Ambition is regularly at conflict with the conscience. He recognizes that the murder of King Duncan will have consequences that are likely to disrupt his peace of mind. All evil deeds have consequences and Macbeth soon learns out that he becomes the target of violence. Macbeth’s flaw of growing ambition soon haunts him. As Macbeth struggles with his conscience he comes face to face with guilt and pain. Growing ambition can hurt ourselves in many different ways. It can cause us to fail at forming trusting relationships with others who you perceive to be competitive threats, hallucination, you may act outside your comfort zone as you contemplate unfair tactics to get rid of someone who is in your way, you may see the world as a constant battle, guilt and pain may overtake you, inner conflict may unleash, you constantly want more because you don't appreciate anything you get and you may end your life if it gets out of hand (Lady Macbeth). In the story of Macbeth we see all of these ideas come to life. As Macbeth struggles with his conscience, he believes that if he keeps killing he will become immune to the guilt and pain, but this is not the case, it just become worse. Macbeth describes his ambition as being "black and deep desires," which means he has recognized how bad of a