Tuesday, September 3, 2019
Mother Daughter Relationships - Learning from Mother in Amy Tans The J
Learning from Mother in The Joy Luck Club      Ã     Ã  Ã   "I have already experienced the  worst. After this, there is no worst possible thing" (Amy Tan 121). Throughout  The Joy Luck Club, Amy Tan tells stories of how mothers use the misfortunes in  their lives, to try to teach their daughters about life. Many of the mothers had  bad experiences in their pasts and do not want to see their daughters live  through the same types of problems. They try to make their daughters' lives as  easy and problem free as possible. However, the daughters do not see this as an  act of love, but rather as an act of control. In the end, the daughters realize  that their mothers tried to use their experiences to teach them not to give up  hope, and to look at the good of an experience rather than the bad.      Ã       Amy Tan starts The Joy Luck Club with the daughter, Jing-mei, and mother,  Suyuan Woo. Suyuan lived through a hard life in Kweilin during the war and  teaches her daughter to keep her head up and have faith, even though things may  seem hard at the time. When Suyuan lived in Kweilin, she had many things that  could depress her, "but to despair was to wish back for something already lost.  Or to prolong what was already unbearable" (11). Suyuan's wishful thinking  reveals that she did not want to think of all the bad things happening around  her. Rather, she wanted to focus on the fact that she "had luxuries few people  could afford" (10). The ability to find the good when others see only bad helped  Suyuan center her attention on the superior things that she had, such as the Joy  Luck Club and her friends. Later, when Jing-mei goes to meet her sisters in  China, she becomes "so nervous [she] can't even feel [her] feet"(331). The  uneasy emo...              ...to keep trying. Although  Rose believes that she has "no hope," inside she has a nengkan as powerful as  her mothers, which makes her wish her marriage would last, just as her mother  wishes Bing would still be alive.      Ã       Overall, each mother in The Joy Luck Club went through something emotionally  exhausting and saddening in her life. The mothers use their experiences to try  to direct the course of their daughters' lives, to make them simpler and more  carefree. Initially, however, the daughters only see that their mothers want to  make decisions for them, not to help them. Ultimately, the daughters realize  their mothers' intentions, but not all accept them. The important thing,  however, is that each daughter learns a valuable lesson and comes to peace with  her mother.      Ã       Work Cited      Tan, Amy. The Joy Luck Club. New York: Ivy Books, 1989.     Ã                        
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