The Man Who Stepped Off the Earth: Chris McCandless

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  • Опубликовано: 2 май 2024
  • Due to complications with scheduling, this video was delayed and the Makeship campaign is no longer live, my apologies and thank you to everyone for supporting the channel. Y'all are a blessing.
    Timestamps
    Intro - 00:00
    The Call - 1:13
    The Wild - 12:11
    Pointless analysis that ruins the mood - 26:11
    Thank you all so much for watching and please let me know what you think!
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    Email: Wendigoon1@gmail.com
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Комментарии • 8 тыс.

  • @spinnigold
    @spinnigold Год назад +10907

    Knowing nothing about this man, I clicked on the thumbnail thinking it was about a flat earther who claimed he had fallen off the side of the earth

    • @aleinad34
      @aleinad34 Год назад +296

      lmao that's priceless TT I had no idea who Chris was until this video, and I thought he was a hippie kinda guy who just... disappeared?

    • @largebig79
      @largebig79 Год назад +94

      I was thinking the same thing

    • @harshpherwani6590
      @harshpherwani6590 Год назад +28

      i did too, but i knew about the man tho, just had to recall his name lol

    • @slynthrax
      @slynthrax Год назад +53

      thats why im here as well kinda annoyed I got click baited

    • @vondamn9943
      @vondamn9943 Год назад +11

      LMFAO

  • @Alfiy_Wolf
    @Alfiy_Wolf 2 года назад +6912

    I believe Chris was simply trying to find himself, he didn’t want to die, he wanted LIVE, he died because he was not properly prepared no other reason.

    • @LexiLovesU
      @LexiLovesU 2 года назад +231

      well he did live until he died

    • @beckstheimpatient4135
      @beckstheimpatient4135 2 года назад +284

      Then he should maybe have accepted help, a map, etc. The universe put helpful people in his path and he was like 'nah, I'm good'. So he WAS incredibly stupid in that regard. But only in that he didn't accept help when it was offered, otherwise who can fault a man for wanting freedom within nature?

    • @Alfiy_Wolf
      @Alfiy_Wolf 2 года назад +183

      He made bad choices out of impulse. I have seen many young and old people make the same mistakes in the wilderness, you don’t know what you’re not prepared for, if you have no idea to be prepared for it. He simply wanted to see if he could do something on his own with no free passes from anyone.

    • @barrag3463
      @barrag3463 2 года назад +66

      Yeah, I don't think he was trying to die or completely apathetic to living, but he was very naive. I also think he also really lucky in his past travels and I don't think he really recognized that fact.

    • @horrorhotel1999
      @horrorhotel1999 2 года назад +8

      The dunning-kruger effect in full effect ladies and gentlemen

  • @Babyboyliz
    @Babyboyliz 10 месяцев назад +4517

    I feel like Chris was definitely “ignorance is bliss” personified. It seems like it wasn’t his intent to be a nature survivalist, it was his intent to live life how he wanted.

    • @devonesq.7533
      @devonesq.7533 7 месяцев назад +124

      i kinda get the idea he didn't like his life at all, no one would pack light to live in the alaska wilderness if they cared about their life at all. it seemed like he wanted out of this world, but had trouble doing it with his own hand. i know from personal experience. the trooper who called his attempt a suicide mission wasn't far off at all. he grew up playing in the woods, and wanted to return to the woods to die in them.
      i can imagine those last couple weeks were the best times of his life though, he essentially was just a child wandering around the forest doing things that he wanted to do, no direction, no one telling him what to do, or how to do it. just satisfying his own basic needs, and wants. he knew what was gonna happen, he knew he wasn't going to survive in the bus forever, and he didn't want to.
      basically, he wanted to go out on his own terms, away from the world, and society that he hated so much. he travelled as far away from it as possible, just to make his statement.

    • @orabyss
      @orabyss 7 месяцев назад +24

      i feel like this is more a projection of your own personal experience like you said lol i mean i don't think anyone should be speculating this hard and acting like they really know the motivation for this like for me idk i see a weird dude who jus didn't find what he wanted in day to day life like there are so many people i think who have this kind of vibe and it has nothing to do with suicidal ideation or a death wish.

    • @orabyss
      @orabyss 7 месяцев назад +8

      ntm straight up said he had a happy life. i mean if he was really that upset and pondering existence and death his journals would have reflected it im sure

    • @devonesq.7533
      @devonesq.7533 7 месяцев назад +23

      @@orabyss why would you reflect upon something if you've already come to terms with it? and death isn't necessarily a sad thing. maybe for others around you, but once you come to terms with your own morality, you realize it's just the final flourish of the life you've lived. he didn't need to ponder what he already knew.
      sure i'll never know what he was thinking, but chris wasn't stupid, he knew he wasn't going to survive out there, and his goal was never to survive. if he wanted to survive, he would've prepared, but he simply did not. this isn't even a debate, because everyone knows you have to be prepared to deal with nature. chris went hiking as a child. he, if anybody else, would understand that being unprepared at the mercy of nature is just a death sentence.
      people can lead happy lives and still be sad, no one is immune to human emotions. no one wants to mope about all day and complain about how much life sucks and everything is stupid. you can pretend to be happy, just to make others happy, a lot of people do it, and i'm certain chris was one of these people.

    • @pepperachu
      @pepperachu 7 месяцев назад +8

      "Ignorance is bliss" and not being happy with the status quo and doing something about it are two totally different things

  • @bor1s0
    @bor1s0 10 месяцев назад +1878

    Chris wasn't a fool for wanting to live his own way. He was a fool for not being prepared to do so.

    • @scoopearly
      @scoopearly 7 месяцев назад +74

      Unfortunately I think he wanted his life to end this way

    • @theotv5522
      @theotv5522 7 месяцев назад +107

      I know right? So many people here praised him for being so open and free, when they clearly gloss over the fact they're just looking at a passive suicide and say "That's so cool"

    • @sharmilathube923
      @sharmilathube923 7 месяцев назад +8

      @@theotv5522 and uh whats wrong with living that way?

    • @beagan8348
      @beagan8348 7 месяцев назад

      @@theotv5522 guy founds out suicidal people empathize with other suicidal people

    • @krelekari
      @krelekari 6 месяцев назад +40

      I personally think he sought out a path of little preparation, and calling him a fool for making a point to avoid key luxuries and extremely helpful things is silly to me. Because he didn't accidentally come ill prepared, he wasnt walking with wool over his eyes, he came as prepared as he wished to.
      Assuming that he'd take every opportunity of many to purposefully make things harder for himself, but also would take a map of an unfamiliar area if he knew it existed, I believe is a foolish assumption.

  • @ironwolf56
    @ironwolf56 2 года назад +24446

    Remember: no matter how much you love nature, nature is a harsh mistress and you must always be ready for the worst.

    • @bigidot
      @bigidot 2 года назад +173

      @@ricac.h8717 what the hell

    • @krehnah7541
      @krehnah7541 2 года назад +138

      @@bigidot it cant hear you, its a bot. If you would, please take the time to report it though, they are a plague.

    • @boobalooba5786
      @boobalooba5786 2 года назад +218

      Also remember that one day you will die, your loved ones will die and every aspect of the world you knew will be dust. Why treat life with such mystical reverence but be so afraid to claim what's yours? Chris Supertramp is the only modern human I have ever looked up to, A man who staked his claim and paid his price.

    • @jackmesrel4933
      @jackmesrel4933 2 года назад +33

      @@krehnah7541 Done, fuck RUclips for allowing this kind of shit to exist

    • @sirreginaldfishingtonxvii6149
      @sirreginaldfishingtonxvii6149 2 года назад +190

      Nature is terrifying, grand and beautiful. And it is no less fantastical merely because it can be cruel.
      Likewise, humans are infinitely capable to survive in almost any enviroment due to ingenuity, tools, and problem solving.
      Thing is, you actually have to know what you're doing to take advantage of what is, more or less, all our species has going for it.

  • @jtofgc
    @jtofgc Год назад +10031

    You're missing the most important research on the starvation issue. Krakauer himself wrote an addendum to Into the Wild about research into ODAP and canavanine poisoning from wild potato seeds when eaten as a major part of one's diet. This type of seed was not known to be poisonous at the time and he had a guidebook on him that said they were safe to eat. ODAP poisoning leads to loss of motor function in the legs and canavanine makes your body unable to synthesize proteins properly. It's possible his poisoning was not due to his own ignorance or mistaken identification of a plant, but due to a gap in the scientific literature that was only closed in the last ten years.

    • @spearfisherman308
      @spearfisherman308 Год назад +55

      Nope he starved to death a documentary about him called call of the wild.

    • @Mantradelcorazon
      @Mantradelcorazon Год назад +6

      wow

    • @BalrogUdun
      @BalrogUdun Год назад +1197

      @@spearfisherman308 yes he starved to death but the poison inhibited him to where he could no longer properly care for himself thus led to the starvation.

    • @spearfisherman308
      @spearfisherman308 Год назад +3

      @@BalrogUdun except that doesn't affect humans.

    • @thecrazycapmaster
      @thecrazycapmaster Год назад +586

      @@spearfisherman308 the cells of the human body use many proteins, one of which is arginine. The danger of canavanine is that the body mistakes it for arginine and tries to use it instead, leading to a lack of actual arginine. There are scientific papers about this, I found one through a minute of searching Google about canavanine and arginine. If that documentary is saying it’s just a simple lack of food, it’s using outdated information.

  • @RocksterStudios-tt3eh
    @RocksterStudios-tt3eh 8 месяцев назад +868

    I understand why Chris did what he did.
    I’ve always had the inner urge to just drop everything and go road tripping, abandon all my ties to society. And I’ve had a happy childhood.
    Chris had grown up in an abusive and materialistic environment; it’s no surprise he left. I just hope he died feeling happy and free.

    • @jamsjars9505
      @jamsjars9505 7 месяцев назад +18

      He definitely died feeling cold sad and lonely. His last breath probably cursed at his stupidity..

    • @mystoxxiide9043
      @mystoxxiide9043 5 месяцев назад +63

      @@jamsjars9505dude he left a note where he said he was happy and prepared to die. he said goodbye. wtf are you talking about, did you even watch the video?

    • @RufusDavis2
      @RufusDavis2 5 месяцев назад +6

      @@jamsjars9505what are you on?

    • @HonzoRich
      @HonzoRich 5 месяцев назад +7

      ​@@mystoxxiide9043 Did you? The author of of that first book about him described him as a bum and thief. Rangers were right to criticize him for being ill-prepared and putting himself in a dangerous situation.
      What this man wrote could easily have been him trying to justify his adventure with words of wonderlust, artifically injecting it with meaning. This same wonderlust grew into others attempting the same journey and dying or having to be rescued.

    • @youbitch1503
      @youbitch1503 3 месяца назад

      ​@@jamsjars9505did you ride the shirt bus as a kid?

  • @hirako7620
    @hirako7620 9 месяцев назад +198

    What I got from Chris' story is that he never intended to be seen as someone daring, he didn't commit himself to the wilderness to prove something of himself, I think he just genuinely wanted some sort of escape that he believed he would find in the immersion of nature, and I think that is a perspective that is lost to so many people and "critics"

    • @Demonslayer20111
      @Demonslayer20111 4 месяца назад +2

      One does not simply wander into the bush and expect it to be an escape. The entire reason he stayed at the bus is because he realized at least partially he was in over his head

    • @ihavenonamestilldonthaveon8970
      @ihavenonamestilldonthaveon8970 3 месяца назад +6

      ​@Demonslayer20111 okay? Why does that matter, the point was that he was running away from the tiredness of his life. What's the point of being a dick about it when he was just exasperated and trying to escape? If he was dumb then whatever, he was trying his best to be happy stop being so rude

  • @theresanoelle
    @theresanoelle Год назад +7114

    Him writing MOOSE! is so wholesome to me you can tell how excited and happy he was to see a moose and honestly I can't blame him

    • @HermunthrudaWaldheim
      @HermunthrudaWaldheim Год назад +132

      For my Life I could Not distinguish between a Moose and a Caribou.

