Brilliant Minds (2024) s01e08 Episode Script

The Lovesick Widow

1

How do human beings,
on their worst days,
still manage to get out of bed?
What is it that motivates us
to move forward?
Simply put desire.
For love. Joy.
Money. Food. Sex.
[BREATHING HEAVILY]
Because in the rare moments
when we actually get what we want,
our brains gift us with dopamine,
the neurotransmitter that creates
Pleasure.
And, like water, pleasure is essential
to the survival of human beings
[SIGHS]
even when it seems out of reach.

Incoming.
I have been searching for a vein
for an IV on Mr. Bishop, for 10 minutes.
Your turn, Mr. Touchdown.
Dr. Kinney, are you
actually asking for my help?
- [CHUCKLES]
- Finally,
she sees me in a different light.
So I'd like to consider
So I think I think we
know what we need to do.

You know, let's move Mrs. Arpin
post-op into the ICU.
We have a bed now
that our John Doe is gone.
Could you please tell the chief
that his name was Roman, not John Doe?
I'd prefer not to get
in the middle of this.
Thank you, Dr. Nichols.
It's amazing how smoothly
a hospital can run
when its procedures are
followed by its doctors.
Okay, I'm just going to say it.
What is the deal with
Dr. Wolf and his mom?
Take it from a psychiatrist.
There's never a dull moment
between mother and son.
Ever.

[SIGHS] I am sorry to
report that you have
A twinkle in your eyes.
I like him.
Mrs. Sullivan, your boys mentioned
that you were recently asked
to leave your assisted-living facility.
On account of erratic behavior.
They like their residents sedated,
and I have too much pep in my step.
They also kept finding her entering
other people's rooms at night,
and when they'd bring her back
to her bed, she'd get aggressive.
She has taken a real turn
since our dad died last year.
Mom, you know it's true.
You haven't been acting like yourself.
We were wondering if
it could be grief related.
It's possible.
That can be a wildly
unpredictable stressor.
They want me to be sad forever.
- [SCOFFS]
- That's not true.
I'm going to go ahead and
have my team get started
on some cognitive tests.
Do you think that it might be dementia?
It does run in the family.
That's why our GP referred us.
I don't want to speculate,
but we will do everything
we can to find out
if this has a neurological cause.
Does that sound good, Mrs. Sullivan?
Mrs. Sullivan is my dead mother-in-law.
Please, call me June.
June. That's a lovely name.
You know, you look
like a younger version
of my late husband.
Do you see it, boys?
I think it's the beard.
Always made me weak in the knees.
Mom, just let the man do his job.
Tell me, do you give your
mother this much grief?
Have you chosen a specialty yet?
[BRITISH ACCENT] I'm a bit torn
between neuro and cardiology.
Oliver.
You're just in time for dinner.
Come. Say hello.
Hi. Tom.
Tom is the medical student
that I was telling you about.
From Oxford.
He's visiting for the summer
as part of his exchange program.
Well, I'm not giving up my bedroom.
[EXHALES SHARPLY]
He'll be sleeping on the pullout.
In the office.
- You mean dad's office?
- [CLEARS THROAT]
You can put me anywhere.
In the attic. Under the stairs.
I'm easy.
Just don't touch anything.
You know, go wash up.

I just don't feel like myself anymore.
I swear, I've never been someone
who had trouble getting out of bed.
Lifelong productivity junkie.
But now I just lay there,
thinking about him.
I haven't slept in days.
I just don't understand
why he won't return my calls.
All I want from him is closure.
I know it's painful.
But, remember, he asked
you to stop contacting him.
He drew a healthy boundary,
and the best thing
you can do for yourself
is respect his wishes.
[CHUCKLES]
I feel like Esther Greenwood
in "The Bell Jar."
[BOTH CHUCKLE]
I remember reading
that book and thinking,
"Get it together, girl."
And now look at me.
I'm totally incapable.
Says the woman who's getting a doctorate
in comparative literature.
You're incredibly capable.
Just going through a rough time.
I hate being this weak
when it comes to men.
I always thought of
myself as independent.
- Like you.
- Mm?
You didn't even take
your husband's last name
when you got married.
That's, like,
the ultimate feminist move.
I don't recall mentioning that
Pierce is my maiden name.
Got me.
I Googled you.
It came up when I was
researching psychiatrists.
I-I didn't realize you were
married to a doctor, too.
Talk about power couple.
[SIGHS]
Same time next week?

