Grey's Anatomy s06e22 Episode Script
Shiny Happy People
[Meredith.]
It's a common belief that positive thinking leads to a happier, healthier life.
Stop fidgeting.
Smile.
I hate ties.
You're the one that's fidgeting.
I'm wearing a thing that sucks in my fat.
You don't have any fat.
I couldn't zip the dress without it.
- I have fat.
- That's just your ass.
I like it fat.
Thank you.
That's disturbing, but kind of awesome.
- Wanna go upstairs and make out? - We're supporting Derek.
Why? His party blows.
This whole wall will be windows, so we can take advantage of the view.
- Nice.
- Broken ground yet? The day I was named chief.
At my parties, we drink beer and dance on tables.
- Are you insulting my party? - It's getting kind of lame out there.
Duty calls.
[Meredith.]
As children we're told to smile and be cheerful and put on a happy face.
As adults we're told to look on the bright side.
To make lemonade and see glasses as half full.
- You're staring again.
- [Callie.]
I am not.
Wanna go to my place and do it in the shower? Teddy's in surgery.
I'm not in the mood for your jokes right now, OK? [Meredith.]
Sometimes reality can get in the way of our ability to act the happy part, though.
- Napkin? - Thank you! I'm getting first dibs on all the finger food before it gets sucked down by the masses.
Thank you! Let's move in together.
Good.
You can't answer.
It's good.
I don't want you to.
I ran it past my shrink.
She thinks it's a good idea.
So think about it.
- Me, you in our own place.
- Yes.
- What? Yes? - Yes.
Yes.
Yes, yes, but I need to warn you that this is my fourth martini, and my judgment is severely impaired.
Also, - I'm a real easy lay right now.
- Works for me.
- I'm going in.
- No, you can't.
It's inappropriate! This is the chief's house, right, Jackson? No.
Go ahead, girl.
Get yours.
[Meredith.]
Your health can fail, boyfriends can cheat.
Friends can disappoint.
Dr.
Sloan, I just wanted to say your work today with Dr.
Shepherd on that acoustic neuroma was amazing.
I was inspired.
You need another drink.
[Meredith.]
It's in these moments when you just want to get real.
To drop the act and be your true, - scared, unhappy self.
- OK OK, look, I just want to tell you that I will not have my personal business all over the hospital like every other little resident ho there.
So therefore, you will not flirt with me at work Listen, listen.
You will not kiss me at work, you will not look at me with the "I have seen you naked" eyes at work.
What we do in the bedroom, stays in the bedroom.
I'm a professional woman with a stellar reputation.
More import importantly, I'm a lady.
And a lady does not show her drawers at the office.
[Stammering.]
Now, woman, I am naked and I look good.
Now, you gonna sit there and lecture me, or you gonna let me take you to my bedroom and have my way with you? [Giggling.]
OK My shoe Mark? Hello? The door's unlocked.
I'm sorry I couldn't meet you earlier, you would not believe my night.
My post-op dissection repair coded.
I had to open him up bedside OK.
Wow! Well this could be fun if we decide to let it.
You and Owen are thinking of moving in together? Not thinking.
Doing.
Mer.
Frickin' speak.
OK.
I think there might be something going on between Owen and Teddy.
Wow.
OK.
There's nothing's going on between Owen and Teddy.
I'm saying I'm pretty sure.
OK, how? How are you sure? I can't say.
And I don't really know, I'm just saying think before you do.
- That's all.
- You know what? That's crap.
- Meredith - I gotta go.
I'm late for rounds.
We're totally not done with this! And when Mark proposed a threesome, she looked at me.
- Like she was thinking about it.
- [Laughs.]
Well, she is cute.
Like a brunette surgical Tinker Bell.
- Who's that? - Nothing.
I walked in on Mark and Reed Adamson last night.
- So he cheated on you.
- No, he didn't cheat on me.
We're dating non-exclusively.
He's not my boyfriend.
[Pager beeping.]
OK, gotta run.
Hear the rest later? Listen, if you want me to say something to him, I can say something.
Owen, I do not need you to defend my honor.
You can stand down now.
Yes, Andrew, I said surgery.
Now Wait, wait.
Would you explain to my son why he doesn't need to worry? Hello? Hi.