    • @Mad_scientist_huburis
      @Mad_scientist_huburis Год назад +47

      @Lola Lander
      Caribou are way smaller than moose

    • @x.HoneyBea.x
      @x.HoneyBea.x 11 месяцев назад +70

      ​@@HermunthrudaWaldheimyou can easily tell by the antlers. While both are massive caribou antlers are skinny and spindly while mose antlers are flat and wide. Also caribou have light patches on their chest and butt while mose are much darker all over

    • @halatiny6537
      @halatiny6537 10 месяцев назад

      @@HermunthrudaWaldheim moose are way fucking bigger😭

    • @tunanugget3243
      @tunanugget3243 10 месяцев назад +51

      @@HermunthrudaWaldheimlate reply, more recently, the skeleton has been identified as a moose and it was not a caribou as the others claimed. I am an alaskan and studied the book and its my favorite book.

  • @mythicalthings1796
    @mythicalthings1796 2 года назад +11178

    His sister claimed his father was a violent drunk, her half siblings also have said he was a violent drunk, even Chris said he was a violent drunk.
    Gee, I wonder if the father was a violent drunk?

    • @ninetoedlizard6650
      @ninetoedlizard6650 2 года назад +1413

      Clearly not, he said he wasn’t a violent drunk so he must not be a violent drunk!!

    • @mythicalthings1796
      @mythicalthings1796 2 года назад +366

      @@ninetoedlizard6650 I mean I know why he didn't say he WAS a violent drunk. That's slander and he could get sued

    • @mythicalthings1796
      @mythicalthings1796 2 года назад +113

      @@theheadofrichardnixon7252 Which part don't you get?

    • @zolawilliams1
      @zolawilliams1 2 года назад +77

      I know right? He was probably a violent drunk.

    • @sandraswan9008
      @sandraswan9008 2 года назад +96

      @@theheadofrichardnixon7252 life of a party right there

  • @kieranclark1629
    @kieranclark1629 Год назад +88

    Did anyone else tear up right after he said the entry was just “beautiful blueberries” or was that just me

    • @kuroneko334
      @kuroneko334 10 месяцев назад +1

      Just you I think

    • @Forest_Casualties
      @Forest_Casualties 4 месяца назад +3

      Sobbing bro

    • @chubbybeastfishing
      @chubbybeastfishing 4 дня назад +1

      I cried my eyes out! But to be fair, I punch myself in the face anytime I hear the word 'blueberries'.

  • @BurningCandlewax
    @BurningCandlewax 6 месяцев назад +81

    I love these patreon names, like"Stephen, Marcy, Kebin, Cody, CUMRANGER, Xavier..."

  • @alaanaahh
    @alaanaahh 2 года назад +11282

    If an accused abuser says the victim is “exaggerating” …….. that means the abuse DEFINITELY happened and the aggressor just doesn’t consider it “abuse” lol. What a pos

    • @FreyaEinde
      @FreyaEinde 2 года назад +1146

      I mean the half-siblings backing it up sold me solid, because getting kids from separate marriages to agree on anything is a rarity. Unsurprised the parents would downplay the abuse.

    • @Hikarixhikarixhikari
      @Hikarixhikarixhikari 2 года назад +614

      @@FreyaEinde plus the back and forth of letters between brother and sister being about their shitty parents, that backs it up for me too.

    • @carnuatus
      @carnuatus 2 года назад +357

      @@Hikarixhikarixhikari and, I mean, the fact that he ran all the way to Alaska to get away from them.

    • @yukiandkanamekuran
      @yukiandkanamekuran 2 года назад +180

      Yeah, it really sounds like the parents are resentful of their children, especially behind closed doors.

    • @Erika-vr3ec
      @Erika-vr3ec 2 года назад +226

      My MIL likes to say "you'd call it abuse...." about her husband beating mine throughout his childhood. Abusers and those who act like it didn't happen or it "wasn't like that" are the worst.

  • @Jay-nj1rq
    @Jay-nj1rq Год назад +4731

    Some people may relate to the sentiment of not really wanting to kill themselves but not wanting to exist so wishing that they could just die some other way. I get those vibes from Chris. Like he didn’t want to actively end his life but he didn’t really care if he did in fact die. That’s why he didn’t want to spend time with gear and maps, he just wanted to get away immediately.

    • @avak2101
      @avak2101 Год назад +518

      that is exactly what i wanted to say.
      there's a lot of peeps in the comments like "oh, he's careless and stupid and could've prepared"
      i don't think he gave a single shit about surviving, just about living what he had left his own way, at least at the start

    • @justsaying6341
      @justsaying6341 Год назад +205

      I disagree with both of you for the sole reason of what we wrote down. you can clearly see that once he realized he was starting to die, he got afraid. he didn‘t want to die, he wanted to get out to recollect, he even wrote that sos note in hopes of rescue. while he accepted his death in the end, he definitely didn‘t actively welcome it

    • @ArDeeMee
      @ArDeeMee Год назад +2

      „I don‘t want to die. I just don‘t want to be alive anymore.“
      Those two are distinctly different, though most people might not see it that way. But the problem is that Chris arrived at the point of no return, and that‘s when he realized he actually DID want to stay alive. But he was out in the middle of nowhere, so sick he couldn‘t leave, no way to call for help. Trapped.
      So his last days were basically torture. He made many mistakes, but he deserved better than to die like that.

    • @mlk0-0
      @mlk0-0 Год назад +17

      That's what I felt, too. And I'm glad he got to enjoy what he did while he did. Most of us just have to suffer through that feeling..

    • @lovelysimmer943
      @lovelysimmer943 Год назад +392

      @@justsaying6341 there’s several stories of survivors who had attempted suicide by jumping off the Golden Gate Bridge who said that the moment they jumped they regretted it. i think for many there’s a difference in wanting to die and then actually being confronted with your imminent death.

  • @ThunderR3d
    @ThunderR3d 11 месяцев назад +711

    As tragic as his end was. I still admire that he was able to live his life like he WANTED to and that's more than what most people could ever do.

    • @360.Tapestry
      @360.Tapestry 9 месяцев назад +36

      sure, but i don't think he WANTED to die weak, hungry, and poisoned in a secluded old bus leaving desperate signs for rescue, so i don't think he actually achieved what he intended. people need to stop romanticizing an idiot's death as anything else

    • @jamsjars9505
      @jamsjars9505 7 месяцев назад +11

      Don't think he wanted to become so weak the he could lead the wilderness. He uses the word "trapped" in his journal entry on day 100.

    • @theotv5522
      @theotv5522 7 месяцев назад +10

      Death by starvation was probably one of the most painful ways to go out.

    • @cronfmeat7880
      @cronfmeat7880 7 месяцев назад +9

      @@360.Tapestryyou do realize they already acknowledged how the way he died was tragic, right?

    • @360.Tapestry
      @360.Tapestry 7 месяцев назад +16

      @@cronfmeat7880 yeah. the real tragedy is that he died looking out there for something he held the key to the whole time. that's the tragedy of most of us. it didn't have to end that way rip to chris, but i would never romanticize the path he took as anything other than being completely lost

  • @wendys_lemonade2459
    @wendys_lemonade2459 11 месяцев назад +271

    that last photo and message really got me. regardless of how people see him, he was happy and he lived a good life. he wasn’t a perfect man, he certainly wasn’t an idol, but he did the things he did so he could write that note.

    • @ka0584
      @ka0584 Месяц назад +1

      This is probably the best explanation I've heard so far.

    • @user-oh4kt4sv8x
      @user-oh4kt4sv8x 11 дней назад

      Ya he lived a good life until this😂😂

    • @KaspersDomain
      @KaspersDomain 2 часа назад

      @@user-oh4kt4sv8x "He lived before he died" _Laugh emojis_

  • @finsta4979
    @finsta4979 Год назад +5512

    My brother did similar thing as Chris. He travelled all over the US with just himself and few possessions, hitchhiking and relying on the kindness of strangers. He struggles a lot with addiction and mental health issues and we have tried to help him to no avail. My brother has been through many US states. He has friends everywhere. We have gone years with no contact with him because he was living on farms or in forests. He comes back to my hometown every few years, stays awhile with our relatives, then leaves again. We worry for him but he is happier this way than when he stays in one place and tries to live “normally”

    • @avabeth2535
      @avabeth2535 Год назад +254

      I hope your brother stays safe ♥️

    • @roachdoggjr.9062
      @roachdoggjr.9062 Год назад +334

      Oh shit my brother too, though he does stuff to go to jail when he can't take walking or biking or hitching any more. "A bed, a roof, 3 square meals a day, and some roommates" as he says.

    • @finsta4979
      @finsta4979 Год назад +1

      @@renaissanceman4054 fuck you my brother would never hurt a soul.

    • @thrandompug2254
      @thrandompug2254 Год назад +168

      Living 'normally' just doesn't work for some people

    • @illseeyaonthedarksideofthemoon
      @illseeyaonthedarksideofthemoon Год назад +18

      @@thrandompug2254 yeah, like lechers and bumps

  • @AlexxKister
    @AlexxKister 2 года назад +14962

    yooooo I just did a project about this guy in high school like a year ago lol. I remember his name “alexander supertramp” was made that way because Supertramp was his favorite band

    • @robby7499
      @robby7499 2 года назад +285

      Where is the [Redacted] Angel in present day?

    • @highbread817
      @highbread817 2 года назад +241

      Your work is fantastic for someone so young!

    • @lardkraken8231
      @lardkraken8231 2 года назад +101

      GOODBYE STRANGER, ITS BEEN NICE...
      also yo its the mandela project guy. keep up the good work!

    • @user_2793
      @user_2793 2 года назад +18

      When season 2

    • @jaironator1110
      @jaironator1110 2 года назад +11

      Yeah, when is it Alex?

  • @Suspect002
    @Suspect002 9 месяцев назад +390

    I knew someone who ended up similar to him. He was a guy who was great in school, friend to every classmate and our class president for a year (all in college). One day he just decided to leave and roam around the country and then even ended up living in a native community in an extremely remote country. He ended up back in the states where I saw him one time seemingly in good spirits until a few weeks later he took his own life. It seems like Chris was going down the same road. All that is left are the memories and one song recorded on a phone around a fire. They were never dumb, just guys finding their own way to live and die.

    • @squirtbrainz1219
      @squirtbrainz1219 4 месяца назад +14

      Really makes me wonder what does ties this lifestyle together with the suicidal tendencies, because all things considered it seems like a fulfilling lifestyle

    • @Elle...
      @Elle... 3 месяца назад +18

      ⁠@@squirtbrainz1219i think the suddenness is why it’s linked. Wanting to live out in the wild while relying on only yourself isn’t a sign of mental distress on its own, but dropping everything one day to go out into an unknown area without any knowledge on how to survive there, or supplies to do so, is not something that someone who wants to live would typically do. I’m sure there are some psychologists who would call what Chris did a suicidal tendency as well, since he didn’t go into it with seemingly any plan at all, let alone one where he isn’t putting himself in harms way.

    • @squirtbrainz1219
      @squirtbrainz1219 3 месяца назад +1

      @@Elle... Was mainly referring to the roaming around and living in different towns around the country and making so many different bonds rather than the Alaska portion, since that part of the story seemed more similar to OP’s story

    • @Elle...
      @Elle... 3 месяца назад

      @@squirtbrainz1219 roaming around like that kind of falls in the same category since it is still putting yourself in an unknown area without much thought for your own safety.

  • @jeremiahvires7864
    @jeremiahvires7864 Год назад +328

    Fun fact: You can avoid rabbit starvation by eating the organ meats and eyes of the rabbit, it has enough fats and carbohydrates to stave off starvation long enough to survive to find other things

    • @zektor1530
      @zektor1530 3 месяца назад +37

      I think starvation sounds preferable

    • @jeremiahvires7864
      @jeremiahvires7864 3 месяца назад +23

      @@zektor1530 fair enough tbh

    • @martingreen4543
      @martingreen4543 2 месяца назад +7

      @@zektor1530 pack some salt and pepper, you'll be fine. a little paprika maybe~

    • @wlodek8757
      @wlodek8757 2 месяца назад +6

      @@zektor1530 Organs are kinda tasty ngl, i actually preffer them to actual meat

    • @BRTowe
      @BRTowe Месяц назад +2

      You'll probably still starve. It usually takes more calories to hunt small game than small game can provide. The old timers killed small game only when it was convenient, they expended energy to hunt large game that was worth the work.