Hey, boys, we spoke to the director
at June's assisted-living facility
to get a better picture
of her behavioral issues.
Confirmed that she was
kicked out of Sunny Park
and she went out with a bang.
She and the other male residents
were caught multiple
times in flagrante delicto.
I failed Latin.
AKA caught in the act.
AKA June was getting down
with Mark, Luke, and John
in the biblical sense. AKA
Okay, we get it.
June was sleeping around.
With half the men in the community.
And it's a big community.
Not a judgment, just a fact.
Okay, just because
June's not showing signs
of cognitive decline yet,
we're not out of the woods
when it comes to dementia.
I mean, hypersexuality could be
a symptom of a brain injury
or tumor or Parkinson's.
Or bipolar disorder, substance abuse.
There's something going on,
and it's not clear
if she's going to be safe
if we send her home.
So let's admit her and
catch Wolf up to speed.
He's going to love this case.
Yeah.
[KNOCK ON DOOR]
Nichols, can I help you?
I need your thoughts on our
Our vestibular schwannoma patient.
You know, the the
I asked for your
Uh, an update as soon as you were done.
Uh, I-I'm not done.
Oh, okay. Look Look, I, um
I don't care what you
do on your own time,
but when we're when
when we're on a case together,
I just I need open
Channels of communication.
Understood.

According to the staff at Sunny Park,
you weren't entering
other residents' rooms
because you were confused.
Is that accurate?
My sons said I was confused.
It's more palatable than saying
their mother was having sex.
They don't want to use those
two words in the same sentence.
I'm not ashamed of myself.
Okay, then, well, uh, in that case,
would you mind walking me
through your sexual history?
How much paper do you have?
[CHUCKLES]
Mickey and I were
high school sweethearts
before we got married.
I'd say we had a healthy
sex life for the most part.
And up until a year ago,
he was my entire history.
But now the number of my
partners has increased
Thirtyfold.
Give or take a few.
Um, June,
you should know that some
diseases cause hypersexuality.
And that's why we've
admitted you to the hospital
so that we could determine the etiology.
I'm not sick. I know my body.
I feel more alive than ever.
Now that my kids are grown
and my grandkids are teenagers,
it's my time.
I just wish my sons could get on board.
Sometimes it's
hard for us to see our parents
as anything other than our parents.
True.
Who knew erratic behavior was
code for hot octogenarian sex?
Honestly, good for June.
She's out there living her best life.
I don't see the issue.
The issue is June isn't
just interested in sex.
She's demonstrating
compulsive sexual behavior
to the point of pathology.
- Something's up.
- We don't know that yet.
But I do agree with the instinct.
We think of disease as deficit,
but it can also present as excess.
Like Parkinson's.
Patients can have excess
involuntary movement.
I mean, her exam isn't consistent,
but meds for that can
cause hypersexuality.
So can frontotemporal dementia,
Which would make her hypersexuality
just a brief reprieve on
the road to a grim death.
Huntington's can present with
hypersexuality and paraphilia.
Although, at her age,
it's extremely late-onset.
Leave it to Ericka to
specialize in all the ways
that sex is a disease.
Maybe June is just finding herself.
Look, we don't want to
pathologize June unnecessarily.
We also don't want to miss any diseases
that could be treatable.
Then we'll get a set of
neurodegenerative labs.
Send her for a brain MRI.
And a full suite of STI testing.
Just to make sure she didn't
pick up any unwanted souvenirs.
[BOTH LAUGHING]
Okay. Hold on. Your Sullivan case
reminds me of a patient
I had a few years ago.
A guy comes in after
a massive car accident
and he's on the verge of herniation,
but somehow we save his life.
Another miracle,
courtesy of Dr. Nichols.
Until he comes in for a follow-up,
and his wife is pissed.
Something's wrong.
He's eating everything.
Like, the TV remote everything.
And he won't stop having sex.
Kluever-Bucy.
Damage to the bilateral medial
temporal lobes in the accident.
Textbook case.
I gave him a neuro referral,
and that was all I could do.
No surgery that could fix it.
Do you not think a neurosurgeon
should have the dexterity
to handle utensils used by a
third of the world's population?
Listen, it's not that
I can't use chopsticks.
I just prefer the
efficiency of the fork.
Oh, come on, I don't have
all day to sit around and opine
and play with my little tools
like you neurologists do.
[CHUCKLES]

