Chapter 2 of 'Metamorphosis' digs into the immediate, claustrophobic fallout of Gregor Samsa's transformation. It opens with the family's attempts to adapt, or rather, their failure to do so. Gregor's sister, Grete, takes on the role of his caretaker, bringing him milk and old food, but she can't bear to look at him. His father's initial shock curdles into a deep-seated resentment and fear, which boils over in a violent confrontation where he pelts Gregor with apples, one of which lodges in his back and causes a festering wound. This isn't just an act of cruelty; it's a physical symbol of the family's rejection now embedded in his body, a source of continuous pain.
The chapter meticulously charts the shrinking of Gregor's world. His room, once just a bedroom, becomes his entire universe, and it starts to reflect his degraded state. He takes to scurrying under the sofa when anyone enters, and he begins crawling on the walls and ceiling, finding a strange solace in these new, inhuman movements. Meanwhile, the family's financial reality sets in; they discuss having to take jobs, and lodgers are mentioned as a future necessity. The focus subtly shifts from 'what happened to Gregor?' to 'how will we live without his income?'. His humanity recedes not just from his own mind, but from their priorities.
What's most heartbreaking is the quiet erosion of hope. The chapter ends not with a dramatic event, but with a slow, grim acceptance. The wound from the apple aches, his family speaks about him through the door as if he's a problem to be managed, and his own thoughts turn to the relief his death would bring. It's a masterful study in how a bizarre, supernatural event devolves into a mundane domestic tragedy, where the real metamorphosis is the family's changing attitude from concern to cold pragmatism, a change far more unsettling than Gregor's physical form.