  • @sailor_indra
    @sailor_indra Год назад +7018

    Chris is not an example of survival, his intent wasn't to show how well he could survive in the wild, he just wanted to live his way. Living our life, the way we desire. Even when he was about to die he didn't fill himself with hatred and resentment, he thanked God for his life. He was a good person, innocent, not blinded by material stuff. He was an example of life, may he rest in peace.

    • @dansweet6793
      @dansweet6793 Год назад +77

      That's how I viewed it

    • @answerman9933
      @answerman9933 11 месяцев назад

      Chris McCandless was an idealistic idiot

    • @toolarmy95
      @toolarmy95 11 месяцев назад +23

      Exactly!!

    • @rallytonight8491
      @rallytonight8491 10 месяцев назад +172

      His writings consisting of how hungry, scared, and lonely he was, as well as the famous quote “Happiness is only real when shared” vastly disproves ALL of that. He knew he screwed up and he died painfully and filled with regret.

    • @legioning
      @legioning 10 месяцев назад +61

      @@rallytonight8491 guess you didnt read the part where he thanked "god" for his life

  • @argondrolf785
    @argondrolf785 2 года назад +4231

    I don't see anything wrong with a man finding fulfillment in his struggle to live, and I empathize with the idea that Chris was a man out of his time. That being said, even frontiersmen knew to be prepared and learned from the mistakes of the ones that came before them. I'm not saying Chris needed to do everything he could to make his journey easy for him, but his carelessness borders on suicidal arrogance.

    • @sezuawn3861
      @sezuawn3861 2 года назад +130

      I think we all get depressed and decide to go wherever life takes us sometimes. Wether you're mad or whatever mix of emotions you have. When i was going through a tough time coping with alot of deaths in the family i would often beat on myself. Id find myself going places i never would had i been in the right state of mind. But it makes you think differently. Just always know what you're worth. Don't let other people bring you down. My cousin chris couldn't handle what was going on. And i dont blame him. Ive been to the point where i just wanna leave.

    • @HexFire03lmao
      @HexFire03lmao 2 года назад +5

      @@sezuawn3861 cousin?

    • @Nantosuelta
      @Nantosuelta 2 года назад +165

      If you havent read the book, I recommend it. From the comments of his family members and those that knew him, he was a good natured person, but also kind of immature and an idealist. He romanticized life in the wilderness and thought of it more as something out of a Jack London novel than a real life or death situation. I think he fell pray to his own spontaneity and lack of forethought. He represents the commonly held dream of "leaving it all beyond and living in the woods" but without realizing just how difficult that reality is to attain, even with the necessary skills.

    • @yukiandkanamekuran
      @yukiandkanamekuran 2 года назад +39

      I don't think he was suicidal, he just didn't like the busy and materialistic life of people like his parents.
      While he definitely should've researched more, I think that's just one flaw. His attitude is pretty great other than that.

    • @randybaumery5090
      @randybaumery5090 2 года назад +14

      Argon Drolf -- exactly. I've been far more prepared just to go deer hunting and camp out for a week. You say arrogant, I say he idealized the idea of "living free of money". Whether case or trading furs, a personal still needs a way to legally acquire the tools to make it.

  • @kanagaway
    @kanagaway Год назад +135

    What I wish for Chris is that he would have had a buddy by his side. Someone who could have shown him a few tricks for surviving in the wilderness. Someone who could have been with him in his loneliest moments.

    • @360.Tapestry
      @360.Tapestry 9 месяцев назад +12

      it wouldn't have happened. he's known for being nice but weird... there's a reason he went on this journey alone

    • @Itried20takennames
      @Itried20takennames Месяц назад +1

      Agree, but from the book, Chris knew nature was brutal, and went to it for the challenge. And he thought a challenge with no real risk, because you have 5 back up plans, was no real challenge and pointless….there needed to be real danger.

  • @panamakira
    @panamakira 9 месяцев назад +130

    I first read the book "Into the Wild" about Chris' story in high school and it always stuck with me. I just felt really sad for him. He seemed like a nice person that was just lost in our world and wanted to live or die his own way. I do think the way of how careless he was in researching and having the proper gear to survive in the wilderness shows that he might have not cared enough about his life. Or who knows maybe he did believe he could survive off the land. I think if only he had a bit more experience.

    • @bencarlson4300
      @bencarlson4300 4 месяца назад +3

      I read the book and watched the movie for a class and they’re both really good, I think there’s something admirable about his life and his death. I often compare it in my mind with Timothy Treadwell from Grizzly Man and think how much more of a despicable fool Treadwell was considering his knowledge and experience level. Sad in both cases, but one chose to endanger himself and the other endangered others out of pure hubris.

  • @MeowmiXX_mmg
    @MeowmiXX_mmg 2 года назад +3625

    The point people walk away with: Wow, the human condition and the evils we as a society create can lead innocent people down the road of insanity and self-destruction, but nature itself is far greater a challenge to overcome
    The actual point of this story: Naming your child "christmas candles" will lead to inevitable derangement

    • @hungryconfidence1562
      @hungryconfidence1562 2 года назад +24

      Facts

    • @trinidad17
      @trinidad17 2 года назад +141

      Came to the comments for this kind of scholarly response *tips tophat while caressing neck beard*

    • @stpbasss3773
      @stpbasss3773 2 года назад +5

      😂

    • @b3dubbs72
      @b3dubbs72 2 года назад +52

      Stands to reason, seeing as how G.G. Allin’s legal name is “Jesus Christ Allin”

    • @horrorhotel1999
      @horrorhotel1999 2 года назад +27

      @@b3dubbs72 As in G-sus Grist? Sounds like a very bad rapper

  • @imjustaturtle641
    @imjustaturtle641 Год назад +3814

    When I was a senior in high school, my English teacher had us read "Into the Wild." We were supposed to compare Chris's life to the Heroes Journey and it was one of the worst lessons I've ever experienced. We weren't allowed to be critical and it felt like our teacher was trying to say "hey when you graduate high school you should be like Chris!' which is a HARD YIKES. Ironically enough I was also in a Wildlife Sciences class at the time and my teacher did his field work with bears in Alaska. He summed up Chris best for me, "It's easy for me to be critical of his entire approach, but what good is there in chastising a man who paid the ultimate price for his folly? When you are surrounded by nature, completely removed from the outside world, you walk the thin line between life and death. But you are also free, in the truest sense of the word. He wasn't seeking fame or book deals or any of the attention his story has since received. He just wanted to be free."

    • @themudpit621
      @themudpit621 Год назад +203

      I remember how much it sucked to be forced to choose between honest expression and a grade you needed for your future.
      Fie... a pox on your old English teacher! A pox I say!!!

    • @MNRAZORBACK
      @MNRAZORBACK Год назад

      I hate how much people hold them up as something romantic or ideal. Those people are idiots. He was an extremely selfish, idealistic and spoiled person. He had to be nagged to take proper footwear, he turned down a map which literally would have saved his life.
      Lots of people tried to help him, but he was too arrogant. Anybody who admires this loser is just a moron. He didn't return triumphant people, he died because he was stupid and ill prepared

    • @thatmeme1360
      @thatmeme1360 Год назад +4

      Now imagine growing up as George Milton from Of Mice An Men And Holding Into The Wild as a Future Goal to an extent...

    • @thatmeme1360
      @thatmeme1360 Год назад +13

      @@themudpit621 I agree. Animal farm , Hatchet , Of Mice and Men , and so many others all get contempt for them when they've been pushed on the kids that way... gotta have a link for a better more heartfelt connection.

    • @mchepen
      @mchepen Год назад +22

      god damn thats a long quote to remember, what do you take for your memory?

  • @prometheuszero9
    @prometheuszero9 7 месяцев назад +25

    For some context, Supertramp is also a band that was popular when McCandless was young, which I'm sure had something to do with his clever little alias for himself.

  • @crayons1584
    @crayons1584 2 месяца назад +9

    I remember reading Into the Wild when I was in highschool and it changed my life, my teacher even let me keep the book. I started hiking and backpacking, and I learned how much nature makes me happy. But what really resonated with me was a quote they found in one of his books that read “happiness is only real when shared”. I think Chris had loved his life, but that he had been lonely. Everything I learned about Chris are things I still focus on today when I think about how I want to live my life

  • @CarayMay
    @CarayMay 2 года назад +2397

    I have a friend who is exactly how you've described Chris. He killed himself a few years ago. I'm still processing it and watching this turned out to be helpful.

    • @abbysapples1225
      @abbysapples1225 2 года назад +93

      I pray to God the Father that in time you'll find peace. ❤️

    • @CarayMay
      @CarayMay 2 года назад +62

      @@abbysapples1225 thank you :) I appreciate it.

    • @abbysapples1225
      @abbysapples1225 2 года назад +20

      @@CarayMay You're very welcome. 🙂

    • @wolfetteplays8894
      @wolfetteplays8894 2 года назад +61

      Hopefully he got reincarnated into a simpler and less dystopian time

    • @RafProductions3
      @RafProductions3 2 года назад

      What he do?

  • @robby7499
    @robby7499 2 года назад +3596

    I've seen many people miss the point of the movie: his story isn't inspiring because in the end, he realized how cruel nature was and wanted to return to civilization, but resigned when he could not.

    • @dext871
      @dext871 2 года назад +157

      I’m glad someone understands

    • @DD-kc6hg
      @DD-kc6hg 2 года назад +249

      @Weni Xerja 👇💘 RUclips won't fix this but hey Let's get rid of the dislike button.

    • @maximumbeans9310
      @maximumbeans9310 2 года назад +387

      And let’s call a spade a spade, he acted like a total fool. He went out into some of the most harsh and unforgiving terrain with barely any supplies, little to no experience, and refused the warnings that were given to him. He seemed to be an intelligent man but by arrogance or perhaps something else, he just couldn’t be dissuaded until it was too late.

    • @personaissleepy
      @personaissleepy 2 года назад +116

      @@DD-kc6hg They invaded the sanctuary of Wendigoon. God save us all.

    • @BeersAndBeatsPDX
      @BeersAndBeatsPDX 2 года назад +191

      The movie was far too kind to him. He was a trust fund kid who thought he could take on nature and lost because of his arrogant ignorance.

  • @patriciau6277
    @patriciau6277 3 месяца назад +15

    As a mother this story broke my heart. As I read the book all I could think about was how lost this poor child was and no one was there for him.

  • @cameronjordan1516
    @cameronjordan1516 8 месяцев назад +48

    Chris died seemingly smiling, he died happy and that's more than most can say

  • @TrixieTreat
    @TrixieTreat 2 года назад +3610

    I don't think Chris was an idiot, but he was definitely ignorant of the reality of the Alaskan wilderness. It seems like he had a lot of magical thinking about his journey which caused him to ignore the advice of those more experienced than him (like refusing to pack cold weather gear). He was so focused on the spiritual nature of his journey that he just ignored the physical realities of what he was up against.
    In reality, had he not found "the magic bus", he would have most likely die much sooner.

    • @b-b8704
      @b-b8704 2 года назад +135

      Most information spread about him is from the book and movie, however, local Alaskans said he broke into their cabins (which is actually okay there, they understand some need the cabins for survival) and left the cabins trashed (this is not seen as okay)
      Edit: ruclips.net/video/gNyav9g6BJY/видео.html

    • @TheRealADHDavid
      @TheRealADHDavid 2 года назад +23

      Do you have a good source for that? To be clear, I've read up on all of the burglary accusations and they're all credible, but I think it'd be a good resource for people looking at your comment.

