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Chapter 2842 The Forbidden Zone of Strange Demons (12)

Chapter 2816 The Forbidden Zone of Strange Demons (12)

Schiller did not relax his vigilance after entering the bedroom. He still did not speak or even write. He just gave Gordon a calm look and then began to look around the room.

Before Schiller could make any move, he saw the eyes of the painting hanging on the wall move.

Schiller understood somewhat, so he did not choose to touch the items in the room, but took out a white candle and lit it.

Soon Schiller sighed and complained in his heart, he thought the consultation fee was so much for just one visit.

But he still began to look at the situation in the room conscientiously, especially looking at the eyes that were moving around in the painting. Combined with the previous memory, Schiele showed a clear expression.

The chaos shown in the hotel is a kind of pathology, which can be completely understood as the inner world of a mental patient. In fact, this is the world in the eyes of many mental patients.

This does not refer to the monsters running around on the ground, the horrific bloody events, or the completely unreasonable chaos, but the state reflected behind all these things.

Someone is feeling fear.

This hotel is almost entirely the embodiment of fear, a sound, a shape, a rule, a feeling, all reflecting someone's deepest fears.

For example, some mental patients often react violently to some inexplicable things, and they only react to one of the same type of things. For example, he is not afraid of thunder in the sky, but he starts to go crazy when the lid of a pot falls to the ground.

Logically speaking, both of them are sounds, and the sound of thunder is much louder than the sound of something falling on the ground. Speaking of which, he has nothing against the pot lid, but that one sound stimulated him to get sick.

But the problem is not actually the pot lid itself, nor the action of dropping something, but rather a specific sound that triggers his fear of certain things.

It is often difficult for ordinary people to understand the connection between the two, or in fact, there is essentially no connection between the two, but in the hallucination system of mental patients, the two are connected.

Many mental patients have described seeing very scary monsters in the corners of their rooms or in their peripheral vision. Such monsters will be summoned by specific sounds or shadows. As soon as similar sounds or graphics appear, the monster will appear.

They will arrive as expected and want to kill them.

Of course, monsters do not exist in the real world, but in their personal spiritual world, certain sounds and graphics are given special meanings that can attract monsters.

So when faced with a mental patient's violent reaction, what we need to do is not to find out what is special about the pot lid, or whether the stress disorder occurred because he once dropped something important. This is behavior.

Doctrine has gone to the extreme fallacy.

In fact, the patient's connection with this sound is most likely a figment of his own imagination. At this time, a professional psychologist will choose to care about his spiritual world.

Of course, you need to ask what's wrong first. The patient may not be able to answer well, but through some guiding questions, you can ask what he is afraid of, what the monsters in his hallucinations look like, what are their patterns, and what can be done to get rid of them.

It leaves.

It sounds like it involves a bit of feudal superstition, but this is really a scientific treatment method, which even includes encouraging patients to bravely fight monsters and strengthen their willpower to never lose to monsters.

Even if all doctors know that this monster does not exist at all, they must do this, because if they cannot comfort the patients from a spiritual level and give them the ability to fight against fearful things in hallucinations, then the pot lid will fall to the ground next time.

Sometimes, they will still get sick and go crazy.

The ultimate way to cure this kind of mental illness is not to eliminate the monster, but to allow the patient to live with the monster, no longer fearing its arrival, but to have the courage to fight it. Only by defeating it can we ignore it.

Schiller believed that the hotel was filled with too many images that aroused some people's fears, the most typical of which was the elevator bell.

This thing rings in the elevator, in the corridor, on the monster, and on the alarm clock. This is obviously a kind of obsessive thinking of the patient.

When some patients develop to a very serious disease, they will not only react to the sound of the pot lid falling on the ground, but also to many similar sounds, and even all sounds will be interpreted by them as the awakening sound of monsters.

The elevator bell is obviously like this. It will ring whenever the other person feels fear, when taking the elevator, walking in the corridor, lying in bed sleeping, or when someone passes by the door.

At this stage, the patient is obviously harassed by a monster. When he is in a small space, the monster will appear. When walking through a corridor, the monster will appear. When he closes his eyes and falls into darkness, the monster will appear.

Monsters will also appear when you suddenly hear a noise in silence.

The restaurant goes a step further. The rules of following Western food etiquette are infinitely magnified. Those who follow them can survive, but those who don't follow them will die. And even death is not peaceful, and they have to come again and again.

This means that the appearance of the monster has begun to affect the other person's daily life, making them fearful. The monster may make them rude on important occasions, break all their current life rules, make them plummet, and completely become a loser.

That's why they have anxious and obsessive thoughts like "Follow the etiquette, follow the rules, I must follow the rules, and I must not make any mistakes." This is why they have behaviors that strengthen rules and create cycles.

Immediately afterwards, Wayne Manor got even worse. Not being able to listen, not see, not speak meant that the other party felt that he was being watched. It meant that monsters had fully invaded his life, and it was no longer even certain clips or certain scenes.

