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- Medical operations are carried out everyday, but for
- some, an operation can change a person's life. One
- experiment was done on a mentally retarded person to try to
- raise his intelligence. The experiment worked, but after
- months, the patient regressed dramatically. In the book,
- Flowers for Algernon, by Daniel Keyes, this intelligence
- operation was preformed, and the patient was Charlie Gordon.
- After the operation, Charlie was very bright, but experienced
- psychological traumas, loneliness, disillusionment, and
- social inadequacies.
- Charlie's psychological traumas or emotional upset was
- caused by his memory recalls. After his operation, he
- remembered every aspect of his childhood, whether it was good
- or bad. "...He's normal! He's normal! He'll grow up like
- other people. Better than others..." Charlie had dreams of
- how his mother was ashamed of him. His mother always thought
- her son was normal and would grow up and be somebody.
- "...He's like a baby. He can't play Monopoly or checkers or
- anything. I won't play with him anymore..." Charlie's
- sister also ignored him. To her, Charlie was dumb and could
- not do anything. Charlie had dreams of his sister yelling at
- him and making fun of him. He also had memories of the night
- his parents took him to the Warren Home. He was terrified
- and his dad would never answer his questions. Charlie
- remembered his childhood and through his memories, he felt
- guilty for hurting his family.
- After the operation, Charlie also suffered from
- disillusionment. In the bakery he used to have friends.
- Friends that would talk to him and care about him. "...Why?
- Because all of the sudden your a bigshot. You think you are
- better than the rest of us..." Charlie then realized that he
- had no friends but merely knew people that made fun of him.
- The bakery employees just liked him because they could blame
- their mistakes on Charlie. Then, they could not do this
- after the operation, so they all turned against Charlie.
- "...I had to find out just how much they knew. I found out.
- Nothing..." "Both frauds" Charlie also found out about
- Nemur and Strauss. He realized they were not professionals,
- but two men that were taking a shot in the dark. Charlie
- felt like an expendable lab specimen. Thus, Charlie had lost
- his friends and knew now he was just a like a lab rat.
- Charlie had lacked faith in his fellow man.
- "...Thoughts of suicide to stop it all while I am still
- in control..." Everyday Charlie lost a piece of himself. He
- was starting to regress and thought about suicide to end his
- up and down life. He became irritable and edgy around people
- at the university. He would become mad at people very
- quickly and then yell at them. His self-centered and
- arrogant personality was a symptom of his regression. People
- stayed away from him because he was becoming a madman and was
- unpredictable. Because of this, Charlie became lonely in his
- last weeks before he regressed totally.
- "...Intelligence without the ability to give and receive
- affection can lead to a mental breakdown..." Charlie
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- experienced social inadequacies while he was intelligent.
- "...You know as well as I do, you don't need to work here
- anymore..." Charlie lost his job because he was to smart to
- work in a bakery. He could not socially interact with people
- he worked with and the people he met. Also, Charlie could
- not perform with Alice or Fay. "...I saw him watching me
- with his eyes wide open. I couldn't do it..." He
- experienced illusions when he tried to make love with Alice.
- The "Charlie" inside of himself emerged and started to regain
- control of his mind. All in all, Charlie suffered from the
- pain of not knowing how to deal with his peers and decisions.
- Therefore, after the operation, Charlie became a smart
- man but he had to pay the price for it. He had psychological
- traumas, suffered from loneliness and illusions, and did not
- know how to act with his peers. Charlie regressed and
- finally went to the Warren Home, but he at least experienced
- the world through normal eyes. On the other hand, Charlie
- might of been better off without the experiment. He would
- still have friends and a job, but most important of all, he
- would have a life.
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