    • @b-b8704
      @b-b8704 2 года назад +56

      @@TheRealADHDavid it was from a documentary I watched on it a long time ago. A few locals were interviewed and thats what they said. Its been so long I have no clue what it was called tbh

    • @dylanfarnham5164
      @dylanfarnham5164 2 года назад +25

      @@TheRealADHDavid while I personally haven't seen this documentary or seen other sources, is it possible that these people already just did not like Chris for is ignorance about the wilderness and decided to fabricate these tales to further lessen the idea that Chris was a hero? Just an idea. Not sure how much weight one should put into it.

    • @DeathnoteBB
      @DeathnoteBB 2 года назад +101

      @@dylanfarnham5164 Seems a bit disingenuous to doubt the local’s firsthand experience with a man known to be ignorant of his environment

  • @mishadixon3694
    @mishadixon3694 Год назад +2818

    I live in Alaska and this guy is a legend to some and an idiot to most. We read a book about him in high school and his story always stuck with me.

    • @totalkatastrophe
      @totalkatastrophe Год назад +71

      i think lil bit of both.

    • @iamsam-cu9rz
      @iamsam-cu9rz Год назад

      @@totalkatastrophelot more idiot though

    • @kirkchurchil8216
      @kirkchurchil8216 Год назад +106

      As someone who loves the woods and grew up camping and hunting this story blows my mind. It seems like he was very stubborn and didn’t take things very serious. The thought of going out in the wilderness of Alaska with such little gear and provisions and a map a simple map! just blows my mind.

    • @gabuccino7325
      @gabuccino7325 Год назад

      He's an idiot, but an idiot i wouldn't laugh at, for sure. He had a pretty good run, travelling, meeting people, living in the wilds completely unprepared for a good amount of time.
      While i'm not shrugging away the fact that he died due to his idiocy. This idiot we're talking about probably has lived his life with more color and memories than what i probably could've gained throughout my lifetime.

    • @mosaicowlstudios
      @mosaicowlstudios Год назад +10

      Legend to me

  • @194californiagirl
    @194californiagirl 8 месяцев назад +19

    I love the story of Chris McCandless. As a young adult I spent the summer working in Yellowstone National Park and even though it was less dangerous then venturing into the Alaskan Wilderness alone there was still wild animals and unfamiliar terrain.
    I think most of us when we're just barely adults need to find ourselves and sometimes a few months in the woods can help.
    I know it was helpful to me and all of the friends I made working in Yellowstone.

  • @Littlemissaly
    @Littlemissaly 10 месяцев назад +16

    I lived in Alaska for 3 months working at one of the seasonal hotels and one of the bars in Denali has a replica of the bus that you can go inside of it. It was so interesting to see and to talk to the people in the area about their thoughts. While I was there a newly wed couple went to follow his trail and the wife got swept up in the river and died. I think more than anything this story needs to be a cautionary tale and emphasis how unforgiving the Alaskan nature can be and people who are choose to follow him completely missed the point

  • @OmniAxisZero
    @OmniAxisZero 2 года назад +2623

    I did something like this once. Decided I had enough of society and sold off everything and lived in the woods for 3 months or so making my way through Northern California to Seattle. I'm by no means a survivalist but have decent instincts. So by the end I was also near death and almost lost my leg. Probably not the smartest thing I ever did but I definitely cherish the experience.

    • @itiswhatitis6673
      @itiswhatitis6673 2 года назад +92

      That’s crazy what was it like being out in the wilderness all alone?

    • @TeeComedian
      @TeeComedian 2 года назад +142

      Oh wow, glad to have you still with us

    • @genarosepulveda9260
      @genarosepulveda9260 2 года назад +66

      I have had urges to do just that with my gf and dog for weeks now

    • @captainalex157
      @captainalex157 2 года назад +97

      @@genarosepulveda9260 do it in the summer, most importantly inform yourself, read books on the topic. Think of everything that can go wrong and prepare yourself for every SHTF scenario. Its gonna be a blast! :)

    • @part-timeloser1662
      @part-timeloser1662 2 года назад +4

      Very cool

  • @harrydsgn
    @harrydsgn 2 года назад +1924

    that line: "Happiness is only real when shared," has stuck with me so hard since seeing the movie. Chris' story is so complex but something about that line cuts straight through and gets to the point of what life is about in such a concise way. Feels so much more tangible than platitudes like 'no man is an island.' Also a hard truth to wrestle with as somebody who struggles with socialization and isolationism.

    • @kass_G59
      @kass_G59 2 года назад +4

      Very true.

    • @EsotericOccultist
      @EsotericOccultist 2 года назад +8

      Thank you for sharing that. I feel the exact same way. 👍👍

    • @CaitlinMagness
      @CaitlinMagness 2 года назад +42

      “No man is an island” is taken from John Donne’s Meditation 17. It’s much more meaningful if you read it in context, as it was before it was repeated everywhere and reduced to a mere platitude. Also just a beautiful, reassuring read. It basically says, “No matter how isolated you might feel, your death would be experienced by the whole world.”

    • @sway_onthetrail
      @sway_onthetrail 2 года назад +30

      Honestly, there’s peace in isolation too. I’m not saying being void of human interaction is healthy, but the best way to share happiness is to learn how to be happy yourself.
      (Just adding on to what you’re saying, not being argumentative, just to be clear.)

    • @jakefoley9539
      @jakefoley9539 2 года назад +17

      This really hit me like a brick to the gut. I'm financially well-off, but very isolated.
      People always ask me why I don't just up and move to some tropical island.
      "Because I'd be there alone"
      They tell me to go buy my dream car.
      "I have no one to enjoy it with"
      They tell me to go on adventure in some foreign place.
      "So I can wander around by myself?"
      They don't understand that I've already done every single I wanted to do in life, alone, and those experiences were all tainted by the fact that I had no one to share them with.
      Put simply, I no longer care about perusing anything or achieving anything while I'm alone. I can't continue to live life as a one-man show with a single audience member, myself.
      This isn't life.

  • @multiversalmanifesters3377
    @multiversalmanifesters3377 7 месяцев назад +14

    Learned about this guy in a high school class
    His decisions confuse me to this day

  • @riduanaqil1452
    @riduanaqil1452 8 месяцев назад +18

    I love that you said surviving wasn't the goal because i came to think so too. There was never an ending or an achievement to be made.. it was just a maan living the way that made him happiest. Despite all the suferring and starvation and the desperation for help in the end all of it made him happy and he was gratefull for it till his very last breath. Not once in his journal did he got mad at God or fate or regret his decision and he finally return to God with nothing less of absolute gratefulness for all the good and the bad through out his life because that is what makes him feel full even as he was dying (yes he wanted to turn back for supplies but he didn't resent the fact that he can't. Reading the words he wrote it was more of a "living life as it is". If it happens than that's how it should be and he is content with it)

  • @haydencriss7709
    @haydencriss7709 Год назад +3387

    Chris I believe dealt with passive suicidal ideation. He wanted to seclude himself and find peace but didn’t want to actively kill himself. I get this idea because of the fact he didn’t research the area and that he packed light. Also the traumatic childhood.

    • @vincemelson9655
      @vincemelson9655 Год назад +36

      exactly

    • @Roozyj
      @Roozyj 10 месяцев назад +226

      That makes a lot of sense. He kinda did what a lot of people probably fantasize about. Mine is moving to Ireland and become a goat farmer/poet, but I wouldn't actually walk out of my life.
      It's quite a romantic way to commit suicide tbh - romantic in the 18/19th century definition

    • @leonardoferrari4852
      @leonardoferrari4852 9 месяцев назад +70

      ​@@Roozyj when romantic meant drinking absinthe while your lungs collapse due to tuberculosis, the good old times

    • @KR-vu9mo
      @KR-vu9mo 9 месяцев назад +28

      @@Roozyjwe have a similar dream. I fantasize about petting highland cows in Scotland on overcast days….

    • @Roozyj
      @Roozyj 9 месяцев назад +2

      @@KR-vu9mo that sounds great

  • @Zsawq12
    @Zsawq12 2 года назад +1414

    Wendigoon is like a best friend telling you things that normally you wouldn’t be interested in but the way he tells it makes you interested

    • @skittlescopes4832
      @skittlescopes4832 2 года назад +16

      True. But he’s also got an eye for picking great topics to talk about

    • @ephin3242
      @ephin3242 2 года назад +7

      I feel like this didn’t need the “best friend” analogy part lol.

    • @zeussesalim1174
      @zeussesalim1174 2 года назад

      Parasocial andy

    • @Zsawq12
      @Zsawq12 2 года назад

      How is that parasocial

    • @Nothing-ce8uv
      @Nothing-ce8uv 2 года назад +2

      ​@@ephin3242 yea lol it just describes literally what he does.

  • @lovelylavenderr
    @lovelylavenderr 9 месяцев назад +14

    I read 'Into the Wild' about Chris for my AP Lang class and I'm glad to see you covering it as well. It's a fascinating story.

    • @RobColeFilms
      @RobColeFilms Месяц назад +1

      Same! I read it for English II, and having never heard of him before, I was fascinated why he would pursue such a lifestyle.

  • @chilledmilkxx8354
    @chilledmilkxx8354 10 месяцев назад +12

    i love when these kinds of stories have a hugely profound effect on what i am thinking

  • @santos8399
    @santos8399 2 года назад +857

    Had to read this book during senior year of high school last year. Felt like a drag at first but learning about someone willingly abandoning everything to explore a life in the wilderness definitely makes you imagine yourself in a situation and I enjoyed it after a while.

    • @bigfoot3866
      @bigfoot3866 2 года назад +26

      If you decide to try this make sure you take YEARS of survival training for the area you're going and be close enough to civilization that you can get help.
      Even the pioneers and mountain men didn't do it alone and had ties to civilization.

    • @IsabellaBiddy
      @IsabellaBiddy 2 года назад

      ME TOO. It was amazing!!

    • @jojodajester2419
      @jojodajester2419 2 года назад

      Nice pfp 😳

    • @farkasmactavish
      @farkasmactavish 2 года назад

      He was pretty cool until he was really stupid.

  • @plantymcplantface7182
    @plantymcplantface7182 2 года назад +3047

    I've been neglected in my up bringing and I've fantasised about running off into the woods just to 'survive' the way Chris did. Looking at Chris, i can see myself and it makes me so depressed. He wasn't stupid, he was alone & in pain.

    • @chloeelizabeth013
      @chloeelizabeth013 2 года назад +169

      Me too. I was actually kind of suicidal at the time. I fantasized escaping to the woods, having almost nothing and intending to die out there. I'm in a better place now and am glad I didn't go through with it. I feel for Chris.

    • @dylanrepetto2447
      @dylanrepetto2447 2 года назад +25

      Your not alone brother !! Love u

    • @TheStarBlack
      @TheStarBlack 2 года назад +27

      Me too. And we are the only ones who can truly understand why he did what he did.

    • @southanime
      @southanime 2 года назад +6

      He was an hero

    • @Tayl0r_
      @Tayl0r_ 2 года назад +63

      Its absolutely despicable how some of the park rangers talked about Chris. I understand working in that field, you get tired of having to rescue the inexperienced, but to completely minimize his life, and his death really rubbed me the wrong way.

  • @marniejohnston5106
    @marniejohnston5106 2 месяца назад +3

    Just stumbled across this video and am blown away!! I have never heard this story before but it really resonates with me…I feel like I can kinda understand why Chris lived out his life the way he did…we are so much more than our physical forms and our human existence. Thank u for bringing this story to my attention, thanks for all of your hard work and finally, just subscribed as I really like your content your attitude and style of presentation. Cheers from Australia 🖤💛❤️

  • @miltonedwin8237
    @miltonedwin8237 Месяц назад +1

    Hi. Fan of MrBallen here. Can't believe I never come across your channel considering both you guys came out the same time around 2020. Great story telling with your very own style of presentation.

