From dependence to independence Jo is mature and reduces reliance on others. Joe and her mother, Helen, moved to an old apartment, and Joe began a new life. At the beginning of the play, Joe was very rude to her mother. Joe trusts. She lives with her mother and she does not have any money. She has no friends and is not mature. Joe is not safe, isolated and vulnerable. At the end of the drama, the dependence on her mother decreased, and she began to rely on Geof.
As the game progressed, Joe changed from a rustic young girl to a mature woman. She does not depend on anyone, but maybe she is supposed to live in a small apartment or a house, but the prospects are bright, I hope to glimthize my hope, I think I can live a happy life.
Joe is a simple young girls student, relying on her unreliable mother, Helen, I will never know her father. She was trapped in school and was surrounded by her mother and a dirty little bed. Because this makes her young, she is often childish and afraid of the dark. Joe desperately left his mother and spread his wings. Her life is a roller coaster, and the ups and downs of this drama represents her life. From encounters with black sailors to preparation for childbirth, she is independent as she is mature.
The confined girls student Joe, seeking exile, was away from her untrustworthy mother Helen and found herself dependent on her. Moving frequently from one place to another does not have a stable income source. In other words, Joe has neither actual social life nor luxury either at school or at home. Joe relied on a casual black sailor to get comfort, but due to his raw fax he was torn apart and she was forced to go. Helen left Joe and married Peter who can not be trusted. Jeff's homosexual colleague is now in her life and Joe soon realizes he is a trustworthy person and begins to rely on him when she is pregnant. Near the end, Jeff left Helen's return, and Joe became an independent woman she was so anxious for, probably the result of her quick honey.