Your mom has some broken bones in her forearm, but we're gonna put some small metal plates in, and she'll be discharged tomorrow.
See, dear? Don't jump on a plane.
I'm gonna call you right after surgery.
[Chuckles.]
Well, love you, too, darling.
Bye-bye.
My son, a lawyer.
He's single.
- Very nice.
A little bit older.
- I'm dating someone, kind of What about you, Reed? You go for older guys, right? - Was it something I said? - Oh, no, no.
It's not you.
- What do we have? - [Owen.]
Henry Stamm, 75, fell down a flight of stairs on a cruise ship before it left the dock.
He has a couple of broken ribs and we're waiting for the abdominal CT results.
- Where were you headed, Mr.
Stamm? - Alaska.
It a present from my kids.
Maybe I'll meet a nice lady, my daughter said.
Now, look at me.
I don't think he fell as much as passed out.
- That bad, doc? - You have what's called sick sinus syndrome.
It's an irregular heart rhythm that causes blackouts.
- We're gonna have to do an ablation - Doctor I think you might have to check my head, too.
- Does it still hurt? - No, but I think I'm seeing a ghost.
- Betty? - Yes? It's Henry.
Henry Stamm.
Henry? Henry Stamm? Oh, my God! That's Henry Stamm.
Betty Flynn! [Betty.]
But my last name is Donahue now.
You married Mike Donahue? May he rest in peace.
And you? How How is Irene? She died ten years ago this August.
I'm so sorry.
- Are you OK? - Just a little fall.
- You? - Fender bender.
You look good, Betty.
- I'm an old lady, Henry.
- [Henry.]
You look pretty damn good - for an old lady to me.
- We should keep this area clear - for emergencies.
- We haven't seen each other - in a half a century, miss.
- All the more reason for you to wait - a little longer for your reunion.
- Yang.
She'll be in room 3128.
Betty Flynn! [Laughing.]
Oh, my God! Hello.
[Humming.]
[Singing.]
What song is that? I know that song.
Oh Just a little something stuck in my head.
You know how it is.
Oh! You both have a great day.
- Bailey in a good mood.
- She is.
- Really good.
- Teddy was right for you.
- Appropriate.
- Appropriate is boring.
That sums up your entire problem.
Good morning.
[Humming.]
[Sings same song that Bailey sang.]
Gentlemen.
- Go, Bailey.
- Indeed.
I'm not crazy.
I'm not crazy.
It's OK, Haley.
Honey, the doctors are gonna help you.
- You page Surgery? - Hayley May, 16, diagnosed paranoid schizophrenic.
Tried to claw her eyes out.
I need you to clear her before I can take her up to Psych.
- She tried to claw her eyes out? - We try to keep her safe.
She's on every med in the book.
But she doesn't eat, doesn't sleep.
The slightest thing sets her off.
Talking even.
So we're having her committed.
We explained to her that they were coming to get her, to try and help.
We turned our back for a minute, just for one minute - Hayley - That's lorazepam.
- I swear to God, I'll do it.
- No, baby, please don't! You don't believe me.
Nobody does.
So no.
I swear to God I'll stab myself.
Hayley, I'm Dr.
Karev, Alex.
- I need you to put that down.
- It will kill me, right? If I stuck this in my heart, it would kill me? - You don't want to do that, Hayley.
- There's drugs in here.
I'd die, right? Trust me.
- I can help you.
- I'm not crazy.
I know.
I believe you.
Everyone outside thinks you're crazy, but something's going on inside and none of us understand, so we need to figure out what that is.
The only way we can do that is if you put that down and let me run some tests.
- OK? - You promise? Yes.
Just put it down.
It's gonna be OK.
Good.
That's good.
I'm not crazy.
I'm not crazy.
I'm not crazy.
I'm not crazy.
Page Shepherd.
[Derek.]
I'd like to run some tests on Hayley.
More tests? We've been to doctors, OK? Hayley is schizophrenic.
She was diagnosed months ago.
Ken's father was schizophrenic.
He killed himself when Ken was eight.
Dr.
Shepherd, it's just a few more tests.
She wants them.
Mr.
And Mrs.
May, believe me, I understand your frustration.
But it's possible something was missed.
Honey, please.
- Fine.
