is going on around them. Tim O’Brien expresses this theme by using characterization, symbolism, and tone continuously. In the story, physical and emotional burdens plagued several characters as they all had baggage weighing them down.
The True Weight of War “The Things They Carried,” by Tim O’Brien, brings to light the psychological impact of what soldiers go through during times of war. We learn that the effects of traumatic events weigh heavier on the minds of men than all of the provisions and equipment they shouldered. Wartime truly tests the human body and and mind, to the point where some men return home completely destroyed. Some soldiers have been driven to the point of mentally altering reality in order to survive day to day. An indefinite number of men became numb to the deaths of their comrades, and yet secretly desired to die and bring a conclusion to their misery.
“I want you to feel what I felt. I want you to know why story-truth is truer sometimes than happening-truth”(O’Brien 171). In “The Things They Carried” Tim O’Brien describes his experience and many other soldiers experiences in the Vietnam war. This book is based off his memory, imagination and storytelling which depicts many perspectives of life before, during and after war. Tim O’Brien uses imagery and symbolism to address that war destroys innocent people and at the same time soliders loss of innocence.
Mahatma Gandhi once said, “Morality is contraband in war”. When you’re at war you must leave all your values and morals behind, because in the end there is no moral to a war story. There is no right or wrong, no core point. The Things They Carried by Tim O’Brien attempts to show the inexplicable horror of war and that certain realities just cannot be explained. Tim O’Brien is the protagonist in the story, being a writer and a Vietnam War Veteran, he writes his novel through a series of semi-autobiographical stories about the cause and effects of war.