A tangled blind spot

Raul 2022-04-20 09:01:15

Very plain description, almost no highlights.
The only thing that fascinated me was the male lead's reaction to the news of cancer.
That reaction was too calm and calm, and it made me worry.
If some emotions are not vented in time, it is not normal after all.
So, I knew it was going to explode anyway.
It's just, where will the explosion point that the director will arrange?
This is where I am curious.
When, what kind of state?
Or is it the pure and heartfelt care of the seemingly inexperienced trainee therapist?
I thought that there would be a climax, but I didn't want the development from quantitative change to qualitative change.
Maybe this way is more realistic!

In my opinion, the
male protagonist is actually a person with a physical cleanliness.
Any "people around" he doesn't really accept to comfort him or hug him,
he looks tense and resistant.
So,
the therapist's comfort to him, from the beginning to the end, has a very subtle change.
It's just that
what I still can't understand is whether
the change in the male protagonist's feelings towards the therapist is a kind of empathy?
Doesn't it mean that the patient and the psychologist or psychologist should not be too close and should not have feelings?

Or is it just because the hero sees the therapist's lovely inadequacies that he opens up to her company?

So what about the therapist to the male protagonist?

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Extended Reading

50/50 quotes

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