- OK.
- OK.
OK.
- Thank you.
I wanna run an EEG, a CAT scan Morning, Amber and Trish.
- Trish and Amber met in the burn unit.
- Best friends ever since.
- Dr.
Grey? - Amber Collier, 28, presents status post MVC.
Amber was in a car when it flipped and she was pinned under it while it burned.
Driving while texting.
We strongly recommend it.
Dr.
Avery, will you please explain how we're gonna use a tissue expander.
We stretch healthy tissue by injecting saline into a balloon placed under the skull.
Today we'll remove that burned area - and cover it with new tissue.
- You promise that afterwards - it won't look like a comb-over, right? - I will do my best.
Dr.
Sloan, Dr.
Bailey.
Amber, how long have your fingers looked like this? I don't know, they always look pretty bad.
- You can still do my surgery, right? - We'll know more after we get some films on the fingers.
You're bummed out about getting a couple of x-rays? You got a twin sister growing out of your head.
That's what you should be bummed about.
She was my wife's roommate, her best friend.
[Richard.]
And you haven't seen one another since then? She was supposed to be in our wedding, my wife's maid of honor, but she disappeared.
I figured that I would write her eventually and try to explain.
But how do you say, "I couldn't stand up in your wedding because I fell in love with your fiancé?" There was a party.
I remember the sky was so clear that night.
I went outside to look at the stars.
And there was Betty.
It just happened.
I felt terrible.
It was wonderful.
He was my first.
She was my first.
Irene and I were waiting for our wedding night.
[Betty.]
For the first time in my life, I felt complete.
Being with Henry, I felt complete.
[Henry.]
I wanted to tell Irene.
I wanted to call off the engagement.
It would have been a terrible scandal.
And it would have ruined my friendship with Irene.
But, of course, the friendship was ruined anyway.
[Henry.]
She just left.
She went to grad school across the country.
And And I I married Irene.
Well, I loved Irene.
But she wasn't She wasn't Betty.
I told myself there'd be plenty of Henrys in my life.
And were there? My husband was a good man.
Kind, funny, smart.
But he was no Henry.
There was never another Henry.
Dr.
Torres, I have an idea.
Nearly 50 years later, and still all those feelings.
It's saying something, isn't it? Is that a good idea? He just had a heart ablation.
- He should be resting.
- A happy patient - is a healthy patient, Yang.
- This scan shows diaphragmatic rupture from the fall.
We have to get him in the OR soon.
He can wait an hour.
Let's let them catch up.
- You're OK with this? - I'm with Webber.
I can't help it.
I'm a romantic.
[Chuckles.]
[Derek.]
You think she's schizophrenic? I think she threatened to stab a syringe into her own heart.
- So I'm leaning toward crazy, yeah.
- The scans are up.
- [Derek.]
Nothing in the frontal lobe.
- [Arizona.]
Or temporo-parietal region.
- Occipital lobe's clean too.
- Crap! - Told you.
Crazy.
- [Derek.]
We tried, Karev.
All the tests are negative.
Let's go inform the parents - and turf her up to Psych.
- This isn't right.
I know crazy.
I grew up with crazy, I dated crazy, and I don't think this girl is crazy.
- Just give me some time.
- Do you have a diagnosis in mind? - No, but - She's suicidal, Alex.
What you did in that ER, you saved her life.
But those parents have been through hell.
You say it's our job to advocate for the patient.
The patient, not the parents.
So, whatever hell they've gone through, hers is worse.
I do say that.
Advocate for the patient.
You've got until my board meeting's over.
Four hours.
Go dig.
Alex - Are we a couple? - What? I need to know what we are.
Because people ask me and I don't know what to say.
I'm over Mark.
I don't know if you're over lzzie, but I am over Mark Sloan.
For real.
And I know that we said this wasn't gonna be a thing, but I like you.
The point is, I want to know what we are.
What this is.
We're a thing.
Yeah, we're together, we're we're a thing.
Whatever.
Dr.
Altman, can I do the mesh repair of the diaphragm? No, I can sew it up with a continuous suture.
[Owen.]
If you do stay sutures on either side of the laceration, - it can be tented down to aid closure.
- I know - Quite a shorthand you two have.
- We worked together a long time.
