Chris was always thinking of how to use his money. He taught his sister how to "keep books" to see if he had made any profit or not. He had some struggles with his parents along the way like any kid, but he thought they were controlling him to where he had to become what they wanted.
Were there indications throughout his life as to the kind of person he would become? There were a few indications to what kind of person he would end up becoming by how he would act against racism, world hunger and how different people lived. After his junior year, McCandless took another road trip, this time driving all the way to Alaska. Back at Emory for his senior year, he began to withdraw from both friends and family. After his graduation, he ceased altogether to communicate with his parents and the sister with whom he had been close.
As the months passed with no word from her son, Billie McCandless worried more and more. One night in July , she awoke in the middle of the night, certain she had heard her son's voice begging "Mom! Help me! Two factors emerge in this chapter that clearly contributed to McCandless's flight into the wilderness — and his eventual death.
It also contains a few loose items, including clothing, a guitar, and two bags of rice. He refused many times help, supplies, and guidance from experienced outdoorsmen. His father has had to families and another son in secret.
Chris rejected his parents materialistic lifestyle because he thought his father used money to try to control Chris. Chris also felt his parents were tyrants, and he was resentful and bitter toward them. Carine McCandless recalls, "There was always a little wanderlust in the family, and it was clear early on that Chris had inherited it. Though small, Chris was strong for his size and well-coordinated. He had trouble following rules.
At the age of 10, McCandless began to run competitively, and in his teens he became a top distance runner in his region. He became interested in ending apartheid in South Africa, and in his senior year of high school, McCandless started talking to friends about smuggling arms into South Africa so they could join the struggle against apartheid.
Concerned as well about hunger in America, he bought and distributed hamburgers to indigents in Washington, D. McCandless once arranged to let a homeless man live in the trailer his parents had parked near their house. After high school, he was offered a job working in Annandale, but he declined, instead driving across the country before leaving for Emory University in Atlanta.
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