咨询师成长手记
生活中总有些东西值得分享
最近基本看完了扪心问诊第二季,不写影评,只是做一些记录。
01
看扪心问诊,我每次是按人物来看,把同一人物的所有Session收集在一起,全部看完,再看另一个。目前还差一个Oliver没看完,因为和其他来访者比起来,这个孩子的诊疗没有那么复杂(主要是父母的问题),似乎不是那么吸引我。
然而,尽管Oliver的部分只看了两集,我却对Paul坐在窗边陪孩子玩游戏那几分钟印象深刻,他刻意地去和一个孩子玩一个他完全不会的游戏的时刻,真是温柔又暖萌。
这一季整体感觉Paul的人物塑造“活”了起来,他从椅子上、咨询师的面具背后,站了起来,走出了他的咨询师,走向了外部世界。
剧情安排给Paul更多的暴露机会,揭露出他作为一个普通人的生活是和他的来访者一样的,同样地承受着四路八方的压力。离异、分离、孤独、个案来访家人的诉讼、对父亲的怨恨与自责......
作为咨询师,Paul平时做来访者的容器,当他来到Gina这里时,往往会“大爆发”,需要一个更稳定的容器。
在上一季中,Paul是一个非常挑战而棘手的来访者,总是会攻击Gina,甚至会把她搞哭。那时我认为Gina的确做得不够和缓,她总是很快地给出太多诠释。但在这一季,我对Gina的感受大有改观,她呈现出了非常强大的“容器”功能,一方面给出Paul很多鼓励和支持;另一方又能够坚持作为督导师的职责,在Paul刺手扎心的攻击嘲讽下活下来,还给Paul她的观察和诠释。
Paul曾因为Alex的死和他父亲对他的渎职诉讼倍感困惑、疲惫,开始怀疑自己工作的意义,尤其在面临Mia的色移和挑衅、Walter的那场“想来令人后怕”的自杀时,几近崩溃。是Gina的稳定和抱持给Paul注入继续从业的动力。
Paul在这一季里有重要的个人成长。因为父亲的死,他终于能够做到:
重新审视父亲的为人、尊重他的选择(他选择不做一个“好”父亲),跳脱那个被父亲抛弃、不得不照顾、拯救母亲的受伤小男孩的自我认同;承认自己是如此地渴望父亲能够给他那些对他来说“有意义的”爱——陪伴,尽管这种承认需要面对“得不到”的痛苦和失落;接受“父亲不是一个好父亲,但是一个还不错的人”。在父亲的死亡中,怨恨消弭,只有爱和惋惜长存。
其实,在我看来,如果他父亲的死再晚一点到来,他还是不会发生这些转变。
死亡总是会冲破人们固着的认知视界,令人发生“觉醒体验”。没有它,这种转变依然会姗姗来迟。死亡是有意义的——并不是说,经历死亡才醒悟太迟了,我认为这“刚刚好”。因为情感的强度需要另外一种强力的形式去清理,只有死亡或者与死亡相关的体验,才足够强力。
02
这一季中,Paul的来访者普遍比上一季更具挑战性。
有在第一次问诊中就表达非常多愤怒的癌症女孩;也有理想化父亲、仇恨母亲、自我厌恶、亲密关系混乱、不断“测试”Paul并展现色移的金发律师(她是Paul的前来访者,20年前曾经因为意外怀孕找Paul短暂咨询过);
还有因为哥哥“意外”自杀而自责、拼命压抑脆弱的自己、用“承担压力”的方式来感受自己的价值、遭遇职业危机后企图自杀的公司高管(68岁的躯壳里,哥哥自杀时的那个脆弱小孩儿依然在呼喊着渴望存活)。
在这一季的治疗中,Paul展现了更多的“贴近”来访者的行为,同时也温柔而坚定地“守护界限”。比如Mia在她的厨房吃早餐,她坚持请她到诊疗区,最后一集中,Mia说不想治疗了但也不想走,坚持在门廊坐着,Paul陪她坐了一会儿,引导她打开话匣子之后,依然坚持她进诊疗区。
为了让来访者感知到她们所认为的那种“关系”不是真实的,只是自己的“认为”和这些信念引发的行为模式,Paul偶尔会主动越界,请求来访者打电话给他,告诉他自己的进展——我想这对于那些“认为自己很惹人厌或者认为自己没办法拥有一份真诚的亲密关系”的人来说,是一剂光之良药*吧。(*所谓光之良药、疗愈之光,是指在灵性视角中每个人的自我疗愈源泉,参见Tom Kenyon&Virginia Essene《The Hathor Material》(哈索尔人资料),译者laoguo2。)
虽然未必去使用它,但它就像一束光一样照进了来访者的心田,来访者只是需要知道“有一束光在那里”就够了,而这会激活他们自己头顶上那种疗愈之光。这种根据来访的特定模式贴近来访者的做法也是亚隆所推崇的。
