Tuesday, April 19, 2016

The Diagnosis

            He rocks back and forth. His pinpoint pupils stare out, but it isn’t quite certain their point of focus. He runs his fingers through his disheveled hair and mumbles. “Why? Why? Why can’t it do what I want?” He grabs the orderly by the collar.
            “Take it easy, friend. What seems to be the problem?”
            “Why! Why can’t it do the simplest of things? I don’t ask much. I only want it to obey. Obedience is all I ask.” His pupils focus in a penetrating stare that startles the orderly. “Why won’t it obey?”
            “Why won’t what obey?”
            “It! Why won’t it obey?”
            The orderly shakes himself loose from the disfigured fingers grasping his collar.
            “Obey! It’s all I ask!”
            The orderly sees the therapist in the hallway. He saunters over. “What do you think is wrong with our friend there?”
            “I’m not sure, but he’s in a bad way.”
            “Yeah, he’s been sitting on that cold, tile floor for the last six hours. He keeps mumbling about it needing to obey.”
            A lady in a lab coat hands the therapist a report. “Here’s another piece of the puzzle.”
            The therapist shakes his head. “Carpal tunnel syndrome and arthritic fingers.”
            The orderly tilts his head to the left. “That can’t be right. He can’t be a day over thirty. Wait a second, . . . you don’t think?”
            “Think what?”
            “Cubicle psychosis? We’ve had that a lot since that telemarketing company opened up down the street.”
            The therapist shakes his head. “No, no. It can’t be that.”
            “How do you know?”
            “He’s been here six hours, and he hasn’t tried to kill anyone yet.”
            “Is it Multiple Avatar Disorder?”
            “No, no. We ran a complete Facebook Addiction Panel. He only scored a 13.”
            “Thirteen, hmm? That’s lower than most of the people working on this floor.”
            “Yeah. I scored an 88, and I’m supposed to be a therapist.”
            “That’s pretty high.”
            “Yeah, and it’s over 90 when I drink too much coffee.”
            “Did you try a Rorschach Test?”
            “He scored a 100%.”
            “I thought there were no right answers.”
            “Sure, sure there are.”
            “What are they?”
            “Bat, monks, bag pipe players, Darth Vader, moth, cosmic string, lovers, kidneys, pelvic bone, and Schrodinger’s cats.”
            “Interesting.”
            “So, what could be bothering our friend over there?”
            “Why you asking me? You’re the therapist.”
            The therapist flags down a nurse. “Could you hook our friend over there up to an EEG?”
            “We ran an EEG when he came in.”
            “Well, why wasn’t I notified?”
            “We attached it to his chart, Sherlock!”
            “Okay, you don’t have to get lippy. Get me his chart.”
            Meanwhile, he continues to rock back and forth. Aside from the mumbling, he’s nearly catatonic.
            “Okay, Sherlock, here’s the chart.”
            “Let’s see here. Hmm, that’s interesting.”
            The orderly leans in. “What’s interesting?”
            “He seems to have little brain activity.”
            “You don’t think?”
            “We’ve seen this before. Let’s go talk to him.”
            He stares deeply into the therapist’s eyes. “Why won’t it obey! Why? I just want it to do what it’s told.”
            The orderly chuckles. “What do you want it to do? Put the lotion on the skin?”
            The therapist cringes. “That’s not funny.”
            “It puts the lotion on the skin.”
            “Enough!”
            He runs his fingers through his hair. “Why? Why won’t it obey.”
            The therapist grabs and shakes him. He looks the therapist in the eye. The therapist boldly proclaims, “Ariel.”
            “Ariel. No, no no!”
            “Garamond.”
            “No, no! I just want italics. Why won’t it obey!”
            “Did you create a chart?”
            “You’re holding his chart,” says the orderly.
            “I’m not talking to you. I’m talking to him.” The therapist stares him in the eyes. “Did you try to create a chart?”
            “Yes, yes. No, no. NO!”
            “Autocorrect.”
            “Oh, please, make it stop! Why won’t it obey!”
            The therapist turns to the orderly. “I think I know what we’re dealing with here.”
            “What? What is it?”
            “This isn’t good. He’ll need treatment, rehab, and at least several years of outpatient counselling.”
            “What? What is it?”
            “He has, . . . Microsoft Mania!”