It only appears in a specific scene, but starts to feel like it is everywhere.

From this, it can be inferred that the other party is a person living in Wayne Manor, because generally speaking, the sign of a full invasion of life by hallucinatory monsters is that the most private space has also been invaded. Patients usually feel it in the bedroom or bathroom at home.

Feeling that they are being watched will completely destroy their sense of security.

Schiller believed that Alfred was not actually spying on anyone, but that the butler had become the embodiment of fear, just like when a patient with persecutory paranoia becomes ill and looks at everyone around him as if he is coming to kill him.

His own, and this housekeeper who often appears in various parts of the manor will obviously be the first target of suspicion for patients who have no sense of security, because he is always silent and everywhere.

Because of this, the other party imagined that Alfred was a monster, or that he had been controlled by the monster, so he could not speak, show expressions, or even react in front of him, otherwise he would be discovered by the monster.

This is also a sign of further deterioration of the condition, from hallucinations at the beginning to suspicion of people in the real world, and only one step away from causing aggressive behavior.

This is just Schiller's analysis based on clinical psychology and psychiatry, assuming that there are really no monsters in the world.

It's a pity that there are monsters in this world, and it's obvious that what this person provoked is not just any ordinary monster, but Nyarlathotep who enjoys teasing humans.

As expected, Naiya appeared in front of the other party, but not in the form of a monster, at least not at first.

But it was different later. Naiya must have revealed his true face in front of the patient, and even completely turned into a monster, and continued to track him, following him and appearing in fragments of his life.

It can be inferred from the elevator ringing that the first time the patient saw the true face of the monster was probably in the elevator, so the arrival of the elevator ringing became the condition that triggered the hallucination.

Immediately afterwards, Nyarlathotep began to harass the patient more frequently. It may be in his life or work that he made a lot of mistakes, which affected his real life, and this began to gradually deprive him.

The other person’s sense of security.

And if as expected, Naiya has not revealed his true face in front of anyone else. If he only does this to patients, no matter whether he goes to see a doctor or someone he wants to get close to, he will not get any answers when he asks for confirmation. In the end,

There can only be one conclusion, and that is that you are crazy.

Then, the intrusion into the patient's life reaches a pervasive level, with constant surveillance and long-term spying. As long as the patient does something, such as talking, looking at other things, or even thinking, the monster will appear.

In the end, the patient feels that even the most familiar place is no longer safe, and allows the chaotic thoughts to control the tired body and go to an unknown place in the distance.

This is similar to mental manipulation in psychology, but the outer gods are advanced life forms after all. They do not need to use human means such as hypnosis to do this, but have more advanced methods.

If Schiller guessed correctly, Naiya's true appearance is not only scary, but the appearance of the Outer God itself is a kind of pollution. Even just looking at it may cause insanity, so Naiya's appearance is like a punishment.

mechanism.

As long as you see a monster, you will feel confusion and pain, but the monster is so pervasive that it will show up no matter what you do, and then make your current life a mess, but no one else can see it or understand it.

Without oneself, it can be said that there is no way to heaven and no way to earth.

After deducing all this, Schiller did not feel angry, he just felt a little pity. If this patient could have met a better psychiatrist, maybe the matter would not have developed to such a serious point.

Because psychiatrists have seen this situation too many times. A good doctor will not tell the patient that you are sick or that the monster is fake right away. You just need to stay awake. This is completely amateurish, just like talking to a patient.

Depressed patients say you want to be more cheerful.

The psychiatrist will ask very carefully about the monster's appearance, attributes, details of the attack on you, how you reacted at the time, how you felt, and even how each part of your limbs felt.

And it involves repeated questioning, long-term questioning, and various methods of questioning, including but not limited to description, drawing, and brain wave control mapping, until the patient is exhausted and can't tell anything.

A good doctor can rely on all of the above to determine what is going on mentally with a patient.

If it were Schiller, he could have realized by asking these things that the monster was real and not an illusion, because there is a very significant difference between the two.

Because you can completely judge from various reports whether the other party is illogical, whether he is conscious, and whether his rationality is normal.

If the above are all normal, and the only abnormal thing is the hallucination monster, then no matter how absurd it is, Schiller will believe that this monster is real, because he trusts his own judgment.

Therefore, it is almost impossible to see a scene in a movie where a victim who encounters a real monster describes everything to a psychiatrist, but the psychiatrist does not believe it. Which psychiatrist would dare not do the above examination and make such a conclusion without long-term observation?

, basically I don’t want a job anymore.

In other words, for psychiatrists, from the moment the other party says there is a monster, they know they are coming to live.

Because this type of mental patient is the most dangerous. Once the sense of security is completely deprived, the persecutory delusion will most likely develop aggressive behavior if left unchecked. And once one of his patients gets involved in a lawsuit, he will never be able to escape.

The result is a waste of time testifying in court.

Schiller sighed again, looked back at Gordon, and considered whether to tell Peter his speculation.

Came to Malaysia again, durian is so delicious hehe


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