When Montag tries to talk to Mildred, she “, fetched a mop,” (Bradbury 47). This shows how Mildred would rather busy herself than have a real conversation with her husband. Also Mildred,”...was simple minded,” to Montag because she always wore her seashells so she could never pay full attention to what was happening around her (Bradbury 48). At the end of the novel there is a great conflict between Montag and Beatty. Before there ever was a conflict Montag’s wife, Mildred, turned him in for having books. With being turned in they sounded the alarm that there where books and they reported to the house that has books. This was Montag’s house. When Beatty told Montag to get the flame thrower Montag used it to burn him, “Beatty flopped over and over… and lay silent” Beatty was dead and now Montag was a murderer (Bradbury 113). Montag had to get out of town and he was going to end up being a book person.
In Ray Bradbury’s, Fahrenheit 451, the author shows how Montag goes from being like everyone else to being an individual by using conflicts. The main conflicts that helped Montag become an individual where, meeting Clarisse, growing away with Mildred, and killing Beatty. This proves that no one has to be like everyone