it's all about love

Freda 2022-03-24 09:02:11

When Alex asked Peterson what to do if John was a murderer, Peterson believed that John was innocent. She also said that it had nothing to do with love, and that he was helping John just because he was a doctor. And John is a patient, she wants to heal him, to save him, if it really has nothing to do with love, how can a doctor have so much confidence to believe a patient? So, everything is about love, and everything Peterson does is because of love for John, and it is love that gives her confidence and courage.

Of course, it is undeniable that in addition to love, there is also a big reason because of Peterson's experience as a psychiatrist. When she asks patients and listens to patients' answers, she always shows a special smile. This smile It may make people relax, or they may irritate others, but it will always make people continue to pour out the hidden words in their hearts. Then, Peterson will be aggressive when necessary, press the patient, and let the patient express thoughts or memories that he dare not say in his heart when he is nervous and nervous. When she was treating John, she even stimulated the memories blocked in John's heart by letting him experience what he had experienced. When the memories resurfaced in John's mind, Peterson pressed John through Speaking out the language, and then through psychological analysis, it helps John to clarify John's past, to help John overcome his fear of past memories, and to eliminate his anxiety and guilt, all by analyzing John's psychology.

Childhood experiences will continue to have an impact on people's psychological development and changes at the subconscious level. Psychoanalysis believes that the reason why people suffer from mental illness and behavioral deviations is directly related to their past experiences; and in all experiences of a person, Childhood experiences have the most important influence on his or her later behavior and emotions; a person's emotional problems and behavioral deviations can be explained by reasoning; when these problems are reasonably explained, the patient will understand Why do you do this, so that you will no longer be anxious, and the symptoms will gradually disappear. And it is precisely because John accidentally killed his brother in childhood that he had a serious sense of guilt for John's future life, which led John to always have a sensitive reaction to black lines on a white background. This also led him to believe that he killed Dr. Edward himself.

At the same time, another key point of psychoanalysis is dreams. Dreams are the best clues to restore memory. Who are you? What are you running from? These secrets are buried deep in your mind, but you don't want to face them. People sometimes don't want to face reality, because the truth hurts their wounds, so they get sick in order to forget everything. Dreams can tell us exactly what you're running from, but they can only show fragments, put them together, put them back together, and then figure out what they mean. The weirder the dream, the more helpful it is. John's multiple dreams, and it is through the series of dreams that Peterson deduces the starting point involved in all events. Dreams come from reality, but also from memories. Childhood memories affect a person's real life and also affect a person's dreams, so psychoanalysts also analyze a person's psychological state through the analysis of dreams.

Through the analysis of John's dreams and memories, Peterson speculates that John's past memories stimulated John's brain, which led to the fault of John's memory. Therefore, let John face his past memories and eliminate John's inner self-blame, is the key to unlocking this case. In the end, after John recalled his childhood memories, with the help of Peterson and psychological correction, he faced his past and eliminated his inner guilt and guilt, so he finally came to a conclusion. The truth finally came to the real murderer, and Peterson and John finally had a lover and got married, and lived a beautiful and happy life of princess and prince in fairy tales.

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Spellbound quotes

  • Dr. Fleurot: It's rather like embracing a textbook.

    Constance Petersen: But why do you do it, then?

    Dr. Fleurot: Because you're not a textbook.

  • Dr. Murchison: The old must make way for the new, especially when the old is suspected of senility.