更具挑战性的来访者,往往也带来非常棘手的情形——Paul多次面临来访者提出准备结束治疗的情形(April、Mia、Walter),理由都是类似的:
“治疗没有用啊”、“我还是这样痛苦”、“我很好,已经不需要了”。
但其实每一个来访者在提出“结束治疗”时还都期待着咨询师回应点什么,他们也许希望看到挽留、看到“在意”,因为每一次关于“结束”的决定背后都有着失望的情绪和未被满足的需要,那些都是值得探索的地方。
我非常感叹Paul能够直接地请求来访者,为了他们的利益继续治疗。我可能需要重温一遍这些台词,再次去感受Paul对于来访者情绪感受的觉察、模式的诠释以及“继续治疗”的劝谏和坚持。
我也清楚记得,April在最后一次诊疗中说的那句“不是所有人没有治疗就会死的”(People do survive without therapy) 。Paul听了会心一笑,带着Paul的父亲的帽子的April看上去也轻松了许多。
我还记得,当Paul反问Gina“那你的父亲是你理想中的那样吗?”时,Gina的那些表情让我泪目。她先是闪过一丝惊诧(突然被问到需要自我暴露的事情),摒气、微微地僵硬地点点头,然后似乎又觉得不妥,也许是想着还是要“真诚一致”吧,接着使劲的摇摇头,笑了。“天呐!Paul,我是个治疗师,你说呢!” ,他们都笑了。
真的很难啊,来访者和治疗师都难。看扪心问诊可以学到很多。
03
最后谈谈这部剧给我带来的“观念”。
首先是关于“和解”的观念。
Paul一直对父亲有非常多的怨恨,作为一个父亲,他出轨、抛弃妻子、孩子,一直没有在儿子身边,这的确令一个“儿子”难以释怀。
但在Gina的鼓励和支持下,Paul在最后终于赶在父亲死之前去养老院见他最后一面。在他和缓的读报声中,父亲才终于心无挂碍地离开了,好像一直在憋着一口气等待着这场和解。
其实,我们的确不需要那么强迫自己、也不需要因为害怕会承受失落和悔恨而紧紧催次自己去“达成”一些什么。会发生的就一定会发生,一切都是刚刚好地安排。
有些情绪需要强烈的形式以冲击、清理,就如同Paul父亲的死亡,也只有死亡能带来这种强力,也只有死亡,作为一个结束,才能与那些积攒了几十年来的怨恨与爱,相抵扣、清算、消弭。
有时候,承认自己“需要”是非常痛苦的,因为承受随即带来的就是“丧失”、“得不到”、“失落”,而用“愤怒、怨恨”这样的情绪去防御、保护自己是更容易些一些的,虽然同样很痛苦。
但是因为死亡的到来,一切都可以清零、可以面对了。因为结束了,那个你渴求的人、那具“可以”提供你渴求的爱、对你而言才有意义的爱的躯体,已经“不在”这个物质世界了。
另一个观点,就是咨询师不必需要自己成为一个“没有问题的「完人」”才能胜任,看到Paul的很多挣扎,我感慨万千。优秀如他的咨询师,依然会有自己的“情绪沟壑、情感黑洞”,这是每一个人的“存在选题”啊。
我们可以慢慢来,按照自己的节奏走。
公众号:Mae有光疗愈(yaoyoulight)
01
米娅是《扪心问诊》第二季的一位来访者,40岁,单身,是一位成功的律师。
她与爸爸的关系非常好。
只要一接到爸爸的电话,哪怕是在会见客户,她都会立刻放下手头的工作,去陪爸爸聊天。
在米娅的感知里,爸爸是世界上最爱她的人。
在她小时候,爸爸经营着一家小商店,每天早出晚归。
她每天上学都会提前出门,经过爸爸的小店,然后爸爸会给她一个大大的微笑,为她泡上一杯牛奶。
有一天早上,店里突然冲进来一个拿枪的劫匪。
他用枪指着爸爸的头,命令爸爸把钱全部交出来。
但爸爸丝毫没有妥协,并冲劫匪回应道:“我已经报警了,警察马上就要来了。”
那一刻,在米娅眼里,爸爸就是一个顶天立地的英雄。
后来,劫匪把抢指向了米娅,继续威胁道:“再不给钱,你女儿的命就没了。”
爸爸顿时慌了,立刻打开抽屉,把所有的钱都给了劫匪。
劫匪离开以后,爸爸抱着米娅痛哭了一场,并跟米娅做了一个约定:“这是个秘密,不能告诉妈妈。”
因为一旦妈妈知道了,肯定会训斥爸爸和米娅。
怀揣着这个共同的秘密,父女两人的关系变得越来越亲密。
从而给米娅形成一种感觉:
我“取代”了妈妈,成为了爸爸心中最重要的人。
与此同时,她与妈妈的关系变得越来越疏远。
02
随着米娅慢慢长大,她开始与不同的男性交往,但却没有一段恋情能最终修成正果。
为什么会这样呢?
