As problems were affecting Thebes, Oedipus called for Tiresias the prophet to find out what was going on. Tiresias stated, “Were you not excellent at solving riddles? And yet this very fortune was your ruin” (Sophocles 18). Tiresias is trying to say that Oedipus solving the Riddle of the Sphinx and becoming King is leading to his destruction by fulfilling the prophecy. Oedipus refuses to believe in what he has heard. According to the movie The Truman Show the producer, Kristof, says, “We accept the reality of the world we are presented” (The Truman Show 1998). Oedipus believed that he was living a perfect and honest life when in fact he was living a lie just as Truman was living most of his life as a …show more content…
Upon hearing from the old man who was with King Laius the day the king died, it was revealed to Oedipus that he himself had killed his own father. Oedipus exclaimed, “Woe! Woe! It is all plain, indeed! O Light, this be the last time I shall gaze on thee, who am revealed to have been born of those Of whom I ought not – to have wedded whom I ought not – and slain whom I might not slay” (Sophocles 44). One of the ironies in the story is that once Oedipus became physically blind he was able to see the truth that he couldn’t see when he actually had eye sight. One of the realities of modern day life is that we often fail to see the truth before it’s too