I Stand Here Ironing

Words: 952
Pages: 4

We have all been there before. Our teacher assigns us a reading and our job is to go beneath the surface of the text. Dig down through the depths of context to find the underlying meaning that the author intends. It is through this journey that we discover what interpretation is and how we find it. “I Stand Here Ironing” by Tillie Olsen is story about a mother recollecting her memories of the relationship she had with her daughter, Emily. The memory was not always a pleasant one due to the mother not taking care of Emily the way that a mother typically would. Emily’s mother sent her away on multiple occasions, including to a convalescent home and to live with her father twice. Throughout the story, it is evident that Emily’s mother does not …show more content…
Emily obliged bearing and a decent sample on things, for instance, school and friendlies. Emily was never extraordinary at school; she was a "moderate learner" (Olsen 260). The mother didn't supply any suggestion on the most ideal approach to upgrade in school nor did she lay weight on the imperativeness of doing outstandingly in school. Emily once in a while had any companions. She was repelled from people as an aftereffect of her mother. The mother barely smiled at Emily "she doesn't grin so effortlessly" (Olsen 258). Emily was not a kind looking individual "her face is closed and serious" (Olsen 258). The mother was never prepared to take control of things and constitute beneficial conditions for Emily that would have been blessed. Tragically, the mother has no control. All the decisions she made for Emily “(nursery, school, recovering home, smiling at Emily)” (Olsen 258) derived from the temptation of strangers. Emily relied on upon the allurement of the outcasts that was convincing her mother to send Emily away to different places to help her. The mother didn't perceive what do with Emily when she was getting raucous. The mother never genuinely raise Emily herself, and the ladies in the cellar did the raised Emily when she was eight years of