:32:03
	But I don't really think
that's it because I don't...
:32:05
	I don't really feel like
stressed or anxious at all.
:32:09
	'Cause all the lithium he's had you on.
It's amazing you can even hear me now.
:32:14
	Look, Andrew, uh,
first of all...
:32:17
	I think you do need to find
a psychiatrist that isn't your father.
:32:20
	That's something that should have
been remedied years ago.
:32:23
	He knows better.
:32:25
	And secondly, uh, I'm in
no position to comment on...
:32:28
	whether you should stay on the meds or not
because I don't know your story.
:32:31
	But my opinion,
since you're paying for it...
:32:35
	is that, yeah, those drugs may help you
as a means to an end...
:32:39
	but sooner or later, if you're not
in some sort of therapy...
:32:41
	whatever's going on in your mind will find
a way to peek its little head out of the water.
:32:46
	- Are you all right?
- Yeah.
:32:48
	Yeah, you're all right.
You're alive.
:32:50
	Come on.
I'll take a look at you. Come.
:32:55
	I'll need you to take your shoes off.
I have to scratch your feet.
:33:30
	So why were you
really there?
:33:32
	Charging.
I'm a robot.
:33:36
	- Do you lie a lot?
- What do you consider a lot?
:33:39
	Enough for people
to call you a liar.
:33:41
	- People call me lots of things.
- Is one of them "liar"?
:33:45
	I could say no, but how would
you know I'm not lyin'?
:33:47
	I guess I could choose
to trust you.
:33:50
	- You can do that?
- I can try.
:33:52
	Whose bike is that?
:33:57
	It was my grandfather's.
:33:59
	It was the only thing he left to anyone
in my family, and he left it to me.