Bathroom's all yours.
Um, if I'm ever in your way,
please just let me know.
This is your home.
I don't want to be an imposition.
No, you're not.
If you want, I can show you around.
- Take you to the beach.
- Yeah, that sounds nice.
Uh, but if your mom's making
you play tour guide, then
No, she's not.
I was rude earlier.
This is an olive branch.
Or an Oliver branch.
[CHUCKLES]
Anyway, um, offer accepted.
Beach sounds lovely.
Good night.

[P.A. CHATTER]
Dr. Wolf.
We got June's results back. Nada.
MRI showed general
age-appropriate cerebral atrophy.
- Nothing too specific.
- Labs were normal, too.
Even our STI testing
was negative. All of it.
Maybe this isn't a disease after all.
Well, we need more time
to see how this plays out,
but we can spare her
a night in the hospital.
Set her up to see me in the clinic.
[PAGERS BEEPING]
- It's a stat page.
- From June's room.
[MONITOR BEEPING]
There's a reindeer place.
- Oh, thank God.
- June?
Nurse Portia just went looking for you.
She was talking to us, and then
she just stopped making sense.
June, can you tell me where we are?
Underneath the asphalt,
there's cats and big
Sounds like word salad to me.
Precisely. It's Wernicke's aphasia.
- Excuse me.
- She could be having a stroke.
Stay calm, June. We're going to
lower your bed, okay?
- June?
- Deep breaths, June.
- Focus on your breaths.
- Oh, I don't know.
We need to get her to a CT scan now.
- [SCREAMING]
- June, we got you.
Stay with us, June.
It's okay. It's okay.
Your mother had a
transient ischemic attack,
or TIA, um, a mini stroke.
The good news is these
resolve on their own.
She's already improving,
and she should regain
her speech completely
within a couple of hours.
What's the bad news?
A TIA is a warning sign
that June is at risk
for having a full stroke
in the near future.
To prevent this, we've already
started her on medication,
and we're in the middle
of a full medical workup.
In the meantime, tell me
a little bit about your mom.
What was she like before
her personality changed?
Before your father died?
Sweet and kind, thoughtful.
- A fourth grade teacher.
- Her health?
Uh, she used to have
high blood pressure,
but no other major issues,
aside from, when we were in high school,
both our parents got
really sick for weeks.
Oh, God. Yeah, they
had really bad fevers
that came and went.
Dad even had these
patchy bald spots for a while.
I'm sorry. Both of
your parents were sick,
and neither of you got it?
- And this was decades ago?
- Yeah.
I'd like to conduct a lumbar puncture
with your mother's consent.
I think it could
illuminate a few things.

