Retrieved from https://studentshare.org/english/1486796-diary-entries
https://studentshare.org/english/1486796-diary-entries.
I continue thinking about my psychiatrist, which is even after he denies the fact that I need one. I contend that the psychiatrist wants to find out the reason why I hike in the forests while collecting butterflies and watching birds and I intend to show my collection to him (Bradbury, 23). Most of what I do is considered strange by other people even when, in my time, it seems normal. That I need a psychiatrist is crazy, particularly since I do the same things that other people do. I ask Montag concerning his firefighting job, stating that he is very different from other firefighters I know because he is attentive to what I tell him, and actually, tries them out.
I go on to tell him that he is one of the few persons who stand (Bradbury, 23). It seems that most of the people that I am in contact with are always fast-paced, and Montag is no different. I think that Montag does not have time to notice the dew that had settled on the grass in the morning. For instance, it is up to me to tell him that there is dew on the grass that morning and every morning. Suddenly, I notice that he does not seem to remember whether he had ever noticed the dew and this makes him very irritable.
I have always noticed most small things that others cannot, which makes me very observant. After I pester Montag with various questions, he surprises me by telling me that I had better run on to the (Bradbury, 24). I obey him and see him tilt his head back into the rain, open his mouth for a few minutes, and catch the falling drops of rain just as I had been doing when they met. I also notice that Montag seems curious regarding the things that I am doing because he is always attempting to do the things that I ask him to do.
Diary entry #2: Montag I meet Clarisse McClellan, who is my new and vivacious young neighbor and I just seem to begin questioning whether I am happy. She gives me enlightenment, as she asks me questions about my happiness, as well as his occupation and the fact that I do not seem to know much concerning history (Bloom 16). Clarisse, through the little things she does, also allows me to see dramatic changes within the government regarding the perception of citizens about their history.
For instance, I had no idea that the real work of firefighters entailed fighting to put off the real fire, or even that billboards only stand at twenty feet in height. In addition, I also had no idea that people could speak to each other. This is because the use of parlor walls by the government had removed any requirement for causal conversation (Bloom 16). Clarisse arouses my curiosity in me as she begins to aid me in the discovery of the fact that I have been missing real happiness in my life for a long time.
After I meet the young girl Clarisse, I go back to the house and find that my wife is lying on the bed, unconscious. She has her Seashell radios close to her head and I find that she has overdosed on sleeping pills, as well as tranquilizers (Bloom 18). Her life is saved after two technicians, who I find very impersonal; bring machines that aid them in removing the drugs from her belly, while also giving her a complete transfusion. However, I believe that she may overdose again with no knowledge of what she was doing.
...Download file to see next pages Read More