  • @DigitalEWhore
    @DigitalEWhore 2 года назад +1013

    One of the saddest parts is if he had been honest with the people he met about wanting to live off the land and what his life before was like, he very well could have been taught how to actually do that. Ive lived in communities similar to the ones Chris went through, and just about everyone I know would have sympathized with him and showed him what they know

    • @callumblakeney7935
      @callumblakeney7935 2 года назад +18

      Stop it Tomar

    • @bitchface235
      @bitchface235 2 года назад +61

      But he wouldn't have done that. He wanted to do everything on his own without anyone else's help. He could've done the same thing in Colorado or Montana and would still be alive today probably.

    • @damoji5332
      @damoji5332 2 года назад +5

      OK Tomie

    • @John_Browns_body
      @John_Browns_body 2 года назад +5

      Look it's tomar

    • @NyanCatHerder
      @NyanCatHerder 2 года назад +16

      I don't "live off the land" or have any interest in doing so. If I met someone who intended to go on a backcountry trail with the supplies that he took, though, I would definitely give them advice and try to help them pick out adequate resources for their intended trip. People who choose to actually live in the wilderness could have also helped him by showing him better ways to accomplish what he hoped with his life. I don't share his goals, but there are many thousands of people who do, and reaching out to them could have made the tragic ending of this story into something much happier.
      It's a tragedy that he didn't accept either kind of guidance, or reach out to others who would have been able to understand and give him a community to belong to. McCandles was on a popular, if difficult, trail. As this video notes, there was an easy way for him to get back across the river if he'd had a proper map (he had one, I think, but it wasn't detailed enough). If he'd left an itinerary, someone could have gone out to find him. I have no interest in mocking him, but he was grossly unprepared, and was unwilling to listen to people who could have gladly and easily helped him. There was no reason for this man to die.

  • @TheHowlingEye
    @TheHowlingEye 2 года назад +3450

    Chris literally run off into the woods instead of going to therapy, but this is in no way his fault. People raised in abusive families will often reject any kind of help and show distrust up until they are in their absolute worst. This is the kind of shit trauma does to you. His parents gaslighting him even it death would explain a lot.

    • @Damaardk
      @Damaardk 2 года назад +102

      Alot of the people who have experienced physical or mental trauma don’t go out in the wilderness away from everything. I feel like to Chris, this was much more than escapism.

    • @VelvetAura
      @VelvetAura 2 года назад +141

      @@Damaardk Mental illness especially manifests itself differently from person to person. There is no way for us to know why Chris did what he did, but I don't think it was on accident or due to negligence. He had chances to go on these journeys more prepared and chose not to. Some say he was arrogant or stupid, some say he was suicidal.
      My personal take on it is that he was disillusioned by the world around him and wanted to get down to the bare essentials on his own terms, even if it was not the most intelligent thing to do by most people's standards. Even if his mental health was a factor, it doesn't seem like Chris would have wanted that to define him or his decision (if he was aware of his mental wellness to begin with).

    • @SaltpeterTaffy
      @SaltpeterTaffy 2 года назад +73

      "In no way" is a dangerous precedent to set. Adults MUST bear responsibility for their own actions to some degree.

    • @peepawfart
      @peepawfart 2 года назад +128

      @@Damaardk I mean... False... I experienced mental/physical trauma (and still experience it, to a lesser extent) and I think about running away into the wilderness very, very often. Its a mixture of "I will never be able to escape this and running away is my best bet" and "Starving to death out in the woods wouldn't be that bad of a way to go"

    • @scp--297
      @scp--297 2 года назад +84

      @@Damaardk
      As someone who currently trying to go to therapy and was abused as a kid to adulthood. When I had the chance as a kid, I constantly ran into the woods to hid or just stayed there until my family cooled down. I even learn what I could eat by my cousin who did the same (How the hell we didn't died or accidentally kill my siblings, I have no idea and we are very lucky.) Even as an adult, I have thought of running away into the wood and never coming back. However, I have a lot of people relying on me (emotional and financial) and I'm aware that part of it is suicidal.
      So I can't help but wonder if it was mental illness or abuse, or a mix of both.

  • @TheAdaoo7
    @TheAdaoo7 10 месяцев назад +10

    I cant believe how delusional his parents must be to only attach his personality and legacy to material things. Even when the closest person in the world to them embodies the most extreme form of anti-materialism, they are unable to even conceive of it as a concept. That's just bewildering to me. Im not saying they should conform to it or even understand his decision but they are clearly unable to even grasp the concept. Insane

  • @Acupofwater_WAW
    @Acupofwater_WAW 11 месяцев назад +13

    I recently read the book and movie about this man. It is truly a very sad story because I too want to get to a place where i can be in peace and alone, but unlike Mccandles I am not as innocent and oblivious.

  • @alaskanwhiskey6383
    @alaskanwhiskey6383 2 года назад +468

    I find it humbling and endearing that Chris wanted to live this life, but my boy was a newbie going into hardcore survival mode in Minecraft

    • @vsGoliath96
      @vsGoliath96 2 года назад +38

      He thought to himself, "Well, I did pretty damn well hitchhiking around the Lower 48... I think I'm ready to take on Alaskan bear country by myself with no provisions!"
      These are two radically different things, Chris!

  • @maggiedk
    @maggiedk 2 года назад +730

    So I actually went to Woodson, the same high school Chris went to. We didn't read the book about him as a class, but I remember one student had done a project on the book and made a video where they went around to teachers who had known Chris and asked them about him. From what I remember, they all said he was kind, funny, and had a lot of friends. It's crazy seeing you make a video about him.

    • @TooMosey
      @TooMosey 2 года назад

      He’s famous

    • @maggiedk
      @maggiedk 2 года назад +11

      @@TooMosey I know, I just don't hear about him often and have never heard him mentioned on RUclips before so it was cool to see Wendigoon covering him

    • @TooMosey
      @TooMosey 2 года назад +3

      @@maggiedk what do you think about his decision?

    • @maggiedk
      @maggiedk 2 года назад +23

      @@TooMosey I think it's pretty tragic, honestly. A lot of people are calling him stupid, as if he deserved to die for that, but I think that's unfair. Young adults make dumb decisions sometimes, but it doesn't mean that they're stupid overall. It's sad that he didn't have more of a chance to grow and learn from his mistakes, because he seemed like a good guy with some unique views on the world.

    • @TooMosey
      @TooMosey 2 года назад +11

      @@maggiedk you’re right the world is a beautiful place but there’s so many dangers too 🙏

  • @AfromanJon
    @AfromanJon 7 месяцев назад +3

    I wouldn't consider him either stupid or some sort of hero. He's just a guy who lived life on his own terms and got caught on the wrong side of a river swell.

  • @terezaaaaa
    @terezaaaaa 9 месяцев назад +1

    we watched into the wild in high school and it definitely stuck with me in some way, so i was excited to see this video come up in my recommendations. love your videos

  • @vangoghingtokms
    @vangoghingtokms Год назад +2692

    I don’t know why, but „beautiful blueberries“ is the saddest and most haunting and most, well, beautiful thing I’ve seen or heard chris say or write. Nothing anyone writes about him will ever top his last journal entry just being him admiring something most people find mundane. Sure, he could have just been delirious from malnutrition or his sicknesses, but I like to think he was saying to god that he did a good job making blueberries and he should be proud of such a beautiful, dazzling creation

    • @henrylafferty4814
      @henrylafferty4814 Год назад +168

      I wasn’t ready for the emotional whiplash of crying at your comment and laughing at your name. Thanks

    • @lillasagna5487
      @lillasagna5487 Год назад +24

      @@henrylafferty4814 I'm in the same boat man

    • @Boost400
      @Boost400 Год назад +26

      it aint that deep

    • @lillasagna5487
      @lillasagna5487 Год назад +1

      @@Boost400 I played apex with your mom

    • @bigboy-gw8me
      @bigboy-gw8me Год назад

      @Floyd Abrams why you just say ughh

  • @milknhoneyhoney
    @milknhoneyhoney 2 года назад +409

    I've only seen the "Into the Wild" movie, I had NO IDEA there was a lift across the river so close to him. Absolutely heartbreaking.

    • @burnttendies8230
      @burnttendies8230 2 года назад +7

      Yeah i also only saw the movie, watched it with my parents and i wanted to watch it again (sometime later) but they removed it from netflix :(( but they recently added it back, and im happy for that, more people need to know his story, definitely changed alot of lives this man did

    • @SL4PSH0CK
      @SL4PSH0CK 2 года назад +9

      it was a Darwin Award which inspired others to seek their own Darwin Awards rawrding them with demise

    • @AmandaVieiraMamaesouCult
      @AmandaVieiraMamaesouCult 2 года назад +14

      @@SL4PSH0CK you don't have to be so edgy and unempathetic all the time

    • @kneau
      @kneau 2 года назад +3

      @@AmandaVieiraMamaesouCult Darwin awards were/are an actual thing, at least in a publication sense. It's my experience that stating this incident was included in a collection of Darwin awards is not edgy; it's a statement of fact. 🤷🏻‍♀️

  • @waketp420
    @waketp420 10 месяцев назад +27

    He inspired me to do the same when i graduated high school.
    I didnt burn my SS card or my ID, but i spent the first few years traveling the country, and camping wherever I thought safe.
    Best decision I ever made.

  • @madolorito
    @madolorito 7 месяцев назад +8

    Chris is definitely an idealist, carefree and a wonderful soul. I hope he have listened to the people that actually cared for him. May this story serve as a lesson to everyone to carefully plan their ventures before executing it in order to avoid unneccesary consequences.

  • @paradoxical_human5246
    @paradoxical_human5246 2 года назад +404

    I live in Alaska and this guys kind of a local legend, in a way. There’s even a restaurant with a replica of the bus he stayed in. The army ended up having to remove the bus because of a bunch of crazies trying to copy him. Honestly, he’s more of a martyr of what not to do. He did every single thing wrong he could’ve, and didn’t know what he was doing. Once you get out of the towns Alaska can be a harsh as hell place to be and he wasn’t ready at all. I respect him trying to follow his dreams, but now he just serves as a way for parents to tell their kids “don’t do this or you’ll die like the guy on the bus.” It’s a sad story, and I wish he had done more research, and maybe could’ve followed his dreams for more than a few months.
    Still, respect to him for somehow killing a caribou.

    • @jasperlee1025
      @jasperlee1025 2 года назад +22

      raised and living in alaska here! idk which area you're in but in fairbanks we had to read into the wild in high school and good god it was so frustrating reading his story. I don't think he's a worthless dipshit but he basically committed suicide. in this area at least, people definitely regard him more as a cautionary tale than anything positive. still definitely respect him for sticking to his beliefs and surviving out there for so long but goddamn, how unprepared and foolish can you be
      also it could be me being native alaskan but every time I talk about it to other eskimo people it always leads back to "white people don't know what they're getting into when it comes to alaskan wilderness"

    • @cesarsalazar6872
      @cesarsalazar6872 2 года назад

      Oh

    • @ivy7417
      @ivy7417 2 года назад +2

      Lol. *urban people of every race

    • @paradoxical_human5246
      @paradoxical_human5246 2 года назад +2

      @@jasperlee1025 Aye fairbanks too! I haven't ever had to read it, and yeah I don't think he was a worthless dipshit, he somehow managed to survive as long as he did. And yeah, I'm white and I can tell you with full confidence that there's precious few of us I've met who know what they're doing out there, and I'm certainly not one.
      Fortunately, most people I've met are aware they don't know shit, and don't risk their lives and the lives of others by trying to live in the wilderness.

    • @Vandyno
      @Vandyno 2 года назад

      Moose.

  • @ivanaz6105
    @ivanaz6105 2 года назад +751

    I need to get this off my chest. Chris' story is one of those that absolutely crush my heart. I'm not sure why, perhaps because of how profoundly his desire to escape current society resonates with me. I admire his bravery. The isolation we feel at a time when communication with the world is easier than ever is deafening and I believe he saw that happening, especially studying Anthropology. Where I see the problem is that it's not living isolated that's the solution or perhaps even what Chris craved. I think what would suit him best would be living in a small community. I don't know anything about Alaska but from what I've seen, there is no shortage of smaller communities spread scarcely around the area. By living with such people, learning about nature around him and ways to co-exist with other beings, I think he would thrive. He seemed happy living his nomadic lifestyle while within in the mainland US borders and there he had contact with people, he wasn't in isolation.
    The tragedy of his final days strikes me the most. Thinking about how cold, scared and in pain he must have been is just haunting, as well as imagining him thinking that probably no one will come to his rescue but still remaining hopeful.
    He seems like a thoroughly kind and thoughtful person and I hope he is able to rest in peace.

