Why I Have No Hero Essay, Research Paper
Why I Have No Hero
American Literature
Matt Robbins
October 7, 1996
What is a hero? Does one have to have superpowers, special abilities or
incredible talent to be considered one? Well, some of us seem to think so.
Then there is the everyday teacher or local figure that is considered a hero to
selected individuals in their community. To me a hero has to have a few
selected qualities, and I haven’t met anyone who can fulfill all three.
First, a hero must be good at heart. A hero has to know how to give and
take accordingly. When he/she is needed to make a great sacrifice to help the
community, their closest friends, or even their greatest enemies, they need to
know that it is okay to make that sacrifice and know they did the right thing.
That person also needs to go out and make a difference in their community and
not need any more motivation than the good feeling they feel when they’ve made a
positive impact on the few people they met with and helped. A person that is to
be considered a hero must be naturally good and work for good and be there when
they are needed most. They should not have to feel guilty about the negative
effects of something they have done if the good it causes out weighs the bad.
Honesty is a good trait to have if you want to be a hero. A hero needs
to be honest with the public so that he/she will get the public’s support to
retain that hero status among them, and possibly gain that status with more
individuals. Being honest is a quality that is never usually overlooked in
naming someone a hero. This includes being honest with one’s self. Honesty
with yourself is a very important virtue. It is hard to get through life,
especially as a hero, lying or fooling yourself into believing something about
as a hero to many people, but you know that you did something to wrong many of
your followers to better yourself. Even though you knew it was wrong, you did
it and you are constantly reminding yourself that it will turn out good and then
no one will ever find out. You were trying to fool yourself into believing that
you did nothing wrong, but in reality you betrayed “your public.”
Trustworthiness is possibly the best and most valuable virtue of a hero
in my eyes. In order to retain the hero image you have to be able to be trusted
and relied on to be there when you said you would. Also, it is necessary for
people to trust you and what you say to them, and for them to know that you will
stick to your word and not let them down. To be trustworthy you have to value
what you say and say what you mean. If you would happen to give a false promise,
you will most likely be caught in that lie and lose the status you deserve or
think you still deserve. You would also be hard pressed to find someone that
would still believe anything you say after one fairly sizable mistake. That
would really hurt your image to the people that once loved and admired you so
much.
A hero must meet these three standards, and as of yet I know of no one
who can presently do this. There are hundreds of people who can meet any one of
these characteristics; of these there are probably a few dozen who can fulfill
two of them. But of all the people I have known and met, is there a person who
I look up to, and can meet all three of these traits I ask of a hero? No, but
maybe somewhere down the road I’ll meet someone who I will consider a hero, as I
have several people in the past. I’m sure there is someone out there who
strives to meet these and I hope there is.