 The Perks of Being a Wallflower
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    The Perks of Being a Wallflower
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    What does Charlie mean when he says "it felt like a goodbye rather than a "see ya"
    
  
  
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          Nick
      
        
          (last edited Feb 22, 2013 02:55PM)
        
        
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      Feb 22, 2013 02:47PM
    
     At the end of the book when Sam was leaving for college, what did Charlie mean when he said "it felt like a goodbye rather than a 'see ya'"? Is he saying that they will never be together in a relationship?
      At the end of the book when Sam was leaving for college, what did Charlie mean when he said "it felt like a goodbye rather than a 'see ya'"? Is he saying that they will never be together in a relationship?
    
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      I think that he's saying that instead of a friendly "see ya" (as in, see you later, we're going to definitely see each other soon a lot) it's a permanent goodbye (as in, this is our ending and its going to stay that way)
    
  
  
   Really? Why do you think it would be their ending? I have to say, I read it the same way as you but it made me feel a little sad to think that true, when he has so much love for Sam. And when she returns at the end of summer she takes him out in the pickup.
      Really? Why do you think it would be their ending? I have to say, I read it the same way as you but it made me feel a little sad to think that true, when he has so much love for Sam. And when she returns at the end of summer she takes him out in the pickup.
     I thought that perhaps it "felt like a goodbye" to him because he could sense that a stage in their relationship--and in each of their lives--was coming to an end. Any previous times they said "see ya" meant "I'll see ya in school Monday" or I"ll call you this weekend." I think this moment represented a larger sense of "goodbye" in Charlie's life.
      I thought that perhaps it "felt like a goodbye" to him because he could sense that a stage in their relationship--and in each of their lives--was coming to an end. Any previous times they said "see ya" meant "I'll see ya in school Monday" or I"ll call you this weekend." I think this moment represented a larger sense of "goodbye" in Charlie's life.
     I prefer your understanding of what he meant. I know it's only a story but to lessen the melancholic state into which I slipped after finishing the book, I told myself that Charlie and Sam ended up with each other.
      I prefer your understanding of what he meant. I know it's only a story but to lessen the melancholic state into which I slipped after finishing the book, I told myself that Charlie and Sam ended up with each other.
    
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