"Doing Nothing" - The Psychoanalyst's Journey to Self-Persuasion and Self-Degeneration.
In the play, there have been two episodes of the heroine Rebecca's psychotherapy, and there are three episodes of marital irritability complaining about her husband who is as gentle as water for one second and irritable as fire for the second. There is also a pair of gays who came to psychological counseling because they found out that they were constantly cheating. Rebecca's blue eyes blinked, pursed her lips, and popped out her nature that embarrassed the client and poked at the inferior.
Later, the heroine's father, Franklyn, reminded her over and over again, warning her. Rebecca told himself over and over again that for the sake of the child, for the sake of the child, from shaking hands to pretending to be harmonious in front of people to rolling on the sheets behind them. I don't know how Rebecca would have ended had it not been for the hammer at the back.
Would Rebecca's professionalism really go unnoticed? Will Rebecca really work for the first two patients? What if you know your inferiority? Do you really not know yourself that much? What stopped Rebecca from the precipice was a hammer that was struck coldly. People will continue to instinctively persuade and degrade themselves. We can only be shocked by reality.
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