    • @jusa297
      @jusa297 2 года назад +6

      Industrial society and it's future by Theodore John Cyzinsky (or something)

    • @QuintonRC23
      @QuintonRC23 2 года назад +3

      Starving to death is painless. Other than his poisoning he would have actually been feeling a type of euphoria as the body feeds on itself.

    • @acehughj4527
      @acehughj4527 2 года назад +5

      @@jusa297 kaczynski

    • @CodeguruX
      @CodeguruX 2 года назад +1

      Yeah, I just clicked through about 30 seconds of this video and don't care if you or anyone else lives or dies. That's the other extreme to make you feel awkward.

    • @tylerrivard53
      @tylerrivard53 2 года назад +2

      Quality comment, much respect 🙏

  • @jaredwhitaker3601
    @jaredwhitaker3601 5 месяцев назад +1

    I loved the movie into the wild, the story is just so fascinating to me and obviously a lot of people. Thanks for covering this wendigoon this is exactly why I discovered and subbed to you. I know this is a little bit different of a video for you but please keep discovering/covering this type of mysteries.

  • @samygirl3113
    @samygirl3113 Год назад +8

    I've always had such admiration for Chris since reading Into the Wild in highschool.

  • @mieszkot1227
    @mieszkot1227 2 года назад +868

    In high school we read the book Into the Wild and watched the movie about McCandless. I didn't ever expect you to cover this, but the story about him is so fascinating. I'm glad more people will learn about him for the first time just like we all did!

  • @estrid8616
    @estrid8616 2 года назад +789

    You explaining the lean meat diet death made me realize how fragile we are, honestly I'm impressed we made it this far man

    • @KeepiTCawl
      @KeepiTCawl 2 года назад +16

      We aren’t meant to for this planet, we were placed here

    • @benwilsonMMA
      @benwilsonMMA 2 года назад +89

      We’re fragile in so many ways but also incredibly tough and robust in just as many

    • @jas6853
      @jas6853 2 года назад +61

      @@KeepiTCawl disagree our ancestors overcame so much

    • @DeathnoteBB
      @DeathnoteBB 2 года назад +14

      @@KeepiTCawl We are if we actually use any common sense

    • @SirDankleberry
      @SirDankleberry 2 года назад +45

      @@KeepiTCawl We are the product of millions of years of evolution and adaptation. There's no other species that has managed to overcome and conquer nature like we have.

  • @Riley_nystrom
    @Riley_nystrom Месяц назад +1

    Into the Wild was a book assigned to me in my high school senior English class. I will always be grateful for my teacher, I adore this story and the impact Chris had on the people around him.

  • @RedLove224
    @RedLove224 3 месяца назад +2

    We talked about Chris MCcandless last semester in our English class, I am in my junior year. His story means a lot to me, and connects with me in strange ways. Despite his tragic end, his determination still went on, it is amazing and saddening at the same time.

  • @t0mies_b0dy
    @t0mies_b0dy Год назад +1537

    As an abuse victim, I have always been told that my version of events were exaggerated to garner attention and sympathy and to get out of a situation or frame my abusers for my own gain. Meanwhile, I was trying to advocate for myself and ensure my own safety and my sister's safety. When an abuser said that the abused's version of events are exaggerated, it's them saying "it happened but I'm going to play victim because I am stuck in my ways and what I did wasn't wrong." It's a form of gaslighting and isolating the victim so that the abuse can continue.

    • @placeholderdoe
      @placeholderdoe 8 месяцев назад +22

      So sorry that you were a victim to that. No one deserves that. I really hope you’re doing better now and you’re away from your abusers

    • @jknight9487
      @jknight9487 8 месяцев назад +46

      @@GoggleDumbactually Chris and Carine’s half siblings have all cut ties with their father.
      Abuse not being “that bad” is such a loaded statement to me.

    • @lukew6725
      @lukew6725 5 месяцев назад +4

      Or it actually was exaggerated because that does happen.

    • @voidstrider801
      @voidstrider801 5 месяцев назад +18

      @@lukew6725 People who lie about being abused definitely exist and have even been caught doing so in some cases but they are the exception, not the rule. Most of the time the abuse actually happened whether it was somewhat exaggerated or understated by the victim, but it still happened more often than not in some form. Also consider the fact that there are people who will lie and say they were not abused out of fear or some warped loyalty/love towards their abuser.

    • @eileensnow6153
      @eileensnow6153 5 месяцев назад +3

      @@lukew6725what a strange comment to make to someone who says they weren’t believed. Sounds awfully gaslighty

  • @alksi1
    @alksi1 Год назад +616

    I did somewhat similar thing once. I bought an old mazda and just drove. I felt i needed alot of distance from my abusive parents. Drove 1000 km to the Arctic ocean. From there i drove through Sweden to Denmark. From Denmark to Germany etc. I drove to Lissabon. After i reached Croatia i decided i want to go back home. Felt like Forrest Gump in the running scene. The trip took me 3 months and very stressfull nights waiting for the mechanics to fix my car without understanding a word of what i needed. Slept in my car most nights. But im glad i did it. It was soothing just to have an escape.

    • @cirrus404
      @cirrus404 Год назад +53

      Hell of an experience, hope you’re in a good place now

    • @bob-kt2cv
      @bob-kt2cv Год назад +11

      hopefully you found what you needed in that trip, hopefully you're safe now.

    • @HickoryJ
      @HickoryJ Год назад +37

      I just finished doing something similar. I was tired of my life in North Carolina. I sold almost everything I owned, drove to the outer banks, and slept on my Toyota Corolla for months this year, just traveling gradually west and then north. I don’t know why I did it. I just had to get out.
      I wound up going from the outer banks of North Carolina to San Francisco, and then northward, finally turning around in Prince George, British Columbia. The Canadian border people didn’t trust me at all. Didn’t know what to tell them, that I was just traveling, but they did let me through.
      I think I needed to get it out of my system. I ended my travels at the end of august and started a new life in Chicago. I’ll see if it works for me.

    • @lilikazhimomi9822
      @lilikazhimomi9822 Год назад +5

      Take me with you next time 😭😭😭😭😭

    • @bob-kt2cv
      @bob-kt2cv Год назад +6

      @@HickoryJ super brave of you Jobey! I hope everything works out for you and you found what you needed.

  • @quirkasaurussaurus2896
    @quirkasaurussaurus2896 6 месяцев назад +3

    @wendigoon, you silly, "Supertramp" is the name of a very famous pop-rock band. They had a huge it with "Breakfast in America" in 1980 - about the time of this man's teenage years.

  • @cyka666
    @cyka666 9 месяцев назад +192

    Something about Chris McCandless that I think is important to note and slightly irritates me about his apparently “inspirational” story, is that only people who come from wealth have the luxury of being indifferent to money. He was able to go on this adventure precisely because he knew, even subconsciously, that he could always go back to a comfortable life. When he says in a letter to his boss who became a friend that “it’s too easy being a tramp with all this money, it was much more fun when I had to scrounge for my meals” is something that only someone from wealth could ever say. Poor people don’t have the luxury of leaving everything behind no matter how much they might wish to.

    • @jacobc.2705
      @jacobc.2705 9 месяцев назад +31

      yeah, i def get that as someone who has been homeless and also from moderate wealth, I've learned that money doesn't buy happiness, however it makes it far easier to find happiness. when i had nothing i could only truly appreciate the little things like unripped clothes and warm blankets because i had taken them for granted in the past. so while i understand why your irritated only he can say such things, you can too. you just have to really search for things to be happy for and the stark contrast makes it a little easier, but also far easier to be bitter about what they've lost.

    • @Tina06019
      @Tina06019 6 месяцев назад +10

      It’s also much easier to be cavalier about money, or the lack thereof, when you are young, strong, and healthy, and you have no dependents. My husband & I lived out of our car (tent, couch surfing) for a short while, and no, it was no fun at all. Thank heavens, it was before we had children.

    • @RallyTheTally
      @RallyTheTally 4 месяца назад +5

      Given he was homeless for forever by his own choice, that's just who he was as a person. Your hating on a dead man for being 'rich' when I bet you compared to other people around the world are living like a king. Life isn't a pity contest.'

    • @cyka666
      @cyka666 4 месяца назад +4

      @@RallyTheTally I never said it was a pity contest. Those types of people I do hate, like people who say “think about the poor children in Africa”. People would say shit like that to my autistic younger brother when he’d have a meltdown over placemats being in the wrong order. Suffering is suffering and belittling anyone because someone else has it worse is shortsighted and ignorant. Besides, if anyone really cared about the “poor kids in Africa” anyway they’d live off the bare minimum and donate the rest to them, or at least do something. I also find it funny that you point out that I must live like a king compared to some others but then follow that up with “it’s not a contest”. I never made it a contest, only you are.
      Anyway, all I said was that I found the way his story is used and the way people see it as irritating, not that I hate Chris or anything else. And I mentioned it only because people will use his story to point out how incredible he is, when, as my point was, he was only able to do what he did precisely because he was rich. People think because he was rich that it shows even more strength of character than if he was middle class or working class for example. It’s because he’s rich that people will say how incredible he was that he gave it all up. And yeah, that is a part of it, and that is surprising and I do respect him for that. If only more rich people could part with their wealth. However, my point is that only because he was rich was he able to /part/ with his wealth in the first place, because he always knew he could return to it at any moment. I still think he was a cool guy and that more people should know his story. I’m definitely not “hating on a dead guy”. But perhaps any form of critical discussion is just being a hater in your view?

    • @gordemn
      @gordemn 4 месяца назад +3

      Yeah I've met these upper middle class "hippies" before, it's easy to give up money when you know you can always go back to daddy for a brand new house, car and whatnot.

  • @bitofbrownshuga3061
    @bitofbrownshuga3061 Год назад +535

    Born and raised in Alaska, we were actually taught in school how to survive certain situations you are likely to encounter in Alaska. This is a sad story and a reminder Alaska and nature in general are not something you can take lightly, its not very forgiving.

  • @DamonNomad82
    @DamonNomad82 Год назад +596

    I think the most bizarre thing about the whole McCandless saga is that they had to remove the bus he lived out of during his demise from its original site because fans of his were constantly making pilgrimages to it and getting stranded in the process.

    • @pippetandpossum
      @pippetandpossum Год назад +2

      And dying

    • @Twenty2246
      @Twenty2246 Год назад +29

      Not just stranded, a bunch of them died

    • @Diremagic
      @Diremagic Год назад +2

      F him for that.

    • @No_Feelings
      @No_Feelings Год назад +8

      ​@@Diremagic you clearly have a warped sense of reality lmao

    • @Diremagic
      @Diremagic Год назад +1

      @@No_Feelings his story led to people dying unless you think that's dandy then ok

  • @artistofcybertron
    @artistofcybertron Год назад

    I always love the insight in your videos! I adore your assessment at the end. Keep making good quality content!!

