How did diary help anne to come over from her lonnelyness
Answers
In his fatherly wisdom, Mr. Frank gives Anne a diary for her birthday. With this little book of blank pages to be filled with her private yearnings and remarks, Anne has been afforded the friend and confidante that she so sorely needs in such a confining and lonely environment as the Secret Annex.
Clearly, Anne imbues this diary with life as she creates a persona for this diary, and she writes to it in the manner in which a girl would confide in a dear friend. She addresses her new confidante as Kitty:
I hope I will be able to confide everything to you, as I have never been able to confide in anyone, and I hope you will be a great source of comfort and support.
The diary becomes a place in which Anne can reflect upon and analyze the interaction of the occupants of the Annex. Thus, by writing out her observations and feelings, Anne can obtain a certain emotional release which helps enable her to cope with tensions and anxieties that she experiences. For instance, she writes about Albert Dussel, who shares her room. In her April 11, 1944, entry, Anne writes of the problems this resident of the Annex causes with his pettiness. One day Anne has a cushion of his on which she allows the cat to sit. When he learns where his cushion has gone, the fussy Drussel worries that fleas might be on it, and he makes "a great commotion about his beloved cushion."