In “The Glass Castle,” the narrator's parents were adventurous and permissive parents. They cared for their kids, but they were unresponsive, which resulted in the kids raising themselves. The narrator's earliest memory was when at three years old, she was boiling her own hot dogs. “Then I would turn on the stove, and when the water was boiling, I would drop in the hot dogs” This is not normal for a three-year-old to be boiling her own food. The parents saw the kids as more mature than they were. They gave them a lot of freedom with barely any rules. This caused the children to grow up more independent than most people. Because the children cared for themselves and their parents too. As the narrator got older, they developed some characteristics that the parent’s had like not wasting food. They grew up poor, which resulted in scarce food. …show more content…
While Dee goes to school, finds a husband, and becomes more confident, Maggie stays sheltered and favored by her mother. Maggie is very shy, and she learns that from her mother. “Who can even imagine me looking at a strange white man in the eye? Dee: She would always look anyone in the eye. Hesitation was no part of her nature.” Dee wanted a quilt that her grandmother made, it was important to her. The mother had told Dee that she had already promised the quilt to Maggie. This caused an argument between Dee and the mother; so, Maggie comes and offers Dee the quilt, taking after her mother, she offers the quilt even though she wanted it. Maggie is a people pleaser who is insecure. The mother had reflected her own insecurities on