Growing Up Guilty Research Paper

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Growing Up Guilty
Webster’s Dictionary defines guilt as “a bad feeling caused by knowing or thinking you have done something wrong.” Sigmund Freud believed guilt to be the result of a clash between the ego and superego. Feelings of guilt become familiar to us at some point. As with all other emotions, it is normal and natural to feel guilty at times. Some say that we feel guilt because it is hard wired into us, helping us to stay humbled and maintain beneficial relationships ever since the very beginning of human interaction. There are cases, though, especially in childhood, where guilt is unhealthy and does not go away. Some people even carry the weight of their actions to their grave, sometimes with no one the wiser. Typically, people who lack any sense of guilt are considered to have some kind of
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He shoved her away to protect himself, and in her fear of getting in trouble herself, she accused him of being the one to assault her, which got him placed in jail for a good portion of his life. After he came out, he was rather haggard and not together mentally. Her actions that caused him to be incarcerated are what brought on Frances’s guilt. In “Child’s Play” two young girls named Marlene and Charlene, mistaken for twins, embraced their new friendship after meeting at a camp. In telling stories back and forth to each other, they developed a mutual hatred for Verna, a mentally disabled young girl that used to live close to Marlene. Verna appeared at the camp and Marlene and Charlene both went out of their way to avoid her. One day they were swimming and Verna was approaching them, when a wave came out of nowhere. The ‘twins’ grabbed onto the first thing their hands could find to keep themselves afloat – that happened to be Verna, who they accidentally drowned. The source of their guilt is