Possessed
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1:08:01
Yes, that's it.
1:08:03
Open your eyes.
1:08:07
Extreme suggestibility.
1:08:09
And that pounding noise
you hear at night...

1:08:12
that's easily explained, Mrs. Smith.
1:08:21
It's merely the sound
of your own heart beating.

1:08:23
Blood pulsation can be heard as sound.
1:08:26
It's a common symptom of neurasthenia.
1:08:29
What's wrong with me, Doctor?
1:08:31
Why do I see things that aren't...
1:08:33
that just couldn't be real?
1:08:35
Sometimes a patient can't distinguish
between reality and unreality.

1:08:40
In your case,
you're still able to make that distinction.

1:08:42
But what if it gets worse? What then?
1:08:44
There is a type of nervous disorder
in which that happens.

1:08:47
We all have dreams, Mrs. Smith.
Bad dreams, sometimes.

1:08:51
But we wake up
and we say that was a bad dream.

1:08:54
Occasionally, however,
we find a patient who can't wake up.

1:08:57
He or she lacks insight...
1:08:59
the ability to distinguish
between what is real and what isn't.

1:09:03
Now, that may be true in your case.
1:09:06
It's too early to know definitely.
1:09:10
You're describing schizophrenia,
aren't you?

1:09:12
Is that what's wrong with me?
1:09:14
I didn't know you had any knowledge
of the subject...

1:09:17
or I shouldn't have discussed it.
1:09:20
I knew there was something wrong
with me when I came up here.

1:09:25
I had no idea it was insanity.
1:09:28
Insanity's not a word we like to use,
Mrs. Smith.

1:09:31
You have a problem but it's not insoluble.
1:09:33
Problems never are.
1:09:34
Whatever it is that's troubling you,
put an end to it.

1:09:38
No, it's too late.
1:09:40
- Much too late.
- Nonsense.

1:09:42
The important thing is to know
that there is something wrong.

1:09:45
Now that you know,
you can do something about it.

1:09:47
I'm going to give you
the name of a psychiatrist.

1:09:50
Go and see him.
1:09:51
Don't lie to him as you did to me.
Tell him the truth.

1:09:57
Mrs. Smith?

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