Symbolism In Flowers For Algernon

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How would you feel if you got an operation to make you even more intelligent than your peers? In the emotional but compelling story “Flowers For Algernon”, a man named Charlie Gordon has a life-changing chance to get an operation, but, it comes with a cost. He is put through many tasks to get this operation, but the main test that this man with a low I.Q of 64 remembers best is a small maze against a mouse that brings symbolism to the rest of the story. But some people wouldn't want to get this operation with its effects, you might die and you brain will forget everything it learned, do you think it’s worth getting this phenomenon? Even though its price is higher than a spaceship on a moon?
Charlie should get this operation because he is working so hard to accomplish what a man who has a mental problem wouldn't be available to think about. Charlie states “I want to be smart like other people.” This man wants to be smart, and has the motivation and chance to reach his lifelong goal. Since Charlie has the chance he should; Charlie should contribute to the world and somehow achieve something amazing, then pass away. There are many people in this world that would
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He said I had a good motor-vation.” When Charlie says motor-vation, he means motivation. This is why he should get the operation as well. People in this world are mentally and physically driven to improve and succeed in this world, but charlie doesn't understand how hard he is truly working to achieve his goal. Charlie doesn't fathom how much he deserves his lifelong goal, although he writes “i'm working very hard.” The world is like a large, unwieldy ladder, and charlie is attempting to climb to the top by giving a helping hand to society and the scientific fields; even though he doesn't know it, this character is quickly climbing that ladder without climbing it. Charlie is just using motivation to defy gravity to get to the

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