[JOSÉ GONZÁLEZ'S "HEARTBEATS" PLAYS]
[LAUGHTER]
Wait up.
[LAUGHTER CONTINUES]

- Come on.
- Wait.
One night to be confused ♪
- One night to speed up truth ♪
- Hey.
- Aw.
- [LAUGHS]
So, I gather from the books
in your dad's office,
he was a doctor.
GP.
Yeah, worked at Bronx
General for a long time.
Can I ask what happened?
He died, uh, four years ago.
We were on a camping trip.
I was with him one minute,
and the next he was gone.
I'm sorry.
Uh, it's okay.
Feels good to talk about it.
My mom mostly avoids the topic.
Well
you can always talk to me.
If you want.
We were in love ♪
- To call for hands of above ♪
- [CHUCKLES]
To lean on ♪
Wouldn't be good enough ♪
For me, no ♪
To call for hands of above ♪
To lean on ♪
Wouldn't be good enough ♪

[SIGHS]
Transient ischemic
attacks can be scary
- Mm-hmm.
- but what we really want
to avoid is an actual stroke.
So the spinal tap results will
help us zero in on a diagnosis.
You know what they never
tell you about getting older?
Doesn't matter what you
look like on the outside.
On the inside, you still feel young.
That's why I like sex so much.
It's the one activity that
makes me feel young again.
You might be able to chase the same high
with a brisk walk in the morning.
[CHUCKLING] What kind of
sex are you having?
Uh, medicine has been
my only love for a while now.
So dating and sex
had to take a back seat.
A back seat? For how long?
Um
Three years.
Oh, honey, I spent the last
decade of my marriage celibate.
It was so lonely.
Don't make the same mistake.
Especially at your age.
I never meant for it to last this long,
but when you're in a dry spell,
it's scary to jump back in.
You just need to find the right partner.
My neighbor Lou was my
first after my husband died.
He made me feel safe.
He made me feel beautiful.
I want that kind of guy for you.

Dr. Dang, I hear you're a whiz
at tracking people down on the internet.
Some say whiz. Others, genius, queen,
the missing face in "Ocean's 8."
But, yes, I am your cybersleuthing girl.
Uh-huh. Um, I need to find a patient
who's gone radio silent.
I did a Google search, nothing
came up, and I'm worried.
- What's her name?
- Um, Alison Whitaker.
- She's a PhD student at NYU.
- Mm, common name.
Try cross-checking her
with hospital records.
Um, okay.
[KEYBOARD CLACKING]
She used a hyphenated name
on one of her intake forms.
Alison Zhang-Whitaker.
Okay, this is weird.
Um, I found her, but,
according to Google,
she's a med student at Columbia.
And it looks like she
knows your husband.

The spinal tap results revealed
that you have what's
called neurosyphilis.
It's caused by an infection
from an untreated case of
syphilis from decades past.
The vascular form of neurosyphilis,
which is what you have,
spreads to the central nervous system
and causes a variety of symptoms,
including hypersexuality.
It's sometimes called Cupid's disease.
It's not contagious, so
you don't have to contact
your sexual partners,
but if it's not properly treated,
it can be fatal.
So everything I've been feeling?
- It's the disease.
- [SIGHS]
Our mom has neurosyphilis, which, if
If I'm hearing you correctly,
is something you only contract
if you've had syphilis in the past?
- That's correct.
- Mom, make this make sense.
Were you cheating on Dad?
[SIGHS]
I loved your father with my whole heart,
and I was never unfaithful.
Unfortunately, the same
cannot be said about your father.
He had a million wonderful
qualities and one big flaw.
But when you're married that long,
you ask yourself a question.
Do I want to look
across the dinner table
and see a man who loves me
and disappoints me in equal measure,
or do I want to see an empty chair?
I chose him.
We had no idea.
I'm so sorry, Mom.
There is some good news here.
Neurosyphilis can be
treated with penicillin,
and many patients make
a complete recovery.
In some cases, we
won't be able to reverse
neurological damage
that's already occurred,
like the cerebral damage
that likely caused your hypersexuality,
but we won't know for sure
until we start treatment.
That sounds like too big of a gamble.
Mom, he said it could be fatal.
It's true.
If the hypersexuality goes away,
we can try libido-enhancing
My brother and I are
completely fine with it going away.
It's just not appropriate.
She's 80 years old.
And still a person.
I love the way I am with this disease,
and I don't know how much
time I have left on this planet.
Will you please tell her
this is a terrible mistake?
That's enough.
This is my decision.
Now, leave me be.
[CLEARS THROAT]
[P.A. CHATTER]

Am I being completely selfish?
No.
Not at all.
I feel like there's
this fire inside of me
that's been gone for so long.
I can't put it out again.
Maybe your sons will come around.
Mm. We'll see.
You know, I might be able
to help your sons understand
you a little bit better.
Um
I want you
To copy this diagram.

