In my opinion, this drama is pretty good no matter it is called "Gypsy" or Chinese "Crossing the Boundary". It is precisely because of her gypsy soul that the heroine constantly crosses the line.
There are two obvious main lines in the whole play: Jean as therapist and Diane as journalist. An obscure line: boundaries. It first appeared in E1's notes for Claire's Clinic, and Jean has a small pause in writing the word, which shows that she is resistant to the deeper meaning of it, and it is interesting that it has the word above and to the right. appear. Later, he appeared in conversations and discussions with colleagues many times, and at the same time, he also found that Jean's small point of this word was "difficult to articulate", and this obscure line gradually became clear. And there are many branch lines interspersed in the three main lines, the most exciting is Diane × Sidney. Through the dialogue between Jean's mom and Jean, we can know that Jean accepts the same sex. Then why did you choose Michael as the opposite sex? In E1, Jean said, "Every time I have a headache, I have to break up with you the next day. Sometimes I miss that feeling", and Michael's ex-girlfriend catherine exists in the conversation and photos. etc. are clues. She enjoys the feeling of "brain convulsion", and she has to choose to get married in order to kill her rival. Anything she does is a way of controlling others, in or out of bounds. In this marriage, she understands that she is unlikely to settle down, and she needs her husband to settle down, and her husband is willing to be controlled by him (see E7 for details), which is why people call it a "model couple". The first time she "crossed the line" after marriage was to have an out-of-bounds relationship with her counselor, Melissa. When the situation couldn't control her, she used extreme methods to let Melissa's family control her. When I saw this, even with Naomi's face, I wanted to slap Jean twice, one on the left and one on the right, my phone screen with tempered film and my fan filter as thick as the bottom of a beer bottle The mirror didn't stop this arrogant bitch.
Whether Jean or Diane, have repeatedly crossed the moral boundaries of the family profession. One might argue that crossing the ethical line is to better control the counselors for their counseling purposes. But don't forget that "controlling others" is inherently immoral, and the only thing we can and should do is control ourselves. As the old saying goes: if one does not do it for oneself, the heavens and the earth will perish.
Well, I don't know what I wrote (ಥ_ಥ). The above are all my humble opinions, welcome to join the discussion.
ps: In E7, the conversation between Michael and his secretary about his marriage actually made me cry. And I really don't want to. I really don't want to call people who go to counseling "patients."
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