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Two Kinds By Amy Tan

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Essay on “Two Kinds”

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Title The short story “Two Kinds,” written by Amy Tan, focuses on the struggles of a young protagonist named Jing-mei trying to find herself without the influences and pressure of others. Aldous Huxley once said, “One believes things because one has been conditioned to believe them.” This relates to the story in significant ways because when Jing-mei’s mother moved to America in hopes of a better future, Jing-mei is pushed to be the “perfect child.” Her mother convinces her the only way to do so was to become a prodigy. Although on board with this idea in the beginning, years pass by, along with Jing-mei’s hopes of becoming this “perfect child.” In the beginning of the …show more content…

She thought long and hard one night and soon decided, “I won’t let her change me, I promise myself. I won’t be what I’m not” (Tan 223). This was the start to a long, tiring battle between the two which would soon, unknowingly, damage them mentally and emotionally, enduringly. She began neglecting her mother’s tricks to help her and started to rebel. After her mother enrolled her in piano lessons, Jing-mei took complete advantage of them and her deaf piano instructor. She “would play after him, the simple scale, the simple chord, and then [I] just played some nonsense that sounded like a cat running up and down on top of garbage cans” (Tan 226). It showed how little effort she put in and how she was going against her mother’s wishes to no extent, wasting her hard earned money just to make a statement. It seemed the harder and more she was pushed, the less Jing-mei believed in herself or her mother’s attempts. As we reach the end of “Two Kinds,” you start to see a significant change in Jing-mei’s attitude. After what she took as a peace-offering from her mother, she started to regain hope in their relationship. The offering was brought about when her mother “surprised me. A few years ago, she offered to give me the piano for my thirteenth birthday. I had not played in all those years. I saw the offer as a sign of forgiveness, a tremendous burden removed” (Tan 232). This short conversation carried much meaning in Jing-mei’s mind, and

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