Once again, Jack has shocked me with his wisdom and the profound nature of his observations. This is, of course, not the first time, as I was previously taken aback by his vocabulary, literacy, and ability to face the unknown so trustingly. Recently, I was impressed by this question:
. . . I bang my head on a faucet.
“Careful.”
Why do persons only say that after the hurt? (283)
This, to me, really captures a predominant theme of the novel. Once Ma and Jack have escaped Room, they find their own struggles in dealing with Outside. One of Ma’s is that people are celebrating their escape so much without paying any attention to those suffering in similar situations. When Jack highlights society's lack of forewarning and tendency towards useless advice after the fact, it reminded me of Ma’s complaints during her interview. Though she didn’t complain about the fact that nobody found the shed suspicious in the seven years she was locked in there, it certainly would've been reasonable to do so. If people care so much about Jack and Ma once they’re out of Room, it makes you wonder what efforts they made to recover them in the interim between Ma’s capture and their escape. As Jack says, they’re seemingly only concerned for Jack and Ma “after the hurt.”
As I mentioned before, Ma expresses her concern for those still in isolation during her interview:
“Her hand is pointing at the puffy-hair woman. “As for kids--there’s places where babies lie in orphanages five to a cot with pacifiers taped into their mouths, kids getting raped by Daddy every night, kids in prisons, whatever, making carpets till they go blind--” (235-236)
Just like with Jack and Ma, it’s an all-too-common phenomenon that society will celebrate a heroic story of somebody escaping their abysmal circumstances without bothering to combat the root of the problem. Jack, in his innocent, curious, and subtly profound way highlighted what is one of the most deeply rooted problems with Outside.