The grandma views herself as a morally righteous woman because she is a “lady,” (“A Good Man Is Hard to Find” 2). Because the grandmother is a lady, she has no problem with judging people, as she does so with her son, Bailey, and his family. This first begins to happen when she is pleading with Bailey to take the family to Tennessee rather than Florida. The grandmother says, “I wouldn’t take my children in any direction with a criminal [The Misfit] like that aloose in it. I couldn’t answer to my conscience if I did,” (“A Good Man Is Hard to Find” 1). The grandmother, however, loses the battle of the vacation destination. Due to this, the grandma began to act out and chastised the trip as much as she can by repeatedly bringing up The Misfit. Throughout the story, the grandmother refers to herself as a lady and believes that she is one. As a result, she never sat down and reflected on her life. The grandmother never realized that she, herself, was a sinner. This changed when she came face-to-face with The Misfit. While the readers notice the grandma’s flaws such as when she turned Bailey’s children against him to travel to a plantation that she remembered from when she was a “young lady,” (“A Good Man Is Hard to Find” 6). The grandmother soon realized that the plantation was in another state, but instead of confessing her mistake, she caused a scene, which created an …show more content…
Reali-tea.” This proved true for each of Flannery O’Connor’s protagonists in “Good Country People,” “A Good Man Is Hard to Find,” and “Revelation.” In these three short stories, each main character was self-righteous and selfish. These characters each had some kind of revelation to realize what they were not. Some of these revelations were more painful than the others. O’Connor regularly wrote about similar subjects, which makes her stories are important. O’Connor’s stories are a warning for people to change the way they are rather than to wait for karma, or reality, to catch up with them. It is better to check yourself before you wreck