The first time I went to an appointment with a counselor was a few days after I missed two weeks of training and dragged a dead line in bed. His consultation room is the hottest in the entire campus. The seats are hard and the cushions are soft. Maybe the heating is turned on too much, his voice seems to be warm. After sitting down, staring at him and answering his basic information, he looked a bit like Daniel Brühl with thinner cheeks. Then he raised his head and said to me, if you meet outside, you don't need to say hello to me, I will assume that we don't know each other. The first rule: never fall in love with your psychiatrist. I know my problem very well. I also know that he can't help me. Maybe I didn't want him to help me. So our meeting almost evolved into an academic exchange in the end: "Between physical safety and self-realization, people still need a sense of belonging. You should try to build a deeper relationship." "But how can you prove Maslow? Is that right?" His voice was too persuasive. After I left that too warm room, I remembered that I didn't have any questioning or rebuttal. "I don't recommend going to a psychiatrist to prescribe medications," he said to me before leaving, "you don't want to put those medicines into your body." Surrounded by various neurophysiological explanations and neuromedicine research and development. In the environment, what I remember most deeply was his words. I know that counselors should not help patients make such absolute guidance and judgments. But that room is really too warm. Harley Quinn is a character I liked when I first encountered it. However, the contact with manga and animation is limited, so my understanding of the characters may not be complete. Joker is a good villain, his madness has no bottom line, and there are incentives for his madness. It's fascinating, yes, but not new. But Harley is different. She is a psychologist who falls in love with patients. "She thought she was curious in him, but she was falling in love. Admit it that you love these words, because they are the antonym of mediocrity and the denial of convention. What could be more interesting and challenging than digging into an incomprehensible brain? Crazy is the most naked tease for you. This is what I read from Harley, and it may also be a side that I have been suppressing. But the movie shattered all these beautiful assumptions: The clown gave the doctor an electric shock and convinced her to jump into the chemical reagent that also made him crazy, and Harley Quinn was born. There is no psychological restraint between the two people, even if they are the same type of people, the interaction immediately loses the tension. I can be at your mercy, just because I love you. Without any explanation, it was terribly vulgar. Just like the relationship between every pair of characters in this movie. DC has produced a water film called Necessary Evil for the promotion of Forever Evil. Eternal evil, indispensable evil, this is the unique charm I expect to see in these characters in DC. Admit it that you love these words, because they are the antonym of mediocrity and the denial of convention. What could be more interesting and challenging than digging into an incomprehensible brain? Crazy is the most naked tease for you. This is what I read from Harley, and it may also be a side that I have been suppressing. But the movie shattered all these beautiful assumptions: The clown gave the doctor an electric shock and convinced her to jump into the chemical reagent that also made him crazy, and Harley Quinn was born. There is no psychological restraint between the two people, even if they are the same type of people, the interaction immediately loses the tension. I can be at your mercy, just because I love you. Without any explanation, it was terribly vulgar. Just like the relationship between every pair of characters in this movie. DC has produced a water film called Necessary Evil for the promotion of Forever Evil. Eternal evil, indispensable evil, this is the unique charm I expect to see in these characters in DC.
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