Why is linda so upset with biff
She explains that all of his automobile accidents are actually failed suicide attempts. Willy overhears Biff, Happy, and Linda arguing about him. When Biff jokes with his father to snap him out of his trance, Willy misunderstands and thinks that Biff is calling him crazy. Happy mentions that Biff plans to ask Bill Oliver for a business loan. Willy brightens immediately. One moment, he tells Biff not to crack any jokes; the next, he tells him to lighten things up with a couple of funny stories.
Linda tries to offer support, but Willy tells her several times to be quiet. Before they fall asleep, Linda again begs Willy to ask his boss for a non-traveling job. Biff removes the rubber hose from behind the fuse box before he retires to bed. Thus, he offers endless praise, hoping that Biff will fulfill the promise of that praise in his adulthood.
Suddenly, Willy realizes he is alone; Ben has disappeared. Linda calls from upstairs for him to come to bed, but he does not. Happy and Biff listen. They hear the car start and speed away. Biff wants Willy to forget him as a useless bum. But Willy cannot let go of the myth around which he has built his life.
He has no hopes of achieving the American Dream himself, so he has transferred his hopes to Biff. Each man is struggling with the other in a desperate battle for his own identity. During the confrontation, Biff makes no attempt to blame anyone for the course that his life has taken. He could not start from the bottom and work his way up because he believed that success would magically descend upon him at any moment, regardless of his own efforts or ambitions. Not only does it validate his salesmanship, as argued above, but it also renders him a martyr, since he believes that the insurance money from his sacrifice will allow Biff to fulfill the American Dream.
Suicide, for Willy, constitutes both a final ambition to realize the Dream and the ultimate selfless act of giving to his sons. In this way, Willy does experience a sort of revelation: he understands that the product he sells is himself and that his final sale is his own life.
Linda tells the boys that Willy has attempted to commit suicide several times. She recently discovered a rubber hose attached to the gas pipe. Every day she struggles with the idea of removing it. Biff agrees to stay and find a job, although he does not like the business world. According to Biff, the Lomans should be working outside. Scene 10 belongs to Linda. Up until this point, Linda appears quiet and submissive as she gently encourages Willy and attempts to reconcile her husband and her children.
During Scene 10, Linda changes. She is angry, vocal, and determined. In many ways, Linda is the only character who is able to see the truth. She knows that Willy is borrowing money from Charley and lying to her about it. She recognizes that Happy is nothing but an over-achieving womanizer incapable of settling down. She also realizes Biff's drifting is the result of his insecurity and his failure to understand his own needs and desires. Even though Linda "sees" the members of her family as they really are, she is not immune to the denial and contradiction that plagues them.
Linda actively participates in the fantasies Willy creates by encouraging his dreams of grandeur. She also chastises the boys when they say or do anything to dispel Willy's imaginings. Thus, even though Linda knows the truth, she actively attempts to conceal it in order to help Willy achieve order in his life. This requires Linda to deny the truth in her outward actions and act in a manner contradictory to the truth.
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