I get it.
I had that once.
Ellis Grey, and I, from the first day we worked together.
I miss it.
She's got hyperacusis, vertigo, tinnitus, nystagmus.
- This blows.
- So you and Lexie - What? - I'm just saying, you and Lexie, - it's not just a sex thing any more? - I'm acting like a duck.
- What? - I figure if you walk like a duck and quack like a duck, eventually you start to feel like a duck.
Lexie is nice and normal and healthy.
I'm acting like a guy who can stick with nice and normal and healthy.
- You're becoming a duck.
- I am becoming a duck.
- Cristina, seriously? - [Alex.]
What's up with that? She's mad at me because I planted seeds of doubt about her moving in with Owen.
- Don't talk to him about me.
- Why don't you come over here - so I can talk to you about you.
- I'll talk to you when you actually talk.
Are you ready to talk? I need the Lexopedia to diagnose my patient.
- She's not a book you can flip through.
- I kinda am.
Go.
Sixteen year old with hyperacusis, vertigo, tinnitus, nystagmus.
Cholesteatoma.
Or temporal lobe tumor.
For God's sake, will you just come over here? - No.
- Scans were clean.
Uh, it's worse with sounds.
We have to whisper.
Oh, uh Page 162.
The June 2004 issue of a journal with a mint green cover.
It's Sound or pressure induced vertigo.
It's called, um I can't Crap.
I can't see it.
It's like the computer froze.
June '04.
Mint green cover.
It's in the research library.
Got it.
Thanks.
So Mark slept with Reed.
Gross, right? - But you're with Alex.
- I know.
No, I'm just saying it's gross.
That's - [pager beeping.]
- That's all.
I'm just It's gross.
Do you think I'm Thatcher? Is that what you were trying to tell me? - That I'm Thatcher? - What? Owen is Ellis and Teddy's Dr.
Webber and somehow I'm Thatcher in the situation? I don't know.
I don't know.
Forget it.
I don't understand.
You didn't find anything.
I just feel like we're torturing her for no reason.
OK, Hayley, we're gonna start now.
When I say now, I want you to pinch your nose and blow.
Make sure you keep your eyes open, OK? Now.
What's happening to her eyes? What's going on? No No! No No! No! Hayley, honey, it's Mommy.
I'm right here.
What the hell did you do to her? I just diagnosed her.
You don't have a middle name? For real? My parents couldn't agree so they decided not to bother.
Well, we're just gonna have to do something about that.
How about "Cheeky?" - Liz "Cheeky" McKee? - Yeah.
I like it.
- It has spunk.
- [Liz laughing.]
All right.
Take care.
Miranda, that was Miranda You have to cut off three of my fingers? They're infected, Amber.
It also means we have to postpone your hair restoration.
I'm sorry.
Amber, you survived a horrible car wreck.
- You'll survive this, too.
- I know, but Hey, what do we always say? We're both alive.
That's what matters.
Everything else is just bumps and bruises.
You can cry, Amber.
It's fine.
It's a lot to take in all at once.
No, she needs to stay positive.
That's how we get through, we stay positive.
She was excited.
She was hopeful.
She was eager.
And that has been crushed.
She has the right to have some feelings.
She can be positive tomorrow.
You can be positive tomorrow.
Thank you.
[Derek.]
It's called superior canal dehiscence syndrome.
It's a result of a small hole that developed in her inner ear.
It's rare and it's hard to diagnose.
The condition wasn't even written up until 1998.
The noise sensitivity, the sandpaper, it's because Hayley can hear everything going on inside her body and every sound outside was magnified.
It's why she couldn't sleep or eat.
She's not schizophrenic.
Was the sex with Altman, was it lousy? - Did she disappoint you? - What? No! No.
Is one woman never enough for some men? I really want to know.
Because I think I'm a good judge of character.
I am a good judge of character and I think Altman is a good judge of character and then she trusted you.
She trusted you, and then you go I just want to know.
Teddy and I were never exclusive.
[Snorts.]
Were you and your guy exclusive? We're not talking about me.
At the end of the trail, there's there's an overlook.
You can see the entire bay from up there.
Of course, the view would be even nicer if I had someone to share it with.
Come live with me.
- Henry - It's a nice place.
