Preview

A Temporary Matter Summary

Good Essays
Open Document
Open Document
902 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
A Temporary Matter Summary
The story A Temporary Matter by Jhumpa Lahiri is about a couple dealing with the stillbirth of their child. In the six months since, the couple, Shoba and Shukamar, have grown distant from each other. When the power is scheduled to go out during dinner every night due to maintenance, they begin to play a game where they reveal secrets to each other in the dark. The game allows for the couple to learn more about each other and grow closer, however all is fleeting when Shoba reveals that she is leaving Shukamar, he retaliates with information about their child. The couple begins to acknowledge that their love for one another is not as powerful as it was before. Their marriage, amongst other promises, are broken. They also face turmoil after their secrets are shared.The revelation of Shoba and Shukamar's final secrets indicate that diminishing love can result in broken promises and emotional anguish.
The realization of their shrinking love causes Shoba and Shukamar to break promises they made to themselves and each other. Shoba tells Shukamar that she is leaving him, saying that "She needed some time alone (p. 21)." This statement shows Shoba breaking the promise of their marriage. She decides to leave Shukamar and end their marriage. Shukamar realizes that “this was the point of her game (p. 21).” He understands that she was trying to tell him that she
…show more content…
Their broken promises, of both the end of their marriage and the gender of their child, have left them emotionally raw. However the couple still weep together in a small form of reconciliation.Shoba and Shukamar have acted like they wish their marriage to end, but still go to each other for comfort at the end of the story. This shows how the love between may have dimmed, and they may have broken promises and hurt each other, but they still love each other dearly even if it wasn’t in the way they originally planned when they were

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Good Essays

    Pet Milk Analysis

    • 603 Words
    • 3 Pages

    The author appeals to the emotions of his audience when discussing the main character’s feelings for Kate. At first, the narrator expresses regret with Kate, in simple things like not being able to see her ‘lovely knees’ often because of her work’s uniform and the feeling that while the two of them were still together, he could feel them drifting apart. Not necessarily because of their individual feelings, but because he knew that they wouldn’t be able to stay together when the time came for them to follow their plans for the future. He describes his contradicting feelings in that talking about their plans made them feel…

    • 603 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Imagine that you could share your feeling anything such as happiness, sadness, suffering or even memories with someone else. Sometimes having other people's feeling is not a good thing. This story wrote by Laura Esquivel is about a girl name Tita. Tita is the youngest girl of the family, and she has to take care of her Mother until she died because her family tradition, so she couldn’t marries anyone unless her mother died. But during that time Tita falls in love with a guy’s name Pedro, but they couldn’t marry each other because of her mother ; later Pedro marries Tita’s sister, but the story does not end there. As the story “Like Water For Chocolate ” by Laura Esquivel Tita is a very good cook of the house but for most of the time her food…

    • 158 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    “A Temporary Matter,” by Jhumpa Lahiri, displays how a married couple’s relationship is affected by the loss of a child. Before their tragedy, they were pleased with one another. However, when Shoba gives birth to a stillborn child, the couple isolated themselves from each other. Shoba distracted herself by working and keeping with her routine while Shukumar lost motivation to finish school. The death of their son created detachment and reticence in their marriage in contrast to their abiding love beforehand.…

    • 835 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The first night of the power outage hints at the deteriorating relationship of Shukumar and Shoba, which results from the lack of communication. Shukumar creates a mental comparison his life, how it “weren’t like this,” stating the drastic difference between the lives that they had prior to the miscarriage, and after the death of their child. His tone has a lingering doubt, a feeling that he has had in the back of his mind, that he has been ignoring, as he “struggles” to talk to Shoba with interest and admiration. His lack of communication during this meal has precedence, when he eventually “gave up trying to amuse her,” as if the bemusement of Shoba would save their dying marriage. While Shukumar gives up his attempts, he accepts their disjointed…

