Just as he said this, the waiter from the restaurant came over and said with a smile: "We will start the meal in 20 minutes. Please confirm your seat in 10 minutes. We will present the products according to the number of people."
Schiller nodded to them, then looked at Arthur and said with a smile: "It seems that we can't let the rich man bleed any more, but fortunately it's less than an hour, calculated as an hour."
Arthur also smiled at him.
"But it's only a one-hour consultation anyway. We can end this conversation as soon as possible, so that you can have some time to do other things."
Arthur didn't express any objection. He just sat there and said nothing, as if to say, just arrange everything.
"Of course, please don't get me wrong. I'm not trying to deal with you. In fact, it's just your duty to conduct routine inquiries on patients. You have to give those people who can't graduate from college some illusion that their medical expenses are worth it. I don't
No need for this."
Arthur tilted his head.
"Your illness has been cured, Arthur." Schiller put his forearm completely on the table, leaned forward and looked into Arthur's eyes and said: "From the moment you became a clown, your illness has been cured."
alright."
"Your disease has never been cruel, violent or crazy. It is a symptom only born of perverts, and you are an ordinary person."
"People often say that after one bad day, everyone has a chance to become a clown, but the truth is that ordinary people will just want to commit suicide after one bad day, many bad days, and several bad years."
"It takes a lot of courage and willpower to firmly hold the view that 'no one's fault is mine,' and even talent. Either you are born with this mindset, or it is almost impossible for you to develop this mentality."
.”
"Even if you show this attitude on the surface, you must be feeling extremely resentful towards yourself and society in your heart. It is simply not something that ordinary people can do to completely pour your resentment towards the latter.
.”
"In the first half of your life, your balance was too tilted forward. Just like every ordinary person, although you would shirk responsibility and blame others and the social environment, it ultimately came down to yourself, and you began to doubt yourself and pull yourself up.
Self-consuming.”
"This is the root cause of the mental illness of the vast majority of ordinary people. Their abilities allow them to do too many bad things, but they do not have the strong willpower to blame all their mistakes on society, so they feel
Regret, frustration, wavering, until depression.”
"Just imagine, if there is an inevitable rule in this world, that is, everyone who has a bad day will become a clown, then will the world be as bad as it is now? Do they dare to be so bad?"
"But because there are no such rules, the vast majority of ordinary people who have experienced a bad day choose to hide home and feel sad. Even if one in ten people must become clowns and do things like you, human beings will
I dare not build society like this."
"That's why I say that your illness is cured, because you have finally thrown away the weight that was too heavy on yourself, and you have finally begun to learn to put the blame on others and attribute your own misfortunes to society."
"You think it's not their fault." Arthur narrowed his eyes and said.
"Not exactly." Schiller replied very calmly: "You know that you have made mistakes that have nothing to do with environmental factors. We have all made them, because it is almost inevitable, whether it is an ordinary person or Bruce Wayne.
No genius can always be completely correct."
"I have to admit that if you could really choose every choice that has nothing to do with environmental factors perfectly, then maybe your life would not be like this, but this is an untenable assumption, because if your life is already some kind of tragedy,
It’s almost impossible to choose the right one.”
"So in the final analysis, it's still their fault?" Arthur leaned back on the chair, leaving only one hand on the edge of the table.
"Yes, but a person's life is an extremely complex proposition. Your choices and society's choices are intertwined to form who you are now. Objectively speaking, it doesn't matter who is more wrong.
It’s also not within the scope of psychology.”
"What we are going to discuss is who you actively attribute your failures in life to. Most normal people will say that although I am indeed not that good, you can't blame me for being so bad now. This is a relatively healthy idea."
"Although it is possible that he is really bad and the tragedy of his life is all his fault, it is also possible that he is actually very good and it is not his fault at all, but if he looks at this problem more neutrally, he can make his own
Maintain a balanced mentality to avoid falling into depression due to excessive blame on oneself or excessive blame on the external environment, resulting in no objective judgment of oneself.”
"As long as you think for a moment, 'Why am I so bad when everyone else is good?', 'Why am I so bad?', it proves that the balance of your subjective attribution is tilted towards yourself, and if you think, 'I
This is how it will be in this life,' and 'People like me deserve to live like this', which proves that the balance has tilted to an extremely dangerous level."
Arthur looked away again, no one knew if he really thought this for a moment.
"And when you become a clown, you kill the people who mock you and tell the world that no one cares about you and no one loves you. It is their indifference that makes you what you are now. You will tell this unfair society
Revenge proves that your balance is finally balanced."
"Isn't it too tilted to the other side?" Arthur asked again.
Schiller seemed to reach out to get the pen from his chest pocket, but then realized that he was not wearing a doctor's uniform and there was no pocket on his chest, so he could only retract his hand and put it on the table again and said.