We just got an update
on the Sullivan case.
Apparently, June said
no to her treatment.
She doesn't want to cure neurosyphilis
if that means killing her sex drive.
Why would a woman in
her 80s risk her life for sex?
Bold choice, for sure.
Am I the only one who's Team June here?
Like, let the woman live.
- And by live, I mean have sex.
- I'm on the fence.
Sex is pretty high on my
list of favorite pastimes,
right above beating your
sweet little butts at Catan
and right below binging K-dramas.
Okay, but what about emotional intimacy?
- That's, like, way hotter.
- Strongly agree.
[SCOFFS] Y'all are so full of it.
What makes pillow talk so
great is the sex you have before it.
Look, I'm just being real.
If there's no physical
connection between two people,
it's game over.

June has made her decision.
- She does not want to be treated.
- [BUTTON BEEPS]
All I can do at this point
is get her sons on her side.
Do you want me to talk to them?
I can be very intimidating.
[CHUCKLES]
Mm-hmm.


[BUTTON BEEPS]
So, I asked your mom to
copy this diagram for me,
and this is what she drew.
Sometimes, inner life and imagination
can be awakened by illness.
It's clear that this disease has
unlocked something in your mom.
Where most people see a box,
she sees so much more.
We appreciate the sentiment.
Really, we do.
And we certainly don't want
to take away your joy, Mom,
but we can't support a
decision that will kill you.
It feels like you're
you're choosing your sex life
- over everything else.
- We still need you.
It isn't just for us.
It's for your grandkids, too.
[SIGHS]
Okay, you can start the treatment.
[SIGHS]
I'll do anything to
get better for my boys.
We're going to take
good care of you, Mom.
Patrick and I were talking.
I want you to come live with me.
The girls are all excited
to have Grandma with us.

Cool. You're doing the
facial nerve branches?
Which I somehow cannot commit to memory.
[CHUCKLES]
I like a mnemonic.
To Zanzibar by motor car.
Temporal. Zygomatic. Buccal.
Marginal mandibular and cervical.
Mm-hmm.
- Thanks.
- [BOTH CHUCKLE]
Oh, God. This is embarrassing.
- I should be tutoring you.
- Mm.
My lack of a social life
means a lot of time
spent alone with medical journals.
Also, I dissected my first
cadaver when I was 14.
- Oh, come on.
- No. I'm serious.
Well, I'm very impressed.
You're very impressive.
So are you.

[DOOR OPENS]
[DOOR CLOSES]

[SIGHS]
June is in an impossible position.
She's sacrificing her own desires
for the good of her kids, and
Are you even listening to me?
No.
I just found out
that I've been treating
The woman who slept with Morris
- And ruined my marriage.
- What?
She's been a patient
for a couple of months.
I had no idea.
I actually liked her.
I was rooting for her.
And then she said something one day that
made me suspicious,
and so I did some digging.
Well, obviously. Anybody in
your position would do the same.
Honestly, I don't know
whether to throw up or scream.
For eight sessions,
she's been telling me how
much she misses her ex
and all the things that
they've done together.
I really thought I had some clarity
on where things
stood with Morris, but
I really don't think I can
look him in the eye again.
June's husband cheated
on her repeatedly for years.
She's 80, and she's just
now finding herself, Carol.
I don't want that for you.
Neither do I.
And yet, I wish I'd never
looked at his phone that night,
but it was late, and
the buzzing woke me up.
Maya was at a sleepover, and
I worried something was wrong,
so I checked his phone
and there were all these messages.
I woke him up right then and there.
It's a good thing Maya
wasn't there to see me go off.
[SIGHS]
He swore.
He swore they'd only
slept together one time.
But if that were true,
why would that woman be in my office
crying for the last two months?
She's hardly a reliable narrator, Carol.
She sought you out as her therapist
when she knew she was
sleeping with your husband.
That is extreme behavior.
She clearly needs help.
Just from somebody else.
I already have a reference lined up.
[SNIFFLES]
If there's one thing I do know,
it's setting boundaries.
[ELEVATOR BELL DINGS]
Can we get custodial to
third-floor nurse's station?
Custodial to third-floor
nurse's station.
[BUTTON BEEPS]
- Dr. Nichols.
- Dr. Landon.
About what happened earlier, I, uh
Who my son chooses to be involved with
is none of my business.
[ELEVATOR DOORS OPEN]
Just
don't hurt him.