    • 168 Words
    • 1 Page
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    As a reader, we hope for Jihei to come along and save Koharu since she truly loves him; however, there is a catch, Jihei is shown to be a weak man that's unable to choose between two women (his wife – Osan, and Koharu). When Jihei's wealthy rival in love, Tahei, buys Koharu off, Jihei faces a public humiliation that he can't bear. At the same time Osan realizes that Koharu will commit suicide rather than go off with Tahei because she is not unfaithful as Jihei thinks (when he overheard Koharu talking). Osan, the epitome of the faithful wife (this story's hero), urges Jihei to pawn their last clothes and buy Koharu, to save both her life and his dignity. At this moment, Gozaemon, Jihei's father-in-law appears and forcefully takes Osan away, ending the marriage. Jihei and Koharu manage to slip away at night, journey along the bridges to the Amijima, and commit suicide together. Osan is truly the hero of this story because she was able to do what was "right", rather than what was pleasant, or convenient to…

    • 590 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Response to "Pagan Night"

    • 662 Words
    • 3 Pages

    Kate Braverman’s “Pagan Night” is a story about a young woman named Sunny who departs with her boyfriend after their band breaks up. They are living in a van and have an unplanned child. Sunny attempts to give it a name, however she is unable to do so. Throughout the story she has urges to kill the baby and make her boyfriend content as he had not wanted this child in the first place. This story is reflective of the struggle many young mothers face today when they face unplanned pregnancy. Sunny and her boyfriend especially were not expecting Sunny to become pregnant and when she does that is when everything in their lives messes up. They are both really young to be parents in that they haven’t even figured out who they are as individuals and what they both want to do in life, essentially basic things that are crucial to have been figured out before one decides to start a family. Both Sunny and her boyfriend do not seem to have sufficient amount of resources to provide simply for each other and this baby will become a burden upon them and their fun, easy going and chill life-style. Also, it doesn’t even seem like they know or understand each other so well either. For instance, they both have a very poor communication system in that Sunny is not able to comfortably express her complete thoughts and concerns with Dalton. Every time asks her what she is thinking about her response is always “Nothing” (page 502). She does not find it important to share her concerns with Dalton, which is unhealthy for a relationship especially parenthood.…

    • 662 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    When he first found out that his wife was dying of cancer he did not tell her . Isobe has no spiritual life and takes his wife for granted , that is until she passes away and Isobe makes it a priority to find her reincarnated soul regardless of what he believes . He finds out that there is a girl who claims to of been Japanese in a prior life and sets out on a journey to India . With Isobe not being a spiritual person he does not see how this could ever work out however in the end he does realize that no matter what , His wife would always be the one he chose to marry and that all though he did not show it much while they were together and she was still alive he loved her very much . When Isobe's wife was still alive she had a nurse named Mitsuko . Mitsuko was a volunteer nurse at the hospital . She went to a French ligature college where she viciously pursued and seduced a fellow college student named Otsu . Mitsuko had no real spiritual thinking at this time…

    • 1026 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    explores how each of the individuals resolves the crisis and the impact on the family unit as they…

    • 2637 Words
    • 10 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    Confetti Girl Analysis

    • 535 Words
    • 3 Pages

    The story’s plot is, there is a girl that makes plans when they get home from a trip. The mother then explains to her daughter that they are going to be going out again. The daughter does not take this very well and gets very angry towards her mother. She then proceeds to storm off to her room and lay on her bed and cry. The mother then tries to talk to her daughter, but she is too mad at her to even talk. This shows that the mother and daughter are very tense at this moment in time. The daughter is clearly very angry at the mom because all they ever do is travel and the one time she makes plans, her mother says they have to travel again. If I were this girl I would also be very upset with my mother, but it would be ok because she is probably doing it so that she can support me and feed me. Although, the girl is very hostile right now, she still loves her mother. Also, it is not only the daughter that is tense, it is also the mother. The mother is tense because she knows that her daughter is angry at her, and that she will have to make it up to her to make things…

