In the abbreviated
Mysteries of Life, there are no common gaps or silences, that are directed
toward the audience. There is one instance, where the main male character ‘milled
around’ and repeated ‘ahem’, appearing to be avoiding what he actually wants to
say to his ex-wife. There aren’t any themes or thoughts the author avoids in
the text, aside from not mentioning or introducing how or why this ex-couple is
back together again.
There are no dreams
for either of the main characters within the text. There are no hallucinations
or dream sequences, or even day dreams. Both characters, from what the reader
can tell, are both fully present in the moment throughout the story.
Both of the couple
are parents to the same daughter, but the father is not around; he ‘hasn’t seen her since birth’. Therefore,
there is no strong, or any, bond between father and daughter. The
author doesn’t allude to whether or not there is a close mother-daughter bond
or not, but the reader can hazard a guess that there is, as generally there
would be if it was just the mother and child living and surviving together on
their own. The text also doesn’t allude to whether or not the child has another
father figure in their life. The Mysteries of Life doesn’t fit into, or abide
by Freudian theory.