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- Death of a Salesman: Willy Lowman
- Willy's Escape
-
- No one has a perfect life. Everyone has conflicts that they must
- face sooner or later. The ways in which people deal with these personal
- conflicts can differ as much as the people themselves. Some insist on
- ignoring the problem as long as possible, while some attack the problem to
- get it out of the way. Willy Lowman's technique in Arthur Miller's play
- Death of a Salesman, leads to very severe consequences. Willy never really
- does anything to help the situation, he just escapes into the past, whether
- intentionally or not, to happier times were problems were scarce. He uses
- this escape as if it were a narcotic, and as the play progresses, the reader
- learns that it can be a dangerous drug, because of it's addictiveness and
- it's deadliness.
- The first time Willy is seen lapsing off into the past is when he
- encounters Biff after arriving home. The conversation between Willy and
- Linda reflects Willy's disappointment in Biff and what he has become, which
- is, for the most part, a bum. After failing to deal adequately with his
- feelings, he escapes into a time when things were better for his family. It
- is not uncommon for one to think of better times at low points in their life
- in order to cheer themselves up so that they are able to deal with the
- problems they encounter, but Willy Lowman takes it one step further. His
- refusal to accept reality is so strong that in his mind he is transported
- back in time to relive one of the happier days of his life. It was a time
- when no one argued, Willy and Linda were younger, the financial situation
- was less of a burden, and Biff and Happy enthusiastically welcomed their
- father back home from a long road trip. Willy's need for the "drug" is
- satiated and he is reassured that everything will turn out okay, and the
- family will soon be as happy as it was in the good old days.
- The next flashback occurs during a discussion between Willy and Linda.
- Willy is depressed about his inability to make enough money to support his
- family, his looks, his personality and the success of his friend and
- neighbor, Charley. "My God if business doesn't pick up , I don't know what
- I'm gonna do!" (36) is the comment made by Willy after Linda figures the
- difference between the family's income and their expenses. Before Linda has
- a chance to offer any words of consolation Willy blurts out "I'm Fat. I'm
- very--foolish to look at, Linda" (37). In doing this he has depressed
- himself so much that he is visited by a woman with whom he is having an
- affair. The woman's purpose in this point of the play is to cheer him up.
- She raises his spirits by telling him how funny and loveable he is, saying
- "You do make me laugh....And I think you're a wonderful man." (38). And
- when he is reassured of his attractiveness and competence, the woman
- disappears, her purpose being fulfilled. Once again the drug has come to
- the rescue, postponing Willy's having to actually do something about his
- problem.
- The next day, when Willy is fired after initially going to ask his boss to
- be relocated is when the next journey into the past occurs. The point of
- the play during which this episode takes place is so dramatic that willy
- seeks a big hit of the flashback drug. Such a big hit in fact, that he is
- transported back to what was probably the happiest day of his life. Biff
- was going to play in Ebbets field in the All-Scholastic Championship game in
- front of thousands of people. Willy couldn't be prouder of his two popular
- sons who at the time had everything going for them and seemed destined to
- live great, important lives, much more so than the "liked, but not well
- liked" boy next door, Bernard. Willy's dependency on the "drug" is becoming
- greater by the hour, at this rate, he cannot remain sane for much longer.
- Too much of anything, even a good thing, can quickly become a bad thing.
- Evidence of this statement is seen during Willy's next flashback, when the
- drug he has been using for so long to avoid his problems backfires, giving
- him a "bad trip", quite possibly a side effect of overuse. This time he is
- brought back to one of the most disturbing moments in his life. It's the
- day that Biff had discovered his father's mistress while visiting him on one
- of his trips to ask him to come back home and negotiate with his math
- teacher to give him the four points he needed to pass math and graduate high
- school. This scene gives the reader a chance to fully understand the
- tension between Willy and Biff, and why things can never be the same.
- Throughout the play, the present has been full of misfortune for the most
- part, while the opposite is true for the past. The reader is left to wonder
- when the turning point occurred. What was the earth-shattering event that
- threw the entire Lowman family into a state of such constant tension? Now
- that event is revealed and Willy is out of good memories to return to. With
- the last hit of Willy's supply of the drug spent, what next? The
- comparison between Willy's voyages into the past and the use of a narcotic
- is so perceptible because of it's verity. When Willy's feeling down, or
- life seems just too tedious and insignificant, or when things just aren't
- going his way, why not take a hit of the old miracle drug, memories. The
- way he overuses his vivid imagination is sad because the only thing it's
- good for is enabling Willy to go through one more day of his piteous life,
- full of bitterness, confusion, depression, false hopefulness, and a feeling
- of love which he is trying very hard to express to his sons who seem
- reluctant to accept it.
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