    • 535 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    In the short story “From a Secret Sorrow” by Karen Van Der Zee a woman who struggles to tell her fiancé a truth that is killing her inside. The story focuses on two main characters, Faye and Kai. Faye is a woman who thought that the world was over for her after finding out she was infertile. Faye had no idea on how to communicate such horrendous news to Kai, her fiancé. She was afraid that her Kai was going to leave her and find someone else. She then started acting weird, nervous, and distanced herself from him. Her fiancé questioned her about a note he found, Faye immediately recognized that it was the note the doctor gave her and with a terrified voice asked “How did you get that?” (31). Finding out that she was infertile made her felt sorrow and like she was the only one who had the right to be upset. She thought that Kai was not going to love her anymore but it was the other way around. Kai seemed like he was really in love with her and cared about her. He wanted to let her know that whatever the problem was she was not alone, that it was not only her problem and that they will work together, then eventually get married. But Faye would not listen, she also loved him so much that she would have rather let him go instead of ruining his life with her knowing she is infertile. She knew he would be extremely disappointed and she told Kai that he had the choice to leave her and marry someone else.…

    • 2456 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    Relationships are only successful when they are filled with love, trust and commitment to one another. When speaking specifically of marriage, these feelings should be exceptionally strong and the couple should experience unconditional love towards each other for the rest of their lives. However, time tells many couples that this is not always the case and that perhaps their love for one another isn't strong enough to mend their differences. Gail Godwin's "A Sorrowful Woman" and Kate Chopin's "The Story of an Hour" both revolve around women experience just that and feel trapped within their own marriages. While both protagonists start off as committed and loving women devoted to their family, personal torment eventually lead both of them to death.…

    • 683 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Patient-Centered Care

    • 631 Words
    • 3 Pages

    This is a teaching strategy about a couple who thought they were doing the best for their first born child but in return was possibly going to lose them forever. There were decisions that they were going to have to make, whether to continue with the treatment or stop it. This was not a usual couple though, they were Buddhists and the staff had no idea what the rituals for death and dying were, along with looking different the couple had dread locks, tattoos, and…

    • 631 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Death of a family member

    • 1079 Words
    • 5 Pages

    In this chapter on Crisis in Family, the death of one’s child, parent, or suicide of a close family member can cause a devastating crisis within a marriage. Mothers and fathers relate to death in different ways, which causes conflict within the marriage. Depending on the circumstances of the death, one spouse may accuse the other of not sharing in the grief, or blaming the other for the death of the child. In dealing with your partner patience should be implemented, thus allowing the other person to grieve in their own way. Most people expect that they will eventually lose a parent, however the death of a child is not foreseen.…

    • 1079 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Confucianism strongly stresses in the fulfillment of responsibilities by the roles in society, whether husband to wife or woman to woman. This particular teaching was the ultimate basis for the plot and conflict in The Love Suicides of Amijima. In this play, the duties as a husband and father and as a woman to another woman are illustrated and strongly affected the characters’ decisions or lack of decisions. The general outline of the story is a love triangle; Jihei, a married man falls in love with a prostitute, Koharu, is unable to “ransom” her (buy her contract from the owner), and eventually commits suicide together. Jihei’s final decision of death was based on his inability to choose between his obligation as a husband and father to Osan and his children, and his love for Koharu. Making his decision even harder was the nobility both women had towards each other; Koharu agrees to give up her love to save Jihei for Osan and Osan agrees to pawn even her own clothing to pay ransom for Koharu to save Koharu’s life. Unable to have both women, Jihei’s suicide was the only way he could deal with losing one. Without his Confucius sense of obligation to Osan, there would be no predicament and…

    • 888 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The conflict in this story is the couple’s decision to either keep the baby or have an abortion. During this story the American man and his girlfriend, Jig fail to have a direct conservation about the unplanned pregnancy instead, they bicker and disagree about everything. Here are a few examples of conflict between Jig and her boyfriend “oh cut it out” (591) and “Well let’s try and have a fine time” (591). By the end of the story, the couple’s inability to talk about the pregnancy may have caused them their relationship.…

    • 487 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays