Part
One. Essay Assignment: The War Between the Ego and Empathy in Where I’m
Calling From In
page one, profile someone who suffers “the type of swollen ego that results in solipsism
and isolation from sanity, maturity, and the human race.” Then in your second
page, profile someone who embodies the “sweet grace of empathy” and show how
this person’s empathy connects him or her to others. Then using an appropriate paragraph transition such as
"Similarly" or "Likewise," you might start your thesis
paragraph this way: The above characters are antithetical to each other. Similarly, the
stories pit characters at war between their egos and the liberation of empathy.
Egotism in the stories (choose no fewer than 3) of Raymond Carver has grave
consequences, which include _______________________, _________________________,
________________________, and ____________________________. In contrast,
empathy has a healing effect on the downtrodden evidenced by
_________________________, _______________________, __________________________,
and ______________________________. Your body paragraphs will correspond to the components you use to fill
in the above blanks. Your conclusion will be one sentence, a brief, dramatic
restatement of your thesis. Your final page, your Works Cited page, will show
the sources you used from Where I’m Calling From, from my blog, from interviews, or from other helpful
sources you find. Your Works Cited page and manuscript must conform to MLA
format. Be sure to make your own catchy, creative title. Part Two. Reading Questions 1. What ways does Mel represent the kind of egotism that
precludes understanding, sympathy, and empathy? This cardiologist knows nothing
about the real heart because he’s obsessed with the hearing the sound of his
own voice, pontificating, bloviating, and bullying his opinions and higher
truths over others. His boastful pride compels him to dominate all discussions.
He is, to use modern parlance, a know-it-all. Even his theology studies render
him ignorant about spiritual matters. He worships his Ego and Smug
Self-Certitude more than he cares about love in the real world. 2. What does the title suggest about the story’s theme?
When we talk about love, we talk about everything BUT love. He who talks about
love knows nothing about love. Why? Because in part love is not intellectual.
Nor is it imposing opinions over others. 3. Why does love so often result in hate and violence?
Terri discusses her previous man Ed on page 170. You’re vulnerable to be
betrayed on the deepest level. You’ve stuck your emotions on the table and are
in a position to get hurt resulting in rage and sometimes violence. Once you’re
in a relationship so deeply, it’s hard to escape so sometimes you feel cornered
and this is where abuse occurs. Even though Mel doesn’t want to admit it, often
love can go awry, turn into a passion gone wrong. Terri knows this from
experience. Love can be the rich custard flan tres leche caramel or love can
curdle into rancid chunks of cottage cheese. Mel wants a tidy theory about love
that comforts him, but he is embracing a mythic over simplification of love,
not the truth. In truth, love has a dark demonic side. Most violent crimes are
crimes of passion. 4. What evidence is there that Mel is a narcissist
completely ignorant of love? He says after arguing with Terri about love, “That
man tried to kill me.” He makes every conversation about himself, rather than
coming to an understanding. See page 171. 5. What stage of love is the narrator Nick in with his
woman Laura? Eros, honeymoon, infatuation. See page 172. His love is untested
because at this stage it’s an “easy love.” See page 174. Most Americans have an
infantile notion of love as being that first stage in which love is a giant
goody box. Whenever you want a goody, you reach into the goody box until the
goodies are gone and then you get a new goody box. 6. What is Mel’s obsession? Love. He always turns the
subject toward love? Why? Because he hungers for a kind of ideal love that will
ameliorate his raging egotism. He knows deep down something is wrong with him
but his ego prevents him from laying it out on the table. Mel’s hunger for love
is noble and true and authentic but his quest for love, finding a theory
instead of love’s reality, is MISGUIDED and therefore doomed to fail. The more
Mel searches for the perfect theory of love, the lonelier he becomes and this
makes him hunger for love all the more. Thus Mel is trapped in a vicious cycle.
7. How does Mel respond to Terry’s plea for empathy and
understanding on page 172? He’s supremely unconcerned with her needs, only his
need to be right. 8. Why is Mel in part insecure or threatened by Ed’s
demonic love? Because Ed was willing to die for love, something Mel can’t do
because Mel cannot let go and lose control. His relationships must be very
controlled due to his insecurities. 9. How does Mel’s immature character force Terry to act?
Like a mother. Mamma love. Too many women are mammas for their men. See page
175 as Terry assuages Mel’s insecure ego. Too many men are trapped in Mamma
Love. They become helpless cripples nestling in the Womb of a relationship that
renders them infants forever and ever. 10.
What journey are the
characters embarking on? An exploration of love without defenses, without
preconceptions. The alcohol is like a truth serum and they unshed their
defenses and only when they have been reduced to a tabula rasa or blank slate
can they see love in a new way. See page 176. A “forbidden” journey. 11.
