After he dumps all his family’s money into an investment, his business partner, Bobo, informs him that the investment went awry. Walter, out of anger and resentment utters, “Man…I trusted you… Man I put my life in your hands…That money is made out of my father’s flesh” (Hansberry 128)! Not only did Walter’s dreams of starting a business dessicate, but also his family’s dreams because the money in the investment made the family’s dreams possible. At this point in the story, Walter’s deferred dream, “dr[ied] up like a raisin in the sun,” as it caused him to suck all the moisture out of life and release all the bitterness on his family (Hughes 1).…