  • @Spook_Boi
    @Spook_Boi Год назад +27

    i get a couple vibes from chris that i can relate to
    1: feeling like the ideas of todays society are bullshit, wandering aimlessly doing the same shit over and over again for a piece of paper with numbers on it. im happiest when im out in the woods fishing, camping, or hunting, forgetting about my phone and just enjoying myself.
    2: not wanting to exist, but not wanting to die entirely by my own means.
    that being said, him not having certain basic survival knowledge makes me kinda upset and i wouldve tried to do things better, but i get it

    • @Demonslayer20111
      @Demonslayer20111 4 месяца назад

      Wandering aimlessly? Sounds like he just kept doing that anyway until it eventually killed him

  • @mallorydrover500
    @mallorydrover500 2 года назад +1824

    As someone who grew up in rural Alaska, I can confirm that the majority of Alaskans I know think of Chris as an idiot. On the one hand, I also believe that Chris was an idiot who made extremely poor decisions. On the other hand, I can see why so many people respect and revere his journey, especially since leaving Alaska myself and having lived in the lower 48 for almost a decade now. This society we live in can be so stifling and inauthentic to the true reaches of human experience. Materialism, capitalism, pavement in all directions, and living in boxes that we construct to block out the outside world... It's no wonder that so many people feel alienated from the human experience, and that Chris's story of leaving it all behind and walking into the wilderness resonates with so many people. As human being, I can understand why his journey is found to be beautiful.
    As a kid who grew up in the Alaskan wilderness, I still think he's an idiot though. It's not just that he did EVERYTHING wrong, but his rejection of nearly all aid and advice from the locals along the way is frustrating for me to hear about. I see why he's called selfish. He's an example of the outsider who walks into nature focused only on his own personal journey, but then the consequences of his actions are a drain on the time and resources of people who actually live there and know better.
    You wanna know how Alaskans survive in the extreme wild, in the middle of nowhere? They rely on each other. You don't shovel only your own driveway after a snowstorm. Even with snow 4ft deep, everyone grabs a shovel and helps to dig out their neighbors. You don't just wander out into the woods unprepared with 10lbs of rice, because the burden of rescuing you (and the others who later mimic your behavior) falls on the communities who actually live there.

    • @sagu1lar
      @sagu1lar 2 года назад +202

      I think this shows a dark part of society. The reliance on comunity and on other people, should come as natural instict to every human.
      The fact that someone would go way out of their way to get away from all other people, either means humans cannot keep up with the demandas of modern society or that there is something fundamentaly wrong with modern society.
      To willingly walk into life threatening situations, might just mean that modern life feels somehow worse than death.
      Just saying, this story might just give us a glimpse of something more profound happening with humanity as of lately.

    • @benwilsonMMA
      @benwilsonMMA 2 года назад +26

      Thanks for the insight!

    • @appleicatpromax7069
      @appleicatpromax7069 2 года назад +11

      What an entitled prick. Yes he was underprepared, yes he was stubborn. The focus has always been and should remain on the spiritual aspect.

    • @doozghost6444
      @doozghost6444 2 года назад +2

      You’re acting sus, bud

    • @christyfielding7498
      @christyfielding7498 2 года назад +85

      It's not on him what others do. That's on them. And obviously he wasn't rescued so he was not a drain on anyone's time or resources. Yes he was an idiot for not being prepared and maybe that could be called selfish in that he didn't think about the people who loved him and how his being hurt or dying would affect them. But how else was it selfish? He asked no one for anything and he didn't hurt anyone but himself. Again what others did in his name isn't on him, he didn't call for people to follow in his footsteps.

  • @Ghostteethz
    @Ghostteethz 2 года назад +1384

    As someone who grew up in an abusive and neglectful household doing exactly this had been my dream since I was a little kid, I think it will be a thought that will be in the back of my mind for the rest of my life in a way. I see myself a lot in Chris and it makes me incredibly sad that he’s mostly just remembered as an idiot with no idea what he was doing because while I think what he did was executed terribly it really seems like he was just desperate to feel alive and get away from everything which is something I think a lot of people can relate to. His plan really didn’t seem to be becoming a survivalist as much as it was to just get away from everything which is really not a stupid desire, he just didn’t really know the right way to go about it.

    • @maeve615
      @maeve615 Год назад +82

      I have no idea how old you are, but speaking from the point of over 40, yes that desire to crawl off somewhere & be left in peace never goes away. Abusive parents don't just hurt children, they create fractured adults

    • @b.fsmashdub4209
      @b.fsmashdub4209 Год назад +41

      I actually did it. I lasted about 6momths before I was pulled back to safety before I killed myself. It was one of the best times of my life but so so lonely. I think I only survived so long was because I had a companion in the way of a dog. She died just before the end of my travels and at the start of my downfall. I still dream of going back to this day

    • @GlorifiedGremlin
      @GlorifiedGremlin Год назад +23

      It doesn't take an abusive household to want to be left the hell alone lol I'm 23 and just bought land out in the woods that I'm going to put a mobile home on. Eventually I'll have solar panels and a well and get off public utilities. I think every human being has an innate desire to get away from all this crap we've built and go back to nature where we belong

    • @wapmop
      @wapmop Год назад

      Beautifully worded

    • @JoseFlores-nn5zo
      @JoseFlores-nn5zo Год назад +3

      I come from a similar background but he wasn’t an idiot just ignorant on how the wild works. I love the quote from Forrest Gump from Jenny when she says “I wish I could be a bird, a bird that can fly far far away.” I’ve felt that but still I would plan it out, even going to visit family I get prepared just in case someone is trying to rob me and what not. Now going into the wilderness you have to know what you’re doing and if not then good luck. I know other people’s experience differ but that’s just me.

  • @LovelyArte
    @LovelyArte 3 месяца назад +1

    This video has opened up my mind to new thoughts. I am 16, and I have always had that mindset that Chris had. I have been trying to find out exactly what it is that differs me from the people around me. Thank you for sharing such a beautiful story ❤️

  • @codex947
    @codex947 2 года назад +219

    From what I remember from reading Into the Wild, a sub theory about the potato seeds is that it wasn't the actual seeds that killed him, but rather a type of mold that can grow on the seeds. This mold produced a toxin that basically made it so your body cannot absorb nutrients from your food. It's fat soluble and can be removed from the body by consuming excess fat, but someone in Chris' situation obviously did not have access to extra fat, and he starved to death at an accelerated rate, even though he had access to food.
    The book also covers a couple of other people who seemed to share Chris' mindset and cast aside their earthly possessions to live in the wild. All of them also have heartbreaking endings.
    I highly recommend the movie based on his story. It definitely glamorizes certain aspects of his journey, but once he gets to the bus it seems to accurately portray what he might have been feeling/ experiencing. There are scenes that will just break your heart.

    • @jorencice
      @jorencice 2 года назад +3

      Litteraly never understood people who want to live in the wild.
      I mean I might be biased cuz I work in IT but technology is by far the best thing humanity has ever invented.
      If you want to live off the land build a freaking farm and grow your own food..

    • @jorencice
      @jorencice 2 года назад +3

      @@FroggyHopScotch30 Except there's a reason we don't do that anymore. Barely surviving isn't "simple". Not to mention humans are pack animals in the wild.
      If he wanted to be a crazy mountain man he should form a commune or join one as humans simply aren't made to survive in the wild alone. We aren't cats that solo hunt. We are primates that hunt in teams.
      And even then what does it prove? That he can do what humans already did for 10s of thousands of years successfully??
      He wants to prove himself then be the first person to do something entirely new.
      Fucking perfect fission power or immortality or something. Rather than die of a disease we probably cured 2000 years ago due to sheer arrogance.

    • @toobigtoobathe9087
      @toobigtoobathe9087 2 года назад +2

      @@jorencice You missed the point entirely. He never wanted to prove himself, just to get away from civilization and an abusive family. He was selfish.

    • @duxdawg
      @duxdawg Год назад

      @@jorencice
      Right on.
      Part of the problem is the incessant romanticizing of the wilderness in books and movies that ignorant, gullible, clueless city folk gobble up. Life, especially in the wilderness, is just NOT like that.
      Another aspect is when reading first person accounts of the old mountain men we see they had decades of experience, hundreds of pounds of supplies and equipment yet STILL went out in groups from 35 to 300. The concept of the "lone mountain man" is ENTIRELY a modern FICTION.

  • @frankrodasky5260
    @frankrodasky5260 2 месяца назад +2

    Chris actually DID have a map. He’d thrown it away not long before his death as part of his fantasy that he’d have no need for it because he didn’t plan to return to civilization.

  • @stacyowl1658
    @stacyowl1658 17 дней назад +3

    Just five minutes in and I already completely understand why the guy decided to leave everything behind and live in the wild. Growing up with emotionally unstable parents who would unpredictably lash out at you one second and act like nothing is wrong the next, with lots of gaslighting and blackmailing mixed in, is an experience that is hard to describe to others that hasn't gone through the same. You don't just get "disillusioned" to your family ties, but dissociated to all other relationships you'll ever have in your life and even to your own mind. Eventually you could never tell if what you think or feel are real, and you can't form any real connection with people anymore. And since the "family" is so put together on the surface, you get dismissed by anyone you try to vent to, because "you get it much better than other people in life so you don't get to complain". It's messed up that the first 18 years of your life determines how you'll live the rest.
    Good on the guy for finding the life he loved to live, wish I could say the same

  • @mckenziejeanne4508
    @mckenziejeanne4508 Год назад +936

    This is such a sad story. As someone with a sister very close in age who is obsessed with the idea of nature and transcendentalism, I think Chris was trying to find meaning like so many of us are. I don’t think he took into account the pain it caused his younger sister by leaving and passing,as my sister has done something similar but has not passed,. and obviously their family environment was not a good one to stay in. It’s just a messy, painful situation all around. I also think he may have been passively suicidal. Not necessarily being prepared and not really caring either because it didn’t seem to matter to him until it got too bad to go back. ❤ To this day my heart breaks for Chris and Carine. I think in a different world and different upbringing he may have been able to travel safely and be able to tell some cool stories late in life.

    • @melancholicegg1000
      @melancholicegg1000 Год назад +33

      I don’t think it’s quite fair to put things like that on him, he lived how was best for him. He didn’t intend for his sister to be hurt by that, but it’s not necessarily his fault

    • @jannaswanson271
      @jannaswanson271 Год назад +1

      The meaning of life is either to embrace or reject God. That is it.

    • @vonbeedle554
      @vonbeedle554 Год назад +25

      @@jannaswanson271 that is a useless waste of life. Jesus didn't sit around and judge people for not conforming, he spread goodness and did something with his life, unlike his later followers, who spread nothing but misery.

    • @jannaswanson271
      @jannaswanson271 Год назад +1

      @@vonbeedle554 "For we must all appear before the judgment seat of Christ, so that each one may be recompensed for his deeds in the body, according to what he has done, whether good or bad." 2 Corinthians 5:10.
      Those who truly follow Christ will walk in love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, gentleness, faithfulness and self-control.

    • @vonbeedle554
      @vonbeedle554 Год назад +16

      @@jannaswanson271 Would it not be better to appear before Christ after making the most of your life and making a positive impact? Piety only gets you so far.

  • @ShortHax
    @ShortHax 2 года назад +611

    Starts game
    Creates character
    Difficulty level: Dark Souls

    • @DD-kc6hg
      @DD-kc6hg 2 года назад

      Oh hey, it's ShortHax

    • @velhaw8737
      @velhaw8737 2 года назад

      Fell off

    • @reachfanatic1234
      @reachfanatic1234 2 года назад +6

      Bruh it’s more like him leaving was starting a new game plus mode on someone else’s account with the pendant gift and dropping all his gear from the start

    • @bigfoot3866
      @bigfoot3866 2 года назад

      Nature is so much worse than that lol.

    • @Dotmw
      @Dotmw 2 года назад +2

      And like Dark Souls, it's much easier if you call someone for help.

  • @JS-bn5cb
    @JS-bn5cb Месяц назад +1

    currently reading Into The Wild for my language arts class and decided id watch this video, thanks wendi!

  • @Munchable420
    @Munchable420 11 месяцев назад

    One of my favorite stories of pop culture, u got my like and sub. Thanks for all your videos, your Waco one is the best I've ever seen and I've seen alot on that subject.

