Want this question answered?
The Treatment for the Stirrings are pills.
The Treatment for the Stirrings are pills.
Once citizens start taking the pills they must take them the rest of their lives.
Once citizens start taking the pills they must take them the rest of their lives.
Once citizens start taking the pills they must take them the rest of their lives.
pills
In "The Giver," stirrings are described as the onset of sexual feelings or desires experienced by adolescents in the community. They are viewed as a sign of emotional confusion and are treated with medication to suppress these natural emotions, as part of the society's goal to eliminate pain and discomfort.
Once people in The Giver start stirrings, they must immediately report it. They also have to take pills to prevent and stop the stirrings.
As a result of Jonas experiencing his first stirrings in "The Giver," he was given pills to suppress his feelings by the community's authorities. This was because stirrings were seen as inappropriate in the highly regulated society of the story. This event marked an important turning point for Jonas and raised questions about the nature of emotions and individuality in his world.
In the Giver, they have to take the pills until they enter the House of the Old.
The community in "The Giver" does not want its members to experience Stirrings because they are seen as emotions that could lead to individuality and disruptions in the controlled society. Stirrings are considered a threat to the stability of the community, as they can lead to unpredictable behavior and challenge the uniformity that the society values.
The community did not want people to have stirrings because they believed it could lead to unpredictable emotions and desires, which could disrupt the Sameness and stability of their society. Stirrings were seen as a threat to their controlled and structured way of life.