因为她交往的每一个男友,都是有妇之夫。
无一例外的,男方一开始都会信誓旦旦地向她许下诺言:“我一定会跟妻子离婚,然后跟你结婚。”
但在秘密交往一段时间以后,男方都会找到各种借口,把她甩开。
在这样周而复始的恋爱模式之下,40岁的米娅至今没有成家。
最初米娅走进保罗的咨询室,是因为她内心非常渴望一个安定的家。
随着治疗的展开,保罗开始引导米娅去探索她一贯的恋爱模式。
为什么她总是找有妇之夫,而不是找正常的单身男性来交往?
在一次次抽丝剥茧的谈话治疗中,保罗慢慢解开了米娅潜意识里的牵引。
这一切,均与她和父亲之间的关系有关。
在成长的过程中,米娅成功地“打败”了妈妈,成为了那个与父亲分享各种秘密的、最重要的女人。
在潜意识的指引下,她不断地在恋爱关系中复制她与父母的关系。
通过与有妇之夫秘密交往,来“打败”对方的妻子,并成为对方最重要的女人。
03
然而,仅仅是理性层面的分析,并不足以让米娅心甘情愿地接受这个解释。
她不断地使用各种防御机制,去攻击保罗,去否认事实的真相。
直到有一天,她罕见地生病了,在家足足躺了一个星期。
期间,她的妈妈专程跑过来看望她,并陪伴她,但她的爸爸却始终没有露面。
米娅主动与妈妈聊起小时候的事情,并质问妈妈:“为什么在我小的时候,你没有像爸爸那样陪伴我,爱我?”
妈妈向她解释道:“因为我刚生下你的时候,就得了产后抑郁症,根本没办法照顾你,所以只能把你托付给爸爸照顾。后来等我从抑郁走出来的时候,你与爸爸的关系已经变得非常亲密了,使得我根本没有办法去接近你们。”
尽管妈妈说的是事实,但米娅依然无法接受,也无法原谅那个没有好好爱过自己的妈妈。
她再一次来到保罗的咨询室。
在谈话中,保罗耐心地引导米娅看清一个眼前的事实:
米娅病了整整一个星期,妈妈来了,爸爸却没有来。
这与米娅的认知“爸爸是最爱我的人,妈妈一点也不爱我”是相互矛盾的。
再回溯到妈妈当初生下米娅得抑郁症的时候,爸爸其实也是同样的态度——任由妻子躺在床上自生自灭,不去探望。
后来,米娅去找爸爸当面澄清这个问题,爸爸顿时恼羞成怒,并大声指责米娅一直都是个脾气怪异,很难伺候的女人。
当设身处地地体验到妈妈当初的孤独与无助以后,米娅终于理解了妈妈的身不由己,并接受了爸爸原来并不是一个完美父亲的事实。
04
每一个孩子在成长过程中,都渴望父母的爱与陪伴;而每一个父母,却又有各自的无奈与局限。
那些从小缺爱的孩子,常常会不自觉地放大成长过程中的某个被爱的瞬间,并把那个曾经给过她一点点温暖的人过度理想化,就像米娅与她爸爸的关系一样。
但另一方面,她可能也会不自觉地放大那些不被爱的瞬间,并把某些人阻挡在关系之外,就像米娅与她妈妈的关系一样。
当我们真正长大的时候,再度回顾我们的成长历程,再度审视我们曾经与父母的关系,也许我们能够从新的视角,得出不一样的答案。
如此一来,我们在看待其它关系的时候,也会变得更理性,更客观,更真实。
看清父母的局限,是我们长大的标志,也是我们变好的开始。
文/广州红树林心理咨询中心 Tangel
e05 Gina
我想让你告诉我,我该怎么做;我想知道怎么样去感受所有这一切
e015 Gina
我们总是不断地修改我们的记忆,这样过去才不会和当前发生冲突
即使你当时还是个孩子,你却对母亲的痛苦产生了移情作用;但你还太小了,所以你去上学拼命工作、努力学习、用心思考。到如今,有人来向你求助,你就能帮助他们,但你不是因为救不了你的母亲所以才成为一名心理医生的
e017 April
生活就是选择的集合
e025 Gina
唯有爱有机会对抗死亡,爱让我们受伤,但没有爱我们会感觉孤立、迷失
e027 April
April,有没有可能,我现在也成了这个模式的一部分了?你患了癌症,你决定独自迎战,就跟以前一样。你不告诉你妈妈,但是你来见我,你告诉我你患癌了,因为在某种程度上你知道我最后会告诉你妈妈。然后,你又一次成了我们的英雄
e030 Gina
他们想被爱,甚至被我爱;他们想要孩子,或者他们想成为我的孩子;他们想要个爱他们的爸妈,他们想要关注,想要情感,想要希望;他们想吃药,他们想sex
这就是你的问题所在,你害怕为自己病人的生活负责,你根本不愿意和他们扯上关系,而我愿意。所以你墨守成规,坚持让他们自己做决定,可在我看来那不叫专业,那叫懦弱
e031 Mia
这可能是个绝佳的选择,如果你拿选择男人的标准来选择治疗师的话,找个可能会令你失望的人,用尽浑身解数来把他赶走,而当他最终辜负你的时候,当然这是必然的,你就会对他满腔怒火
我并没有说他们都是有罪的,但是每一次你站在法庭为你的客户辩护时,我觉得你其实是在为你的父亲辩护,向每一个人,尤其是你自己
30
You know, it's not dogma. It's a basic tenet of our profession. If you take action in your patients' lives, you cause them to become dependent on you. You cripple them.