  • @raios_etrovoes
    @raios_etrovoes 2 года назад +47

    As I watched this video, I realised how much he embodied the archetype of the Fool card in tarot. Going out blindly with nothing but a backpack, not looking where you're going or thinking of the dangers ahead, starting over somewhere new, even the reactions of others towards him (the assumption that he was indeed a fool). Such an interesting story

  • @frogs482
    @frogs482 2 года назад +104

    When I read Walden in high school- and later Into the Wild in the same class- the way I looked at the world changed a lot. I used to daydream about attempting to go on a comparable adventure and "live off the land". In my mind it felt like it would be the only way to experience life to the fullest, for lack of a better phrase. I reaaaally loved your comparison of Chris' story to a Rorscach blot. What someone takes away from the story probably reveals some traits, values, about that person. For example the 'Happiness only real when shared'. Such a fascinatingly ambiguous quote, especially in the context with Chris.
    Im so happy that you made this standalone video. Thank You!!
    Maybe a video about Tarrare, the French dude who ate everything would be a good topic !

    • @jss638
      @jss638 2 года назад +5

      Seconding Tarrare as a topic.

    • @giran4914
      @giran4914 2 года назад +3

      @@jss638 yes please

    • @amberhernandez
      @amberhernandez 2 года назад +2

      Tarrare? Man, I miss Sam O'Nella :(

  • @kodiibearv
    @kodiibearv 6 месяцев назад +2

    Oh, hearing this name and getting flashbacks to second semester junior year, skimming through the SparkNotes of his book for quarantine assignments...
    Great video!

  • @devoff7014
    @devoff7014 8 месяцев назад +4

    I'm newish to the channel and I gotta say You're the most wholesome dude ive ever seen and I love this channel that ending was so nice 😭😂❤

  • @saacattaac007
    @saacattaac007 2 года назад +547

    Chris is not a genius, he’s not an idiot. He’s just his own man. He lives for his own self. He wasn’t trying to survive, he wasn’t trying to die, he was on a pilgrimage. To find himself, to find nature, to find fun… it doesn’t matter. He’s a lesson to us all about finding our own path, and our own consequences.

    • @saacattaac007
      @saacattaac007 2 года назад +22

      @akh he died appreciating life. Whether or not that’s what he was looking for we will never know. It’s what I’m looking for, so he’s certainly some sort of hero? Not so much hero, but kind of like a myth, like a man who actually did it. Inspiration maybe. I’m not gonna go die in the woods ofc, but there might be some point in my life where I just let whoever blows the wind take the reigns. He truly is a Rorschach test, since we don’t really know his values and his aspirations, we can only judge his accomplishment based on what we want for our own life, so to someone who wants to succeed, he’s a fool, but to someone who wants to live, he’s visionary.

    • @ThePoorJohns
      @ThePoorJohns 2 года назад +4

      Well said, mate.

    • @zelinamarks5397
      @zelinamarks5397 2 года назад +15

      I really hated the book (never saw the movie) but imo he really threw his life away. He seemed spoiled and idealistic. The only thing that could have explained his behavior is if his dad was as bad as Sister says.

    • @orxy5316
      @orxy5316 2 года назад

      He was going to find himself, even if it meant dying

    • @Bendanna93
      @Bendanna93 2 года назад +10

      @@zelinamarks5397 would someone spoiled really just throw away everything like he did?

  • @johndough4412
    @johndough4412 Год назад +1647

    As someone who farms, hunts, fishes and writes/makes music. I'm conflicted on Chris. I don't think he's an idiot at all. He had a genuine lack of concern, caring or preparation. I don't think that's because he was an idiot, I think it was intentional. Anyone seriously concerned with living and not ultimately dying in the Alaskan wilderness would've done a lot more preparation. When he went to the magic bus, he clearly wasn't very concerned on how that story would end. Did he regret it when he was starving? I'll bet money he did. Was it worth it? maybe. People are still talking about him decades later. If he didn't die, would that be the case? also Wendingoon killing it love the content and the conversations sparked in the comment section

    • @dogguy8603
      @dogguy8603 Год назад +36

      My guess is he was ignorant in regards to surviving in the wild, assuming game would be everywhere

    • @ekay4495
      @ekay4495 Год назад +73

      I'm pretty sure the lack of preparation, arrogance etc is what makes him an idiot. Wanting to live in the wild without any idea how to is idiotic. Realizing the faults of society of his home life doesn't automatically make him smart

    • @satekeeper
      @satekeeper Год назад +74

      While his death is sad and tragic, he was also privileged, arrogant, and ignorant. He didn't understand what a hard life means. For him, it was like playing dress-up. A fun, romantic idea instead of a serious, difficult, precarious existence. It may seem noble for him to give up his family money and comfort, but he also didn't really know what this meant.. and unlike most of us, he always had the option of going home to mom & dad. He died because of his naive, romantic view of nature and wilderness living. He did not respect it or the people who live that way every day because they have to. It never occurred to him that he might need to learn survival skills and knowledge. He just assumed he could easily figure it out, all by himself. Arrogance. Privilege. Hubris. The danger of these are his true legacy.

    • @Jacob_Overby
      @Jacob_Overby Год назад +2

      Makes you think of life before the internet and vast distribution of education

    • @stevescraft26
      @stevescraft26 Год назад +60

      I strongly disagree with the notion that he was an idiot. Was he careless? Yes, but I am sure he *knew* the dangers, he just didn't *care*. He wanted to experience life and that is what he did. He seemed happy until his last days, he didn't regret doing what he did, he never disrespected other people or put them in danger. He lived life in his fullest. Some people may think he wasted his life but I am sure Chris would say the same about us, just because he experienced happiness in his own ways, doesn't mean he wasn't happy.
      Who is the real fool, the man who died happy or those who live only to stay mad about him?

  • @maryellenblount6376
    @maryellenblount6376 Месяц назад +1

    I really like how you speak of Chris and his journey. It's definitely a strange story and I believe Chris was a unique individual. It appears he did what he wanted even until his death. Great story!

  • @username_etc4957
    @username_etc4957 Месяц назад +1

    I’ll always have a soft spot in my heart for people who decide to live life on their terms. The kind of people who look at the world as it is and say “No, I don’t want to be a part of this, I WON’T be a part of this, so I’m going to forge my own path regardless of what anyone thinks.” Society as it is isn’t for everyone, and honestly I have the same notions constantly as to whether or not I even want to be a part of it. These days I think a lot of people do. Say whatever you will about Chris, his story is inspiring, and his journey was one of a kind. I hope wherever he is he’s finally found what he was looking for.

  • @MissMadeleineSwann
    @MissMadeleineSwann 2 года назад +112

    You're one of my anxiety go to channels. Whenever I'm having a terrible panic attack and hiding in my room your videos always help calm me down so thank you!

    • @JT5555
      @JT5555 2 года назад +10

      dad cares about his children.

    • @beanoptodon
      @beanoptodon 2 года назад +2

      Same

    • @katiemechenbier4172
      @katiemechenbier4172 2 года назад +5

      Me too! I hope you're having a good day 💓

    • @PureMagic101
      @PureMagic101 2 года назад +13

      @pyropulse things are stressful and we’re also able to better diagnose mental illnesses people may be experiencing thanks to advancements in our understanding of them

    • @deereye87
      @deereye87 2 года назад +3

      I have pretty intense anxiety too lol, so I know what you mean. I hope you are doing well!

  • @GayFrogsTho
    @GayFrogsTho 2 года назад +524

    A lot of people seem to romanticize this guy, but I think he and his journey was just tragic. He was still very much a kid and his young dreams and ideals ultimately came up hard against the realities of an adventure in the wilderness.

    • @maggiedk
      @maggiedk 2 года назад +3

      Agreed.

    • @justsomeretardontheinterne6987
      @justsomeretardontheinterne6987 2 года назад +35

      Nah, he was dead set on what he wanted to do, many men would dream of his death.

    • @ivanquiles4903
      @ivanquiles4903 2 года назад +5

      I just saw your pic and name and can conclude that you, sir, are a man of culture

    • @PauaP
      @PauaP 2 года назад +38

      @pyropulse I think living in the wilderness and surviving can be interpreted as different tbh. He wasn't pretty much living, in a sense of trying to survive, and I mean really trying to survive, his death was by in large was pretty much tragic. But I'm just glad he had accepted death in the end, and died happily with an enjoyment of life.

    • @shenkichin6295
      @shenkichin6295 2 года назад +39

      People are quick to both romanticize and demonize him. His tale is both inspiring to people who feel wanderlust, and one of caution about the importance of being prepared. In the end, Chris realized that you have to find balance in life and ultimately wished to return to society in some form, and was remiss to discover that he could not.

  • @piber20
    @piber20 9 месяцев назад +6

    I remember reading the book in school, and then watching a documentary on it and doing assignments on the true story and such. I find Chris to be a really interesting story.

  • @yourlocalfestivefurry354
    @yourlocalfestivefurry354 Год назад +2

    "where are you going"
    "west."

  • @thelorax616
    @thelorax616 2 года назад +528

    I have always admired Chris’s passion and wanderlust, as well as the absolute tenacity with which he lived his life. That changed a bit when I got lost trying to summit a mountain by myself. I was so underprepared I had neither a map nor a lighter, and I honestly thought I was going to die. That experience shed a lot of light on the kind of things the Alaskan Park Ranger have said. The carefree way Chris approached the wilderness was very, very ignorant. It makes me so sad - with the right knowledge and skill set, Chris McCandless’s journey could have continued on, perhaps leading him to even more wonderful, profound places. He died a bit of a fool. But it’s still hard not to see him as, in some way, a hero.

    • @boobalooba5786
      @boobalooba5786 2 года назад +11

      Is it truly foolish to struggle? To choose the harder way and just go towards your passion with all your heart? I find it foolish to work just to survive, so demeaning and pointless. We are the authors pf our own stories, so why not fill the pages with adventure instead of drudgery?

    • @bece00
      @bece00 2 года назад +65

      @@boobalooba5786 it is foolish to struggle when you don't have to. If he wanted to live in the woods he should've been smart enough to know you can't just walk out into the wild and survive with no equipment or survivalist skills. It's ignorance and hubris imo

    • @Giganfan2k1
      @Giganfan2k1 2 года назад +18

      Maybe being in Scouting, and having proper training before my wanderlust really kicked in keeps me from understanding?
      I don't understand people that think they can climb a mountain without a topo map and compass. Like what is the thinking there? You just keep walking up until you get to the top then you just walk back the way you came?
      What was the water situation like? Did you have a 2 liters? Do you have a way to make more if you needed too?

    • @gogo.yubari6589
      @gogo.yubari6589 2 года назад +9

      honestly i feel that was the point, he wanted to be underprepared, he wanted to chart new territory, he wanted to live off the land and not rely on society
      i dont know if i would consider that a fool, because its more than most of us could do

    • @gagne6928
      @gagne6928 2 года назад +2

      I think the reason he went out there was to struggle though. Similar to how he said life was "too easy" when he had a job and money. I admire him in a way honestly

  • @JurgenWindcaller
    @JurgenWindcaller 2 года назад +2156

    I just love the note "MOOSE!" on his journal, that felt so wholesome even though he was probably scared of it
    RIP Chris
    Edit: I've never had this many likes, thanks guys it's crazy that over 1000 people saw my one dumb comment :D

    • @sharonrigs7999
      @sharonrigs7999 2 года назад +31

      Chris obviously didn't know how difficult it can be to process 100's of pounds of game.
      I've never hunted moose alone for good reason. Just whitetail. Dragging 200+ lbs of dressed deer 2 miles out of the bush makes you appreciate every mouthful of meat!

    • @shrimpguy6900
      @shrimpguy6900 2 года назад +28

      Moose are fucking terrifying.

    • @JurgenWindcaller
      @JurgenWindcaller 2 года назад +23

      @@shrimpguy6900 they are! a moose once fell down on top of my cousin's car! They were driving near a cliff and then it happened. What are the chances of that happening, moose are weird

    • @ItsNessaTho
      @ItsNessaTho 2 года назад +10

      @@JurgenWindcaller what the hell! I don't know why the image of that creeps me out so much but it does lol

    • @JurgenWindcaller
      @JurgenWindcaller 2 года назад +2

      @@ItsNessaTho yeah it's a true story! i don't know how my cousin was just laughing about it, i would be scared shitless