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Time And Guilt Essay Research Paper Time

Time And Guilt Essay, Research Paper


Time and Guilt


In Tillie Olsen’s narrative “I Stand Here


Ironing,” I interpreted that there was a reflection of


the loss of time and the sense of guilt between a


mother and daughter. This is displayed in the authors


word choice, point of view, imagery and tone.


Olsen begins her narrative while ironing and


talking on the phone. Her daughter needs help, she is


told. So she begins to ask herself a million questions.


She wonders why her daughter needs help, how she can


help her, and what she could have done to prevent her


from straying so far in the first place. As these


questions run through her mind the iron in her hand


moves swiftly back and forth in rhythm, throughout the


entire narrative. Ironing being an act of boredom.


With each movement she has a new thought regarding her


daughter; she questions how she could have raised her


to be a better person.


In this essay one senses Emily’s resentment toward


her mother. This is because of the way in which she had


been treated, for it is clearly obvious that Emily was


unknowingly denied the love and attention a normal


child would receive. What is odd though is that


throughout the narrative one can feel the love Olsen


has for her daughter. Nevertheless, this love that


Olsen claims to have for her daughter, is not expressed


enough to Emily, which, therefore, leads Emily to


acquire many feelings of resentment, neglect and


perhaps even betrayal toward her mother. A good example


occurs when Olsen is confronted about her love for her


daughter, and she says, “What was in my face when I


looked at her?” This clearly shows how unaware she is


of her daughter’s feelings.


This is suggested continuously throughout the


story when Olsen recounts how she had to send her


daughter away while she worked. Although, the act was


unintentional, too much time away from one’s loved one,


for too long can have a drastic effect on a person;


most especially a child.


That is why Emily seems so bitter; “She was a


child seldom smiled at,” (6). Who could blame her for


not smiling? She had been sent away from her family


during so many key points in her life. First, she had


been sent way when she was a baby in order for her mom


to get back on her feet. Next, she was sent away to a


convalescent hospital where she was again separated


from her family. How was she supposed to live a normal


life when all that she loved and depended on kept


leaving her life? Emily was constantly denied


stability, and that is a major factor in allowing her


to lead a normal life.


Olsen says her husband “could no longer endure


sharing want”

with them (2). When broken down, “want”


suggests that he did not care to share a life of


poverty with them. Could this be true also for Olsen


toward Emily, but in a different text? To Olsen, what


if it means that she can no longer continue to hold


expectations for her daughter? Does that not constitute


for want also?


Maybe that is what the whole story is about. On


the outside it looks like a story about a conflict


between mother and daughter, but there are many


interpretations to be pondered. What if the story is


really about a mother that drops all expectations for


her daughter in order for her to lead a normal life


before it is too late? Or, better yet, maybe it is


Emily that can no longer endure want?


Whatever the case is, one thing is for sure and


that is that Emily has been denied something that could


have made her whole.


Olsen uses such verbs as remember, sift, weigh,


estimate, total, all of which mean that she must


consider carefully. In the beginning these words are


used to show how Olsen begins to examine her daughter’s


life. In the conclusion, she employs the words


dredging; which means to dig up or search, compounds;


which means to combine or add, and total again, which


in this case means to sum up. This suggests that in the


end she has concluded her observation of her daughter,


and that is that she will never come to a conclusion of


her daughter. She will never “total” it all.


Tillie Olsen writes a great story about raising


her daughter, Emily. She makes good use of word choice


in describing their life story, informing us of how


being a single parent was hard, and that the war did


not contribute any good either to raising her daughter.


Olsen excels at getting across her point of view and


that is that maybe she could have helped Emily if she


had had more time and more knowledge. Olsen builds us a


good setting to the point that we can see Emily waving


from the patio of the hospital, or we can see her


playing with her sister; she makes good use of imagery.


And furthermore, Olsen sets a tone throughout the story


which, combined with word choice and imagery, allows us


to feel the emotion of her story.


Olsen is ironing throughout the story, showing us


how boring their life is moving back and forth in the


same direction. Guilt, although the word is indirectly


used, is sensed every time she speaks of Emily and even


more so in the tone of the essay. In conclusion, “I


Stand Here Ironing” is about the need for time and the


feeling of guilt a mother has for her daughter. Maybe


with a little more love and knowledge their lives would


not be so static. In other words, less like the iron.

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