Good morning, June.
Is it?
I know you're going to tell me
that the antibiotics are working,
but I just feel numb.
It appears the medication is also
eradicating your hypersexuality.
You know, there are other alternatives,
medications that can
help your sex drive.
[CHUCKLES] I'm going to be living
with my son and his family.
No freedom, no independence.
No need for alternatives.
[SIGHS]
Dr. Ross to imaging.
Dr. Ross imaging.

Did something happen? Is our mom okay?
It depends on what you consider okay.
When is the last time you saw her?
Early this morning.
She seemed a little quiet, maybe. Tired.
It's not exhaustion, it's despair.
Her brain is getting better, but
her state of mind is declining.
I asked her to copy that diagram again.
The neurosyphilis is getting better
and the hypersexuality is going away,
but so is her spark.
Look, I have spent my entire career
helping patients adapt
to their conditions,
but your mom doesn't want that.
She wants a life of her own.
Okay. So she doesn't
want to live with us.
And she wants to still want to have sex.
You wouldn't listen
to me the first time.
I'm asking you to listen to me now.
In addition to her treatment,
I can put her on libido-enhancing meds
and hormone therapy
to preserve her sex drive.
It means you will likely have a mom
who brings new
boyfriends to family dinners
and overshares about her
sex life every chance she gets,
a different person than
the woman who raised you,
but no matter how
uncomfortable that makes you feel,
I'm asking you to support
her, not shame her.
I'm asking you to adapt.
You can help save the part of your mom
that makes her feel alive,
and let her live out her
golden years on her terms.

Okay, Doc, yeah. You win.
Yeah, we'll do it.
Uh, maybe we should
lock the door this time.
I can only handle my mother
walking in on me so many times.
Uh, actually, I was
hoping we could talk.
These last few days, this thing,
it's been a lot of fun
but we've all been a little
impulsive after losing patients,
and losing Roman was especially hard.
We were feeling the grief, and
we both needed a pick-me-up.
But I-I just think it's
best if we cut our losses,
you know, kept things professional.
Okay.
O-O-Okay?
Yeah. I mean, you made
your case, and you're right.
Uh, misplaced grief. That's all this is.
[CHUCKLES]
Finally, we agree on something.
[CHUCKLES] Just, uh
try not to be weird
when you run into me.
I'll do my best.

We've been seeing each other
every week now for two months.
- It's the highlight of my week.
- Uh-huh.
Your progress, while steady,
could be accelerated in
a different environment.
I think there's another psychiatrist
that would be better suited to help you.
Mm, please, Dr. Pierce.
Please Please don't give up on me.
I've already seen three therapists.
You're the only one I can talk to.
- Alison
- I need you.
If I lose you
I don't know what I'll do.

O-Okay.
Okay. Let's keep trying.

