Pages

Thursday, March 7, 2013

Case 3: Distrust, Disgust.


             Photo Credit
             “Gertrude, you're denying it but you know in your heart I'm right. You know it's an unhealthy relationship.”, I said.

             “You don't know anything. There is nothing wrong with me. I am not that terrible of a person. Hes my son!”, Gertrude pleaded.

             “I'm sorry, but he has already admitted to it. Gertrude. . . just admit it. You are in an unhealthy relationship with your son Hamlet. It's no longer just motherly love. It's intimate love that you have for him, and he for you.”, I said regretfully.

              This was one of many discussions I had with Gertrude and Hamlet. I can honestly say that I've learned more from this one case than any other in my career. The three things prevalent throughout every interview and interrogation were denial, disgust, and disbelief. It wasn't simply two people interacting in a manner that was unethical. Now don't get me wrong, they were aware of what was going on, but only Hamlet knew of the extent it was going. Something in his mind made it okay for him to approach his mother in this way. It had to have been something significant to cause him to override his mind's normal values system. I put all my effort into finding out why this happened to him.

              From what I gathered, Hamlet was never very trusting in women. He always thought that most were untrustworthy and saw them as betraying. Of all the woman in his life, his mother disappointed him the most. He was extremely perplexed about why she got over his fathers death so quickly, and why she was already engaged to someone else. In his mind she didn't seem to care about her husband. He felt that she was completely fine with him being dead. The thought of loving someone else was impossible to him. Incidentally, he started having feelings for her. Instead of seeing her as his mom, he started seeing her as an equal and a confused woman. He started to sympathize with her, which in turn started the process of falling in love with her. Even though she disappointed him, she was really one of the only women to consistently be there for him, and take care of him. It may seem odd to most, as it should, but being a physiologist I was able to stay neutral and understanding through the whole situation and eventually helped Hamlet see that what he was feeling was wrong. As for Gertrude, she really couldn't get over the fact that she could possibly have feeling for her son. That alone helped her to get through the disgust of the situation.

              In the end Hamlet, Gertrude, and myself learned a good life lesson that we all need to remember and take to heart. Our brain is the decision making part of our body, but only our heart can determine whether something is morally right or not. “If you have a pure heart, then you will have a pure mind. Simple as that.” - Dr. Seize.

3 comments:

  1. It can be awfully strange how the brain works sometimes. Even though it may be an unhealthy relationship, I feel that no matter how much counseling you give them, they will still continue to do whatever it is they are doing Dr. Seize.

    ReplyDelete
  2. I'm going to half to agree with Karliah. Sometimes counseling won't help they have to want to help themselves.

    ReplyDelete
  3. I have to agree with Karliah, as well. Counseling is just that...counsel. It is not intended to help people change their minds, but to be able to construct consequential decisions. What decisions are going to bring positive outcomes as opposed to the decisions that will bring negative outcomes? Your diagnosis is for Hamlet, yet the problem seems to be with Gertrude. Perhaps she needs more counseling. There are studies that show how a son fights for his mother's love from very early in life. A mother is the first woman a son loves. I have read books on it before. The same would go for a daughter and her father.

    ReplyDelete