they tolerate him he loves them

Glennie 2022-04-23 07:03:17

I'm sure that two years ago, I clicked into the interface more than once and wanted to watch a medical drama, but after reading the introduction, I gave up this one. I thought that a protagonist with savant syndrome must be in the hospital like a duck to water. The hero buff all incurable diseases through him 100% of his hands will be healed and he has autism emmm... Then I guess the conflict in this show must be that some senior doctors do not believe the protagonist's judgment to go their own way and finally piapia slaps the face to bring out the protagonist's otherworldliness or The autistic doctor has many conflicts with his patients. Although he has the aura of the protagonist, everyone doesn't like him. He is lonely and arrogant, and he is still motivated and determined to be a good doctor...

But it turns out that I was wrong. Shaun has proposed various medical solutions, but he is not always right. At the same time, other residents will also provide very constructive comments. Not only the protagonist, they are all excellent. His boss is also very professional. After getting along, they also admitted that Shaun was extraordinary, so the people in the hospital really gave this special doctor more patience and gentleness than in reality, and they were even willing to use their future to take on some of Shaun's mistakes

This show is the reality of those stereotyped doubts and denials of "Shaun" that I don't want to go into, but it's just such ordinary little details like Dr Melendez and Dr Andrew's guidance and support to the younger generation Dr Kalu and Dr Browne To include Shaun as his friend makes the show so warm

I love that most of the characters in the show are finally starting to understand Shaun Murphy even though I thought at one point he was too stubborn and too disrespectful to think that when others correct him over and over again (like telling patients things they don't really need to know) ) He never corrected it. He used his autism to escape basic manners. He also thought he was not grateful to Glassman. He was too self-conscious. He never understood the kindness of others. I can't make me sympathize with this character, but in the end I still understand that he has his own standards for life and doing things. He treats people around him with his clumsy, persistent, unsmooth look. He loves Glassman and he loves and respects those who work with him. The doctor's way of being as special as he is, I'm just demanding him from a worldly perspective, because his rational, logical and paranoid way of thinking has broken through too many people (characters) I like.

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Extended Reading
  • Avis 2022-03-28 09:01:07

    Episode 7 is a slap in the face of the ketogenic diet

  • Dessie 2022-04-24 07:01:16

    There is nothing happier than seeing a drama that makes people grow up. Everyone is experiencing it, and everyone is growing up. The details and the rough branches are like the interlacing of blood vessels in the body. The whole body, all experiences are also essential in the context of our life. Physicians pay attention to benevolence, so how do the rest of us know how much risk doctors take every day and how helpless they are to treat each patient. Accuracy is the doctor's duty, and the sound of the alarm will become the doctor's instinct, but every decision is a bewildering gamble, and the doctor should be the best. [But it's too idealized, the world is not worth it]...People's experience is continuous, but in the play it shows that people's growth develops rapidly in a short period of time