You don't just listen. You make observations. You ask questions. You make interpretations. You encourage people to look at the patterns of their behavior.
They want to be loved, even by me. They want a child, or they want to be my child. They want a parent who loves them. They want attention, they want affection. They want hope, they want pills, and they want sex.
But if she were capable of receiving love and support, she wouldn't be coming to you for them. That's her real problem. And until it's treated, she won't be able to take anyone's advice. And that's why she needs therapy.
-You'd always rather yell than think. -What don't I want to think about?
-Then why am I failing them? -It's not about you, Paul. You know, they're human beings. They're struggling with profound problems. If only you could find courage to sit with the fact that what we do is hard and sometimes, it makes you feel like an idiot. It's a humbling profession. And if you lack anything as a therapist, it's humility. Somehow you have to learn to tolerate the fact that we don't save people. We can't.
-I don't want to see my patients. -See your patients, Paul. Act as if you believe you're helping.
31
You haven't lost your father. He's still in your life, but you did lose the father that you thought you had. He didn't refute your mother's version of events. "Mia, born to a depressed mother, idealizes her father so as not to feel completely alone. And this week, after finally confronting him, she can see her dad for who he really is." It is shattering, but if you can now move beyond that connection to your father it may open the possibility of finding love elsewhere.
I just felt like the bed was safe and the living room was scary.
You want what I can't give you. Blaming me for not giving you what you need when you needed it.
- I felt like I had nothing before. Now I have less than nothing. Thank you. You've helped me to realize that I've made poor choice after poor choice my whole life. - But you also have to realize, Mia, that you're at a critical juncture in you life, that now you do have the self-knowledge to make different, better choices. And sometimes when you're on the verge of real change, that's when you fight the hardest.
