The stirring treatment suggests that Jonas's community has strict rules and controls in place to regulate their emotions and keep them in check. It indicates a lack of individual freedom and expression, as emotions are suppressed and controlled for the greater good of the community.
The Treatment for the Stirrings are pills.
The stirring usually with a dream.
The training Jonas is getting in The Giver leaves him no time to talk about his dreams to his family. Jonas is doing training that is different than his friends have.
The highest job in the community in the book "The Giver" is called the Receiver of Memory.
The receiver in "The Giver" did not have access to memories of the past before the community was created. This is contrasted with the Giver, who holds all memories and emotions for the community.
The Giver stays in the Community, after Jonas leaves with Gabriel. The Giver helps the Community deal with all of the new memories and feelings they have received, because when Jonas left, all the memories he got from The Giver were released into the Community.
The Treatment for the Stirrings are pills.
The very last ceremony celebrated in the community in "The Giver" is the Ceremony of Release.
In "The Giver," older people are treated with respect and care in the community, but they are also eventually released once they reach a certain age. This release is seen as a way to maintain the sameness and efficiency of the community. Older people are not allowed to grow old and frail like in real life societies.
In "The Giver," Jonas's concern for the precision of language is evident in his realization of the limitations of his community's vocabulary and the lack of depth in their communication. His desire for accuracy and clarity in expressing his feelings and experiences leads him to question the language restrictions imposed by the society and seek a deeper connection through more precise language. Ultimately, this concern for precision of language plays a central role in Jonas's journey towards individuality and understanding.
In Lois Lowry's novel "The Giver," the Giver's real name is never revealed. He is simply known as the Giver, as is the role he plays in the community.
In the book "The Giver," members of the community are required to take daily pills every morning after they turn twelve until they reach a certain age when they enter the House of the Old. The specific age is not mentioned in the book, but it is implied to be around the time when they become elderly.