Walter White's Transformation Into Heisenberg In Breaking Bad Series
Walter White is the main protagonist in the Breaking Bad series, he is a Nobel Prize-winning genius chemist who now works as a chemistry teacher at a high school and works part-time as a car washer.
In this series we will see and explore the character of Walter White, a normal family man who transforms into his self-created alter ego Heisenberg, someone who is ruthless, ambitious, and ruthless. We will explore how his nature and morality slowly change and I will also go into depth about how his psychology and ego lead him to ruin or prosperity.
His transition from teacher to villain and the revelation of the darkness within him is something that is very interesting for us to discuss in depth.
Initially after he was diagnosed with inoperable lung cancer, his motivation was to earn a lot of money to pass on to his family. The money he wanted to earn became an important point in the story of this series, he was very sure that this was his main motivation, he was very sure that he did all this for his family, but as the story progressed we can see that he did all this because he enjoyed the thrill and feeling of power in being a criminal.
Walter White shaved his head and wore a hat and called himself Heisenberg, this was his way of separating himself from his morally ambiguous actions, by doing so he felt that it was Heisenberg who did it and not himself. The longer he was involved in the criminal world, the more he learned how to act and the more his morals became unclear.
But actually because Heisenberg is not something new he created but has been around for a long time and has always been a part of it all this time. If we look at it briefly he has a different nature and even his appearance is different, but they are two of the same people, they are both people who have a high sense of arrogance and ego, they are both geniuses, and both want power, the only difference is that Walter White does nothing, he is very passive, but Heisenberg is very active, he acts, the difference is only that thin.