The Alchemist concludes with Santiago at the end of his journey across the sea and sands, back to where he started, dreaming under a sycamore tree. That is until the last line of the novel, "I'm coming, Fatima..." (Epilogue.13); This line shows that Santiago's journey is not yet done and that he will continue to travel even after the end of the novel.
He wants to get rid of the bicycle because it is broken and rusted. He is worried that his child may injure himself while riding it. He no longer needs a bicycle to help him make a living.
Answer:
ram:hey how r u
rathika:I'm fine and u
ram:I'm not fine
rathik:what happened?
ram:my parents are getting divorced
rathika:what ? you can block them from doing that.
ram:I will try , OK what about your family I haven't see your father
rathika:my father died since 2 months
ram:oh I'm really sorry , OK then bye
rathika:its OK , bye
Answer: I can't really give you an answer because I don't know your dream. But I'd say the TYPICAL American dream is to get a stable, good paying job, marry the person you love, have two kids, and live in a big nice house. The obstacles you would have to overcome are possibly school fees, working and getting along with people, raising your kids right. I'm not sure about the thesis and supporting details because like I said, not my dream. It's yours.
I think it would go after