Topic > The beauty of being different in life by Cherry Valance

Anne Frank once said: "We all live with the aim of being happy, our lives are all different and yet the same." Sometimes we may be faced with a difficult situation such as a death, divorce, or foreclosure that will make life very difficult but, in the end, all we want is to be happy. Even if that means forgiving the person who made you unhappy. Cherry Valance, a rich and spoiled business partner dealing with the terrible tragedy of her boyfriend's death, realizes that different can be good. Say no to plagiarism. Get a tailor-made essay on "Why Violent Video Games Shouldn't Be Banned"? Get an Original Essay Going to the movies isn't usually life-changing. Well, for Cherry Valance, that was the case. If Cherry hadn't talked to the Greasers, her boyfriend wouldn't have died and there wouldn't have been any fights. But let me start at the beginning. Cherry and her friend Marcia, together with their boyfriends, decide to go to the cinema. When the kids bring alcohol, they fight a lot so the kids leave. A few minutes later, a group of Greaser kids show up and after getting into a fight with a very rude Greaser, Cherry and Marcia befriend the rest of the group. At the end of the film the boys offer to take them home. The girls' mistake is accepting their offer. Halfway to the houses, the blue Mustang arrives containing Cherry and Marcia's boyfriends. It makes guys mad that their girlfriends are with dirty Greasers. Bob states, “And even if you're mad at us, there's no reason to go walking the streets with these bums” (45). From then on everything started to go downhill. Cherry and Pony may have different backgrounds, but they soon realize that they are not as different as they think. Now, let's rewind the tape, Cherry and Pony meet at the cinema, and this is where it all begins. After meeting, they talk, get to know each other and soon discover that they both like watching sunsets. It seems funny to them that they're watching the same sunset, that Cherry, a Soc, might have something in common with a greaser like Pony. They come to the conclusion that perhaps the two worlds they live in are not so different after all. Before Cherry leaves with her boyfriend, she reminds him that "some of us watch the sunset too" (46). Later in the book, Johnny kills Bob, defending Pony, and they go into hiding. Once they are safe to leave, they find that the church is on fire because of them and there are children inside. Feeling guilty, Johnny and Ponyboy try to save the children. In the process, Johnny is seriously injured and nearly dies. After it's all over and no one is in trouble for running from the police, Cherry finds it hard to forgive Johnny after what he did to Bob. In the end, Pony is upset that she won't be going to see Johnny, but realizes that it's tough everywhere and says ""can you really see the sunset from the West Side well? Cherry blinked in surprise, then smiled. “Really good.” “You can see it well even from the East Side”' (130). Forgiving a person who has hurt you, or someone close to you, can be difficult. It's easier to hold a grudge than to forgive them. Forgiving Johnny, and not holding a grudge against him, is one of the challenges Cherry faces throughout the book. He says, “But I could never look at the person who killed him.” (168) This indicates that he finds it difficult to forgive Johnny for killing Bob. However, he learns to forgive the Greasers as a group. He is shown to forgive them when he warns Ponyboy, his friends about the brawl that will happen. and wants to help them. You don't have to warn them. In fact, it would be easier for her not to, because she would have to be on the Soc's side. However, she becomes neutral because she forgives the Greasers and doesn't want to see anyone else dead or hurt. Cherry learns that.