Open your mouth and pour blueberries. She is looking at the danger. She got most answers by answering questions, so I have the courage to answer questions from time to time. Charles looked at her from the corner, leaned against the chair, leaned against the wall, and was sitting there most of the time. Even if you feel that he is not particularly depressed all the time, it is difficult to say. He looks miserable. Sometimes, Jane made a noise in her mouth till I thought about it for a while. To understand only that Jane can make any sound in the world as she was his beloved person.
In this story, the views of the medical world of the 19th century about mental illness and women's problem are expressed, and her reaction to these ideas led to Jane's depression and illness. In the story, she tried to convince her husband that this remaining treatment did not work, but he did not listen, I told her to get asleep just. This is only indicative of how women are not considered to be most useful for women. She understands this is happening. She said, "What can people do?" Or "But what can they do?" During this time, public expression of frustration and anger of women is considered inappropriate. She accused me of being "under stress" saying, "Sometimes I get too angry with John." John told her "Do not ignore proper self-control". That's why she does not allow herself to express herself with speech or her sentences, I think she will use it as a ration.
In the 19th century, women had lived in a world dominated by men, so women had to accept their situation. In a short story, Charlotte Perkins Gilman's yellow wallpaper, a woman named Jane suffers from postpartum depression. Jane's husband, John is a doctor. To cure her illness, he told Jane they would go to the summer house. When they arrived in the summer house, he ordered her to stay in bed. - Bar Charlotte Perkins Gilman (Yellow Wallpaper) can analyze the problems faced by women with mental illness, the sense of isolation from your loved ones and may make a difference. At the time of writing, psychiatric patients do not believe that they are suffering from actual diseases. For example, "hysteria" is considered a female illness. And that makes it a bit insidious of the real pain confronted by these women.
Recently, my longtime acquaintance, I was called Jane, I finished her life. She does not contain organic ingredients and is healthy, but she has taken psychotropic medicine for years to curb depression. Jane left a loving husband and some adult children standing by her throughout the struggle and made any adjustments to the many narcotic changes. She had been seeking help from an excellent Bible counselor before, but she told me that Jane really suffered from dissatisfaction.