Monday, March 16, 2020

Triage essays

Triage essays Mark was looking for himself, still trying to find his way back from the dead. How does Mark learn to love with the pain of the past? Before his breakdown war is merely a career opportunity for Mark. He moves from one trouble spot to another to make a living, not because he has any commitment to a cause. Marks mental breakdown is caused by a result of witnessing too many wars, his physical and mental injuries from Kurdistan, Talzanis triage process, his amnesia of Colins fate and too many needless deaths. His eventual acceptance that scars only partially heal forms the narrative of the novel. Mark is forced to embark upon a journey to self knowledge and spiritual awareness. Mark a sensitive young man, his father recalls that he was different from other children: ...you were the most sensitive. Very inquisitive, too (p. 131). While other children had no awareness of the outside world, Mark reacted sensitively to news items. But after nine years of exposure to war violence, he has certain arrogance about how unaffected he is. Joaquin plays a major role in Marks voyage forgiving and forgetting the pain of the past. By listening carefully to Marks accounts of his war experiences, Joaquin is able to restore Marks memory of Colins death. But this is not the end of Marks trauma. It is only at this point that the journey towards self-knowledge can begin and there are times in Spain when we doubt if Mark can ever accept the guilt that he feels for allowing Colin to die. Joaquin presents the confronting view that for a reason, or lack of; war is inevitable. It is through Joaquins experience of war trauma that Scott Anderson ties together the events of modern wars that Mark is involved in and allows Mark to discover he is not alone. But unlike everyone else Joaquin does not offer Mark that promise, he believes Mark belongs to an age where ...