Charlie agrees to have the operation because he is eager to improve his intelligence and escape the limitations of his current life as a mentally challenged adult. The opportunity to gain intellect and experience the world in a new way excites him, as he believes it will lead to personal growth and acceptance. Additionally, he is influenced by the success of the experiment on Algernon, the laboratory mouse, which gives him hope for a better future. Ultimately, Charlie's desire for connection and understanding drives his decision to undergo the procedure.
Hug her and then kiss her.
No acceptance and agreement are not necessarily the same thing. For example, drivers on highways must accept the posted speed limit, even though they may not agree that a particular section of the highway is posted as 45 MPH. Every day we accept many things in school, the work place, society, and even within our families, without being in agreement with the rules, codes to live by, or values. We might accept our Great Aunt's beliefs in the afterlife, even if we don't agree with her beliefs. We accept we must do homework to learn and get good grades, and in the best situation, we also agree that homework makes life easier. We accept that to get a salary or paycheck, we must attend work at a set time and leave at a certain time, even though we may not agree with 9 to 5 work days.. or not agree with swing shifts... or not agree with working weekends. Often our behaviors indicate acceptance of, even if not agreement with. The best situations are when we can accept and agree.
It is certainly true that when there is lack of interest one can`t achieve goal.
Yes
addition, subtraction, multiplication, division.....
The story is called Flowers for Algernon, I remember reading it last year. Charlie had always wished to be intelligent like everyone else and he was told that the operation could make him that way.
Charlie's IQ before the operation: 68 after three months from the operation , Charlie's IQ reached 185. In the beginning of the story, Charlie's IQ was 68. Then, after he got the operation, it reached 185. And it kept going up from there, 200.
Algernon was a mouse they did an operation on, just like Charlie had an operation. They had the dame operation.
The reader realizes that the effects of Charlie's operation are not permanent when Charlie's intelligence begins to regress, and his writing becomes more distorted and filled with spelling errors again. This regression in his cognitive abilities indicates that the initial success of the operation was temporary.
I believe that he would have been better without the operation
When charlie gets the operation
after a while, the operation started to wear off and he started to lose his intelligence
fear
Algeron is dying, doctor dont want. -Brazuke, BR
== == == == Charlie Brown thought Christmas was too commercialized. I agree!
Charlie becomes increasingly more intelligent -- up to the point of genius, before returning to his original status.
Yes, heart transplants are a common operation.