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Why This Matters
Connect literature to life
This chapter teaches how to tell when we're working toward a goal versus running from a problem.
Practice This Today
This week, notice when you suddenly get 'busy' - ask yourself: am I solving something or avoiding something?
Now let's explore the literary elements.
Key Quotes & Analysis
"The harder he worked, the better he felt, and the work went all the better."
Context: Describing Levin's desperate attempt to lose himself in physical labor
This shows the temporary relief that extreme physical activity can provide from mental anguish. The irony is that his desperation actually makes him more effective at the work, but it's not sustainable.
In Today's Words:
The more I exhaust myself, the less I have to think about what's really bothering me.
"But the moment he stopped working, the moment he began to think, he was seized by that horror."
Context: When Levin pauses from his frantic labor
This reveals the fundamental flaw in using physical exhaustion as escape - it only works while you're actively doing it. The underlying pain remains untouched.
In Today's Words:
As soon as I stop keeping busy, all those dark thoughts come flooding back.
"The peasants noticed that their master was somehow different today."
Context: The workers observing Levin's unusual behavior
This shows how our pain is often more visible to others than we realize. Despite Levin's attempts to hide his crisis through work, his desperation is obvious to those around him.
In Today's Words:
Everyone could tell something was seriously wrong with him, even though he thought he was hiding it.
Thematic Threads
Physical Labor
In This Chapter
Levin works frantically in the fields, pushing his body to extremes to escape mental anguish
Development
Evolved from his earlier appreciation of honest work to desperate self-punishment
In Your Life:
You might recognize this when you clean house obsessively after bad news or work extra shifts to avoid dealing with relationship problems
Class
In This Chapter
His peasant workers notice something wrong with their master's frantic behavior, showing they understand him despite class differences
Development
Continues the theme of mutual observation and understanding across social boundaries
In Your Life:
Your coworkers or neighbors often see your stress before you admit it to yourself
Despair
In This Chapter
Levin's suicidal thoughts drive him to seek any form of temporary relief, even through physical pain
Development
His spiritual crisis has deepened from philosophical questioning to active suffering
In Your Life:
You might find yourself doing anything - even harmful things - to stop overwhelming emotional pain
Temporary Solutions
In This Chapter
Physical exhaustion provides brief respite but the dark thoughts return immediately when work stops
Development
Introduced here as Levin learns the limits of distraction-based coping
In Your Life:
You might notice how binge-watching, shopping sprees, or other distractions only postpone difficult feelings
Human Connection
In This Chapter
The peasants' concerned observations show that isolation during crisis is often an illusion
Development
Continues the theme that others can see our struggles even when we try to hide them
In Your Life:
People around you often notice when you're struggling, even when you think you're hiding it well
You now have the context. Time to form your own thoughts.
Discussion Questions
- 1
What specific strategy does Levin use to try to escape his dark thoughts, and how well does it work?
analysis • surface - 2
Why do you think Levin chooses physical exhaustion rather than other forms of distraction like drinking or socializing?
analysis • medium - 3
Where do you see people today using work or physical activity to avoid dealing with emotional problems?
application • medium - 4
If you had a friend like Levin who was working themselves to exhaustion to avoid painful feelings, what would you actually say or do to help them?
application • deep - 5
What does Levin's discovery that his peasants notice something is wrong teach us about how visible our pain really is to others?
reflection • deep
Critical Thinking Exercise
Map Your Own Escape Routes
Think about the last time you felt overwhelmed by stress, sadness, or anxiety. Write down three things you did to cope with those feelings. For each coping strategy, identify whether it actually addressed the problem or just distracted you from it temporarily. Then brainstorm one direct action you could have taken to face the issue head-on.
Consider:
- •Consider both healthy and unhealthy escape strategies - sometimes even good activities like exercise become problematic when used as avoidance
- •Think about the difference between taking care of yourself versus running away from yourself
- •Notice patterns in how you typically respond to emotional pain - do you tend toward overwork, isolation, shopping, cleaning, or something else?
Journaling Prompt
Write about a time when you worked extra hard or stayed extra busy to avoid dealing with something difficult. What were you really trying not to feel? Looking back, what do you wish you had done differently?
Coming Up Next...
Chapter 156
Vronsky returns home to find Anna gone, and her mysterious absence all morning—combined with her strange behavior—begins to worry him. The cracks in their relationship are widening.





