Indifference is Scary—Lily Caswell
At the beginning of Part 4, it talks about how utterly and completely exhausted Rieux and his friends were. The exhaustion presented itself in “the form of a strange indifference to everything. Men, for instance, who hitherto had shown a keen interest in every scrap of news concerning the plague now displayed none at all.” Honestly, no feeling is worse than any other feeling, at least in my personal opinion. They had just given up on coping with their fatigue. Their coping mechanism was honestly just not feeling at all. Personally, I have been at that point where I literally don’t care what happens. And honestly, looking back at that and talking to friends about it makes me realize that I made a lot of people (including teachers) very worried for me. I don’t want that to happen again
I commented on Bug’s and Emory’s posts.
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