-Do you really think that getting married is going to make it all better? Do you have any idea of how many married people, how many parents feel as empty as you do? And what about that made you feel good? Have you ever considered that maybe it's not about a child, Mia, or a husband? Maybe that's just a picture in your head from your family, from your friends, from the culture. Not everyone needs that to live a full and contented life. Maybe what you really want, Mia, is to feel connected, authentically connected to somebody or something else. - And we bothe know that I can't have that. -It's been your way of communicating to both of us what you need. You've also been honest, caring. You've made yourself vulnerable. You've shown me who you really are. And you haven't walked away.
32
She used to say, "A mother is only as happy as her least happy child."
It's difficult to be the one who survives.
- Did I make it all up? - No. You just got rerouted. Your life's path has changed without your consent. It must be so hard to handle.
But sometimes, we just have to act as if we do.
I mean, you've learned so much about yourself, about trust and acceptance, about not needing to be perfect all the time. I mean, I know it's hard to see that now, but the great thing about self-knowledge is that once you have it... you have it. And you can't help but put it into use. You still have challenges ahead of you, that's why I think you really need to keep talking to somebody.
33
What he really needs now is a home where he can feel safe. You need to build that for him.
- The truth is, there's a good chance things are gonna get worse for Oliver and for you. For a long time, he is going to be very angry at you. And you're gonna have to keep loving him, no matter what. You're gonna have to let him have his anger. And you're gonna have to take it, just let him be who he is. - So just take it? - And keep showing up.
You know, once when I was about your age, I saw my dad cry. He was having a big fight with my mom. They were yelling at each other. I just wanted them to stop. I guess I wanted them to be... to be just happy. And it made me so pissed when I found out that they weren't. Well, I stayed pissed at them for a long time. And then I realized that even though my mom and dad got upset, and they made big mistakes sometimes, they still loved me.
If you're not getting something that you need, tell them. If you don't understand why something is happening, say 'Can you please explain this to me?' And if things get really upsetting and confusing, call me. That way we can work together to try and solve the problem.
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It can be hard to live your life, to be genuinely fulfilled, when a part of your true self is locked away.
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- I acted as if I believed I really was help. - And did that help? - To be honest, I was kind of skeptical at first. I felt a bit like a hypocrite, and they'd see that. - Of course you'd feel that way. - But then weirdly enough, something started to happen. I was talking to Oliver's dad about the responsibility of what it means to be a father and keeping in touch with your kid. Really, I was talking for both of us. But I think I reached him. I mean, I was still doubting myself, but I just kept at it, you know? I just couldn't believe that something so simple could actually work. And it kept working, you know? - You're a good therapist. And I'm sure you did a lot of good work this week, despite how uncertain you felt.
They both think that the world is supposed to be on their shoulders, and they're both incapable of receiving support.
- Practicing this way, I may never know whether I help people or not. It's not like I'm trying to get them to pass their driving test or do better on their SATs or something. The only measure I have of whether I'm helping somebody or not is how my patients feel about it and how their lives go on from there. And they won't know that until long after we've stopped therapy. - What are you saying? - I guess what I'm trying to say is that these people come to me, they want me to fix their problems, and the truth is , I think all I can do is just walk with them for a while, keep them company during a rough patch. I don't think anybody's life can be figured out, but it is in our nature to keep trying to make sense of it. And sometimes we can use help. That's when, if we're lucky, there's somebody in the room who can listen. It doesn't have to be somebody perfect, somebody sufficiently screwed up to actually get what we might be going through. - Someone like you. - On occasion. - And not someone like me. - No, Gina. Not for me. Not anymore.
The one thing I have figured out... I just need to be with more people. I don't need a break from being a therapist. I need a break from... just from this. You know? I need to stop analyzing my life. I need to start living it. I need you to let me go.
- What's the book about? - It's about redemption, I suppose.
I never would have survived without you.