Flibanserin will increase your libido,
and it will reduce your distress
about your sexual desires.
We've also referred
you to a wonderful GP
to discuss hormone therapy.
And here's a little something
for when you want some alone time.
I hear you'll have plenty of space
at your new, fancy retirement community.
[CHUCKLES]
Uh, the meds are going to
help you feel like yourself again.
And I don't mean the June of yesteryear,
I mean the June who
walked into this hospital
with a twinkle in her eye.
You know, after a certain age,
women begin to feel invisible.
But you made me feel anything but.
Thank you, Dr. Wolf.
- [KNOCK ON DOOR]
- June.
Lou, Walt, what are you doing here?
We had to see about our best girl.
Ah. Oh.
We usually see any
disease as inherently bad,
a problem to fix.
But in June's case,
illness was also wellness.
It opened up a part of her
she'd buried a long time ago.
Here's to being women who aren't afraid
to get their needs met.
Sometimes it's hard to tell
other people what we want.
Sometimes it's even
harder to tell ourselves.
Desire is a complicated emotion.
It can lead to the highest highs
and the lowest lows.
All we can do is savor the peaks
and tolerate the valleys.
Morning.
Where's Tom?
He left early this morning.
Uh, he he doesn't
have class this morning.
Not for school.
He's on a plane.
Heading back to London.
He went home?
Why?
Mom.
Sit down. Eat.
Before your eggs get cold.
[SIGHS]

[DOOR SLAMS]
What did you say to Dr. Nichols?
Nothing that concerns you.
I don't believe you.
Why didn't you talk to me?
I'm not the one
insisting on this cold war.
That's all you.
When I was younger,
you sent Tom away,
the Oxford exchange student.
What
W-W-What about him?
I woke up one morning, and he was gone.
The day after you caught us kissing.
Oliver, what is this about?
You made me feel like
I did something wrong,
like there was something wrong with me.
I sent Tom home because
it was inappropriate.
I was 18. He was 21.
He was at a completely
different stage of his life.
You were confused and
still grieving your father.
Then why didn't you say that?
Because by saying nothing, you implied
that there was something
about me that you didn't like.
I felt rejected for years.
I didn't say anything
or ask anything because I
I didn't want to know.
It was a very different time.
I was a doctor
in New York City in the 1990s.
And I had seen so much
pain and suffering and death.
And I was scared for you.
I didn't know how to talk to you.
Your father was always
better at that than I was.
You are my mother.
After everything we had
been through with him,
why couldn't you see that
I was finally happy again?
You just ripped that away from me.
[VOICE BREAKING] I'm sorry.
I was just trying to protect you.
I didn't need protection.
I needed love.
[DOOR CLOSES]
[BIG RED MACHINE'S
"I WON'T RUN FROM IT" PLAYS]

[GASPS]

[KNOCK ON DOOR]
Now, look at that road ♪
Look at that climb ♪
- Hey.
- Uh, hey.
- [BOTH CHUCKLE]
- Um, w-what Are you okay?
Yeah, you're, uh, elevator broke again.
Uh
Thanks.
So they didn't have pea shoots,
so I got the garlic cucumber,
and, uh, I thought we'd
start with "Episode IV"
because the originals are
way better than the prequels.
Am I missing something?
No.
I just thought
Life is short and, uh
Ah, screw it.
Ah, ah, ah, ah, ah ♪
Wait. I thought you said
you had feelings for Jacob.
Uh, uh
Ah, ah, ah, ah, ah ♪
- Yeah, don't don't answer that.
- [CHUCKLES]
Ah, ah, ah, ah, ah ♪
Ah, ah, ah, ah, ah ♪
Dr. Bowen, call 3-3-1. Dr. Bowen, 3-3-1.
Hey.
This
This isn't about grief for me.
And I don't think it's
about grief for you, either.
We are doctors.
We assess risk every day.
We help patients and families
make impossible decisions.
We don't subscribe to leaps of faith.
So I'd say our odds are 50/50,
and pain is inevitable, but so is joy.
And if this thing does implode,
then we'll find a way to adapt.
But I don't want to end something
before it's even had a chance to begin.
I want to try.
I'd say our odds are more like 60/40.
[JOSÉ GONZÁLEZ'S "HEARTBEATS" PLAYS]
But you've proven me wrong before.
- To lean on ♪
- [SIGHS]
Wouldn't be good enough ♪
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