Where does Mel show some
humanity and humility? He expresses self-doubt and concedes that maybe Terri
was right about love going bad. Yes, love curdles, goes rank. See page 176. 12.
What is Mel searching
for on page 177. Permanence and transcendence. These are nice qualities of
love, but they are absolutes and ideals and suggest a man who is more in love
with the IDEA of love more than love itself. 13.
What makes Mel an
interesting character? He can long for a “higher love” but be full of a
serpent’s spit, venom, and hate. See page 178. 14.
What is one of Mel’s
chief regrets? He never followed his passion, food. He probably became a doctor
for status and now he feels compromised as a human being and dreams for some
kind of fantasy love, an ideal love. See page 180 where Mel longs for chivalry.
Chivalry is just a mask, a form of “armor” that prevents Mel from getting his
hands dirty in life and facing his demons. See page 181. 15.
What if anything is
profound about the story’s ending?
Part Three. What 10 Things Should Mel Do to be a Happier, More
Loving Person? 1. He needs to take a “chill pill,” that is, learn to
relax. He gets too worked up over things and as a result he becomes blind to
his anger, egotism and obnoxiousness. 2. He needs to become a better listener, listen more,
talk less. 3. He needs to learn to accept himself. He appears to be
consumed by self-hatred. Why? Because he demands a perfect love from himself,
an ideal life and he knows he’s fallen short. Worse, he does nothing to close
the gap between his behavior and his so-called higher ideals. He is frustrated
with himself and he lashes out on others. 4. He needs to accept the demonic in others and himself
in order to be less demonic. People who don’t acknowledge their inner demons
are more dangerous than those who don’t. 5. He needs to open his mind to definitions of love that
are less ideal than his own. Perhaps he should incorporate a “dirty hands”
philosophy. 6. He needs to confront and acknowledge his insecurities
rather than being in denial about them as he rages on Terry. 7. He needs to see how he treats others, a sign of
maturity, and maybe he’ll act more loving instead of talking about love all the
time. 8. He needs to realize his own cowardice and egotism have
brought him frustration and unhappiness instead of blaming others. 9. He needs to develop the courage to be honest when he’s
sober, not just when he’s drunk. 10.
He needs to learn how to
have conversations with people rather than lecturing people. Part Four. Filling in your mapping components by answering a key
question. Egotism in the stories (choose no fewer than 3) of Raymond Carver has
grave consequences, which include _______________________,
_________________________, ________________________, and
____________________________. In contrast, empathy has a healing effect on the
downtrodden evidenced by _________________________, _______________________,
__________________________, and ______________________________. Two Important Questions: Your Answers Will Outline Your Essay Number
1 Question One. What are the dangerous consequences of Mel’s egotism? 1. Mel is obsessed with being right in his theory of love
more than he is interested in connecting with people by listening to them and
empathizing with them and making compromises with them. 2. Mel is more interested in the idea of love, which
assures his ego, than he is with real love, a complex beast that threatens his
ego. Real love isn’t as safe as idealized love. Abstractions about love are
just theories, stale formulas relegated to effete college professors.
Abstractions don’t cut it in the real world. People tell me you can read
parenting books until the cows come home, but until you parent a child, you
know nothing about parenting. Mel can talk about love until he’s blue in the
face, but until he really loves, he is an ignoramus about love. 3. Mel’s egotism has blinded him from a painful fact. He
doesn’t have conversations with people. He talks down and lectures to them.
This disconnects him and pushes him into the world of solipsism in which he
becomes the only reality. 4. Solipsism, failing to connect with others, is a form
of insanity. The telling signs of solipsism are self-pity, resentment, and
narcissism (you’re the only one who matters, your suffering is worse than
everyone else’s, your grievances are more compelling to everyone else’s). Tell
the students about the doctor whose wife left him and the student who never
dated after 20 years. These are two examples of people who are withdrawn into
themselves and cannot connect with the outside world and as such are insane. Question Two: What are the healing effects of empathy? 1. Empathy, the ability to stand in someone else’s shoes,
is liberation and “a vacation” from the prison of self-centered egotism. 2. Empathy reveals strength and security. Only strong,
mature, secure people are relaxed enough to let go of their ego so they can
listen and be of service to others. 3. Empathy gives us real self-worth because we actually
see the value of us helping people. In contrast, egotism is a false self-worth
because we have to constantly aggrandize ourselves with vanity. Vanity is the
Mother of False Self-Worth. 4. Empathy allows us to listen. Listening helps bring in
new information, which forces us to let go of our old, stale ideas. Often we
need new information to cleanse us of our old, stagnant ideas and to establish
a tabula rasa or blank slate so we can begin anew. Part Five. Student Activity Think of someone you know who suffers from egotism and solipsism. This
one-page profile could be used for the first page of your essay.
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