While it might seem insane to pretend to be deaf and dumb, Bromden does benefit. Fighting in wartime, Bromden navigated the fog that was used as a military tactic, and here he applies the valuable lesson he learned. Either fight to see clearly in the fog and experience effort and risk, or give yourself up to the fog and embrace complacency and safety. Here, Bromden reveals that on the ward, he chooses the latter. For Bromden, the fog represents his escape from the reality of the ward around him.
Bromden decides to vote with the men to watch the World Series on TV. At first, Bromden pretends that McMurphy made him vote by using wires, but he knows that he voted himself and admits the same here.
For Bromden, raising his hand constitutes a significant change. He never before participated in any of the ward activities, instead content to hide behind his silence.
This choice represents the first step to Bromden becoming part of the ward community and finding himself. After his vote on the TV schedule, Bromden fears that he has blown his secret and alerted the staff that he can hear. His fear that they will retaliate against him for deceiving them proves unfounded, however. The hospital staff continues to ignore Bromden just like they always have done. Create a free Team What is Teams? Learn more. Why did Chief Bromden fool everyone?
Ask Question. Asked 5 years, 10 months ago. Active 5 years, 10 months ago. Viewed 5k times. Improve this question. Vijin Paulraj Vijin Paulraj 20k 38 38 gold badges silver badges bronze badges. Add a comment. Active Oldest Votes. Chief played high school football, which enabled him to travel to different areas. During one out-of-town trip, his team is given a tour of a factory where he meets a young African-American woman who begs him to take her away with him.
In the Army he learns about the electronics that he will later schizophrenically hallucinate as part of the Combine. The Combine is the invention of Chief's paranoia; a large mechanized matrix that enforces its control over humankind by making it conform to rigid standards of behavior. Chief believes he can hear the mechanized gears of the Combine behind the walls and beneath the floors of the hospital where he has been living as a deaf-mute since the war.
As the novel progresses, Chief's delusions decrease. He no longer witnesses the fog that the Combine would regularly emit on the ward, and he even begins to communicate verbally with McMurphy and the other ward patients.
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