"This requires a concrete analysis of specific issues. In addition to starting from two aspects of morality and personal feelings, it also has to..."
"You will try to be as brief as possible."
"Then just from social morality..."
"Don't talk about morality."
"That person's feelings..."
"There is no emotion either."
Schiller seemed a little helpless, and Arthur finally started his counterattack. He put his forearms on the table like Schiller did before, leaned forward and looked at Schiller and asked: "What do you think of my criminal behavior?"
"You know that formal psychotherapy is audio-recorded, right?"
"Of course, but I don't..."
"I care."
Arthur was stunned for a moment, then suddenly came to his senses and looked at Schiller, staring straight into those calm and firm eyes.
"I am a doctor and you are a patient consulting me. We should talk as little as possible about my personal opinions and talk more about your condition. When you come here for treatment, I help you see yourself clearly.
Not spying on me."
Arthur and Bruce, who was eavesdropping on the side, both frowned. Arthur was because of Schiller's attitude, while Bruce found that Schiller's greedy personality was more cautious in this regard because he was often in a place where social order was normal.
place?
If he is arrogant, he will directly say, I don't care if you kill someone. First, the person you kill has nothing to do with me. Second, you who kill someone have nothing to do with me.
There is one person in this world who has died, but there are always people in this world who are dying. There is one person in this world who is going to jail, but there are too many people in this world who are going to jail, so why should we care?
However, Greedy did not express his views from beginning to end. He was obviously avoiding certain sentences that touched the law and morality. He seemed to be accustomed to protecting himself under the law.
This is not surprising. The death of an individual in Gotham is nothing at all. Even in the Gotham where Arthur lives, dozens of public murders occur every day, and people have long been numb.
Murder is not even a fashionable topic here, it is just one of the topics of daily chatter. Serial murders involving more than 5 people can barely make the front page. Only a terrorist attack that kills at least 200 people can make the headlines.
So people here don't care at all about talking about this kind of thing. Even if you tell Gordon how many people you have killed in front of him, he will not arrest you based on this. After all, if you want to arrest you like this, Gotham will just change it.
Forget it becomes a whole prison.
But in places other than Gotham, especially those places where the social order is still stable and the law is very effective. In short, in a civilized society, people must be careful about their words and deeds, and any opinions expressed about the murder case
All may become evidence in court in the future.
So although these things have never disappeared and people are always talking about them, they can always find the most appropriate attitude to express their feelings in a subtle way, but they can perfectly avoid possible accountability in the future.
Of course Arthur reacted. He wanted to say that he didn't care about the recording at all. He had killed all the murders and the court had sentenced him. What was there that he couldn't talk about?
But Schiller said that he cared, which proves that if he really talks about the homicide case from a personal perspective, I am afraid it will not be a point of view that the law likes. So what kind of point of view can the law not like?
This kind of hint is too vague, and the attitude expressed is ambiguous and very subtle. You can say that he said something, but in the final analysis, he still said nothing. You can say that he expressed his opinion, but in the final analysis, he did not
What's your opinion?
"You are very much like the lawyer who defended me before." Arthur commented.
"The behavior is commendable, but the professional level begs to differ," Schiller said, shaking his head.
Arthur felt that he was hinting at something. Although it seemed that poor murderers also had defense lawyers, which reflected the fairness of the law, my professional level was different from his.
But it sounds a bit like I think you are not guilty, so someone should defend you. It is a pity that he could not exonerate you, who is innocent.
There is a big difference between these two meanings, and they can even be said to be two completely opposite attitudes. The former stands on the side of the law, while the latter completely despises the law.
There is no evidence in this short sentence to prove what Schiller meant. I can only say that you just listen to this and say nothing.
Arthur reviewed everything Schiller said before and found that what Schiller said was quite reasonable and his analysis was very clear. The so-called emotional diseases caused by subjective attribution and the balance theory are both reasonable and well-founded, and they are very easy to be misunderstood.
understand.
Two main conclusions are given, one is that Arthur is an ordinary person, and the other is that Arthur's condition is improving.
The method used is indeed psychoanalysis, which accurately points out some of Arthur's depressed thoughts before becoming the clown. From the ordinary person theory to the attribution theory, even ordinary people Arthur can pass this time.
Psychological treatment to clarify where your problems lie and how to adjust them.
This is a very normal psychological treatment from a psychiatrist. The only problem is that it doesn't look like Schiller.
This does not involve any analysis of Arthur's personality. It can be said that it is completely based on the facts and finding the cause of the disease. He is really serious about treating the disease.
The question is when did Schiller seriously treat his illness?
His words that seem like psychological counseling are actually just a prelude to breaking the defenses of others. The therapeutic effects are all gifts of seeing others collapse after being told by themselves. People have long had a consensus that Schiller's psychotherapy is like before a bomb explodes.
beep sound.
So he's actually a psychiatrist?!
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