几个故事中,Walter的故事最先打动我。
大公司的CEO Walter晚上失眠,来看心理医生。
谈话中Paul知道Walter的女儿在卢旺达做志愿者,对小女儿的担忧也许是失眠的导火索。担忧一被表达出来,引发了Walter的 Panic attack。
第二次来访,Paul对Panic Attack进行追问,回忆起来上次发生的时候是楼下保安换人的时候,老的门卫去世来了一个新人,Walter在电梯里发作。Walter每天和老门卫说Hi,关系并不亲近。
然后追忆起第一次Panic attack 是六岁时候,躺在哥哥的房间里。哥哥十六岁了,秋天就要去耶鲁上大学,最优秀的学生,跳级。几天前游泳时溺亡。父亲把Walter从邻居家接回,说这是你的房间了。那天晚上是第一次发作。
从此以后Walter不再是个孩子,他要照顾父母感受,不能哭,要优秀,母亲喝醉了,要记得查看厨房是否忘记关火。
那个6岁之前的小孩一生之中把所有人都放在自己肩上,直到68岁,不再是CEO了,不知道该怎么面对所有人,不知道该怎么照顾自己,让自己内心的小孩从六岁开始慢慢长大。
比第一季还要精彩,几乎有一半的剧集都会看哭。关于真相与真实,责任与义务。Paul 的精神分析里有太多自我暴露了。有两个地方他处理的很棒:1,Mia 问他列举任何一个我们亲密的时刻,他说:现在。2,和 Oliver 临别时的那通电话。这个爱尔兰男人,这样一双深邃的眼睛,谁不爱呢?
继承了上一季的许多因子,比上一季感人,但是这季的几个故事有雷同的内核。虽然分析时有精神分析派的动力性,有客体关系的理想化分析,有格式塔学派的觉察,有认知学派的思维模式分析,但更多的是存在主义学派的分析,死亡,意义,特别是责任,甚至可以说,这几个故事的内核是责任问题
比起第一季,差了那么点意思。and every teenage girl is a total disaster!
为therapist平反的系列剧。起初也觉得在短短数十分钟的therapy里,聊的都是毫无建树的内容,病人想要fix problems想要索取爱,therapist却只能固守着boundaries隔岸观火般淡然聆听,所以每个病人都抗拒合作与帮助,therapist劳心劳力却又不讨好。直到最后将病灶心魔一步步抽丝剥茧般摊开,随即而来的是拨云见日般情感内核的冲撞。如果我与GB孤男寡女共处一室,肯定越过boundary先犯罪了再说。
看完第二季,有种不舍得的感觉,怎么只拍了三季,5555,再看一季就没有了。
第二季的麻烦更普通人一些,太贴近生活所以一次不能看太多。仍然很棒,男主换了发型之后简直犯规。
既深刻又温暖。看到Pual就很安心。Paul在支撑着很多人,Gina支撑着Paul,这才是世界温暖运行的方式。Gina最后是不是很难过?如何能既身在其中又看出自己的Pattern呢?
真的超赞。PS这一季一定请了一位牛逼的配乐师,bm太经典了。。。
Pual疯了,我求求他别这样,他不可能把每个人都救下来……他不可能走进每个人的生活拯救每一个人……我真的求求他别这样
中国现在心理医学这个行业必将火爆
这家伙说啥心理治疗都是扯淡。——你不仅仅是听、你还观察、你还解析、你鼓励人们去审视自己的行为模式。——我可能做了那些事,但那都不是人们想要的。他们想要个爱他们的爸妈,他们想要关注、他们想要情感、他们想要希望、他们想吃药、他们想做爱。可我给不了他们这些东西。
第二季比第一季更好,paul呈现出真实和迷茫的一面,而且拥有许多温情和动人的力量,多次情感和对话让我落泪。
看不起心理治疗看该剧也有很好效果。。
这是我看过最不商业的美剧了!没那么狗血,表演精彩、场景简单!
竟然比第一季还棒!!
比第一季更深刻、更真实了。诊疗故事随着Paul个人生活的颠覆也在慢慢转变着。所有演员都很出色。继续恶补第三季!
几乎每集都会看哭怎么破。它改变了我很多。Some people naturally have more heightened emotional responses than others. You've been working hard to change your nature which is probably a futile enterprise. But a continual effort to do that could make you very angry or insecure.
paul是个卷入过多的咨询师,在咨询室试图找到自我存在的意义。在他反移情作为父亲的case,总是可以相对处理比较好,反而则不是。
去过therapy才能知道Paul是多么优秀的therapist…
这一季几乎全部是关于奇葩父母如何给带给子女成长磨难以及幼年经历对一个人的整个人生的影响的故事。而心理医师保罗自己也一直在母亲留下的阴影中挣扎。感叹这个世界奇葩父母何其多。