I picked up Hard Times by Charles Dickens with a simple goal: to improve my vocabulary. I did not expect the book to challenge my behavior, my beliefs, and the way I present myself to the world.
Yet, through its exaggerated and often uncomfortable characters, the novel acted as a mirror—revealing traits I had overlooked and forcing me to rethink the cost of my own attitudes.
When Recognition Turns into Overcompensation
Thanks to Hard Times I have noticed the following pattern in my life. After a long period of dismissal of my achievements and efforts in different projects and spheres by people who mattered for me, I have decided to talk about my work and… “brilliance” on my own. “If other people don’t do it, I will do it myself,” I thought. We often overcorrect past neglect without realizing it. In trying to compensate, we risk becoming what we once disliked.
When Self-Promotion Becomes Self-Caricature
Through the character of Mr. Bounderby, I immediately recognized how foolish constant self-promotion can appear. It was indeed revealing but not painful. By reading the scenes with Bounderby I could smile thinking how ridiculously close these situations were to some of mine. It convinced me to avoid making the same kind of impression going forward. I decided there should be specific occasions for self-promotion, not every opportunity. Self-promotion without awareness quickly turns into self-caricature.
The Illusion of Perfect Systems
Another belief the book challenged was my assumption that systems guarantee results. Gradgrind’s character and story helped me to expand my understanding of why systems fail people. We are constantly told systems are the perfect solution to productivity—yet they often fail us because we misunderstand their nature.
Learning the Power of Quiet Wisdom
In contrast to this I have learned how being humble and considerate of other people is a power. I have fallen in love with the character of Sissy as she possesses what I never had – a quiet wisdom that surfaces when it is needed. I am so much extravert, I would never be able to hide anything in me. I loved her lack of needing acknowledgement to be such a strong character, self-sufficient and rich from within. Indeed, she became an example for me. Being humble doesn’t mean hiding, it means showing your strength where it is needed.
Loyalty, Status, and Hidden Insecurity
On a different note some characters were really entertaining. A lot of laughs about the Mrs. Sparsit’s looks and reactions. It felt as if it had been written from my old co-worker Mrs. O, who still remains around her Patron. Her headshakes over the cup of coffee and the nose that demonstrated her coming from high society and especially eyebrows, are the exact representation of that lady I know. Of course, putting her high society nose where she should not out of the overprotection of her patron and dedication to him is admirable and miserable simultaneously.
I did not see Mrs. Sparsit as an inspiration, but rather as confirmation that my dislike for such behavior is justified. Behind devotion to authority often lies insecurity and immaturity.
How Charles Dickens Made Me Feel What I Didn’t Expect
These are the impressions from the characters. Now I would like to cover my impressions from the writing. At some point, while shedding a tear over the scene of dying Stephen Blackpool I have caught myself on a thought: “How did he (Dickens) did it? I did not even sympathize a lot with Stephen?”
The Discomfort of Unfair Outcomes
Finding the answer to what moved me was a puzzle. Maybe due to the difficult language used in Stephen’s dialogues to picture his heavy accent, my mind was overwhelmed trying to process what exactly was said and what meant within the scope of story. Maybe because of his pessimistic outlook at life I did not quite like him, despite his character being noble and kind. And then these tears over his death.. wow, very impressive effect.
Maybe at the end of his story I have seen how he did his best to do the right thing.. like I do, and I have seen how this attitude to life and things brought to the tragic and unfair end? That realization was uncomfortable because it raised a deeper question: is doing the right thing always enough to lead to a fair outcome? I wonder if other readers liked Stephen from the very beginning.
A Book That Changed More Than My Vocabulary
Dickens’ writing is definitely one that has to be learned from, and I believe I will explore more of his works.
What impressed me the most, as I have read about this writing process after I have completed reading the novel, is that he was writing a chapter a week (or maybe a longer period per chapter – I don’t remember) for a publication in a magazine. This means that the story could not be corrected once published. This writing was a journey for Dickens himself. One wrong turn and the story would have a different impact from what he intended. I still need to read his correspondence related to the Hard Times writing to understand how he worked on this piece and what the challenges were. I am happy with what I have discovered so far and might come back with the analysis of his writing process in more details.
Reading Hard Times enriched me. More importantly, it pushed me to rethink how I present myself, how I rely on systems, and how I relate to others. These are not small shifts—they are changes I will carry into my work and daily life. Sometimes, the books we read for small reasons change us in the biggest ways.