Books

The Celle Seminars_Page 418

George Vithoulkas

small details, things that I don’t consider to be particularly important.
(G. V.): Is she the fighting type? (Boyfriend): Oh, yes!
(G.V.): Are you afraid of her when she becomes angry? Can she become very angry, slamming doors, shouting, out of control? (Boyfriend): No, it is rather a very long debate, a very long discussion.
(G. V.): But is there shouting? (Boyfriend): Rarely.
(G.V.): When you have a debate, is it only verbal, no irritability? (Boyfriend): Yes, it stays strictly verbal. (G. V.): What I mean is shouting or-
(Boyfriend): No, we try to discuss things, settle them by discussion.
(G. V.): But can she become so irritated that she is no longer able to discuss things with you calmly?
(Boyfriend): No, I think that in that sort of situation she tends more readily to start crying.
(G.V.): If she becomes very angry, does she burst out crying? (Boyfriend): Yes.
(G. V.): Do you consider her to be someone who cries very easily? (Boyfriend): I can’t really judge, I have no comparisons. (G. V.): Does she cry once a day?
(Boyfriend): No, I think she probably does it secretly when she’s alone.
(G. V.): She doesn’t cry when you two are having a slightly heated discussion? (Boyfriend): Rarely.
(G. V.): (addresses patient again) What parts are most affected, the right elbow and the right knee, or the right elbow and the left knee?
(F.P.): Both knees are affected.
(G. V.): In the same way, or is one knee more affected than the other?

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