Friday, September 5, 2008

Personality and lifestyle

Having a nice personality and being a good person seem to be saying the same thing, but they are actually different. To simply state my response, I think having a nice personality is just one factor that enables an individual to be a good person. In other words, being a good person includes having a nice personality. The reason I thought this way is because a person can be a good person either with a nice personality or not. Having a nice personality is a specific idea that describes a person, while being a good person is too vague to be specific. A good person can be kind, generous, gregarious, and so on.
In that regard, I guess personality is a factor that describes a person. By knowing the personality, people can know each other more in detail, rather than just knowing someone is a good person.
Similarly, the difference between having a nice lifestyle and living well can be deduced. Having a nice lifestyle is just one of the factors that enable a person to live well. The phrase living well can mean wealth, family bond, donating money, and so on. Same as above, living well includes having a nice lifestyle.
In that regard, I see the common point between the notions of personality and lifestyle. Apparently, both personality and lifestyle are specific description of an individual. In other words, both personality and lifestyle are certain branch of description that enable people to know each other more in depth. For example, when a person gets to be informed of another, he/she would have a better and clearer guess if the personality is known, rather than just being said it’s a good person. Similarly, it would be more beneficial and informative if the lifestyle if mentioned, rather than just knowing it is a person living well.

Suicide

Throughout the play, Willy tries to commit suicide several times. Considering that he leads an unsuccessful, hopeless life, this is not surprising, but the suicide attempts actually hold some significance. After seeing Dave Singleman’s funeral, Willy thought it was the ideal way a salesman could die. Also, it is known in this play that if Willy dies, there would be insurance money for the family. It is quite sad but the suicide attempts of Willy are not just insane acts, but are Willy’s ambitious, yet vain, desire to be recognized, and Willy’s love for his family.
Willy put a rubber pipe in the room below the stairs that supplies electricity. It is unsure how this would make Willy able to commit suicide, but it can be inferred from the context, since Linda says Willy was trying to kill himself and shows her sons the rubber pipe.
Another method of Willy’s suicide attempt was to crash the car. This play starts with Willy’s coming back from Florida with no energy, and immediately, Happy says, “Maybe he crashed up the car again.” This means Willy already had crashed the car before and there is some possibility that he would do it again. Unfortunately, Willy does die with a car accident, when he drove out at full speed after a daydream with Ben.
There could be two reasons conjectured in context. One is that Willy wants to be admired the same way he did Dave Singleman. Just as Dave Singleman was admired even after his death and was acknowledged as a great salesman, so does Willy want to be well-liked and expects people to be remembering him, praising him. However, this dream of Willy’s was too ideal, considering that he is an unsuccessful salesman, unlike Dave Singleman. The other is that Willy’s death could provide his family with insurance money, which will enable the family to pay back all the rents and be free from the confinement of money. At the end of the play, Willy dies with a car crash, and his family gets insurance money and pays the rent. Whether Willy purposely died or not, the family received insurance money, anyway.

Dave Singleman, like Willy, is a salesman in this play. However, unlike Willy, Dave Singleman is a very successful salesman who could make living just by calling buyers and selling products. At first, the name appeared to be ironic, because his last name is Singleman, and I thought it represents loneliness and isolation. Considering that Dave Singleman is such a great salesman, I realize that the last name “Singleman” actually was supposed to represent the fact that Dave Singleman was a remarkably influential salesman who could sell products with his own power (single man’s power).
As mentioned above, Dave Singleman is a successful salesman, unlike Willy. As a salesman, Willy knows well about Dave Singleman and admires him. The reason why Willy admires Dave Singleman is that Singleman is well-liked. Throughout the play, Willy frequently emphasizes the importance of being well-liked to his sons, Biff and Happy. Even though Willy is not a very well-liked salesman, he wants his sons to be well-liked, but the sons are not well-liked, either.
This is why Willy admires Dave Singleman, being well-liked. Willy went to Dave Singleman’s funeral and actually saw how well-liked he was. In Dave Singleman’s funeral, there were thousands of other salesman and buyers. Willy was strongly impressed by this funeral and highly admires Dave Singleman, for his being well-liked.
Apparently, as a salesman, being admired by other salesmen and being well-liked by buyers are great honors. While Willy is the case of achieving neither of the honors, Dave Singleman is the one who actually achieved both, so Willy finds Dave Singleman especially admirable, regarding salesman profession. However, just because Willy admires Dave Singleman and thinks that’s the way salesman could honorably die, it doesn’t mean Willy is only pursuing a way of dying. Of course, Willy hopes to be admired after his death, but his motivation for salesmanship also has to do with a way of living, rather than a way of dying, because he wants to be well-liked and wants to sell products well in his career.