- Warm, quiet.
- We barely know each other.
We know each other.
We missed our chance once, Betty.
I'd hate to make the same mistake again.
Betty, I need to get you up to surgery.
Think about it.
That's all I ask.
I got over you Henry.
I married Mike.
I had four kids.
Now, grandkids that give me such joy.
I got over you.
I'm sorry.
Looks like that's just about it.
You want to have the anesthesiologist start lightening her up? - You could ask me directly.
- Dr.
Sloan? You want to start lightening her up? No, wait.
I want to do the hair restoration.
- What about the chance of infection? - The infection looked pretty isolated.
- You think we can do it? - It seems to me that we are all in need of a little magic today.
Right, Dr.
Bailey? Let's do it.
Do you think your mom ever got over the chief? Do you think she still loved him, after all those years? My mom loved Richard until the day she died.
What were you trying to tell me this morning? About Teddy and Owen.
Is there something I'm not seeing? - Cristina - Meredith, please, just tell me what you know.
Just - Why? - You have to understand.
It's been just me and you for a long time.
And now it's me and Derek, and it's you and me.
And I told you what I said this morning because it's you and me.
But I can't tell you any more because it's me and Derek.
Fine, you know what? I get it.
But I need you to understand that I need there to be a me and Owen.
- Hey.
- Hey.
I hate your job.
- I love you.
- Stop trying to make me happy.
Do you think he loves her? Owen and Teddy? - I mean, do you think that's why - Meredith.
I'm saying, when he threw her under the bus, what read did you get? - Do you think he loves her? - You can't tell Cristina.
I know that.
That's why I hate your job.
- Do you want a hug? - Yeah.
[Callie.]
Wow, impressive technique.
Who taught you that? Mark.
He taught me one-handed ties, mattress stitches, dual onlay bone grafts.
Now, he can teach his techniques to Reed.
- Lexie - It's fine.
I'm fine.
I don't care.
I'm with Alex.
I do not care about Mark andlor who he sleeps with.
That's the same thing I keep telling myself about Arizona, that I don't care.
You know what? Sometimes it works, for the most part.
But then a patient gets asked to move across the country for a man she barely knows and all I can think is how stupid they were to let each other go in the first place.
[Sighs.]
All I want is for her to change her mind and say yes.
I want to believe.
[Derek.]
OK, time to close off the canal.
[Alex.]
You're using fascia and bone wax? Yep, then we'll cover it with the cortical bone graft we harvested and seal it with the fibrin glue.
She'll be good as new.
You cover a hole with a bone graft and this girl gets her whole life back.
Wouldn't it be nice if everything in life were that simple? I hoped it wouldn't leave such a big scar.
It'll look better in a couple of weeks, once it has a chance to heal.
You'll be doing shampoo commercials in no time.
And your hand is just bumps and bruises, right? I lost three fingers today, Trish.
- That's not bump and bruises.
- I know that.
But we're alive.
It's better than the alternative.
I call in sick to work sometimes because I just can't bear to drive.
I sit in my car in my garage, and I'm so angry about what happened to me, that I can't drive my car! For hours, I just sit there! Does that ever happen to you? That you're so angry you can't breathe? Because I do! But I can't tell you that because I'm afraid I'm being weak.
Or ungrateful.
Please.
You are my best friend.
Horrible things have happened to us.
Can we just be real with each other for once? I can't watch romantic comedies anymore because I just want to yell at the women.
"You can't find Mr.
Right? That's your biggest problem? Well, try having most of your face burned off, you stupid bitch! See what a freaking Pretty Woman you are then!" [Both laughing.]
I don't know - Thank you.
- Oh, no! Cristina loves you.
And I want to, but I can't.
Because I want to punch you in the face right now.
I know you tried to have Teddy fired and I believe it's because you love her.
And if you care about Cristina at all, you will tell her.
If you're actually the good guy she thinks you are, you will tell her.
And if you don't, then I'll know and you'll know that you are not that guy.
[Sighs.]
Look, Teddy.
- I wanted to say - I should've knocked.
It's that simple.
And it's that over.
- Talk to her.
- I just did.
She doesn't want to.
I'm not talking about Teddy, I'm talking about Lexie.
You still love Lexie.
Sleeping around isn't gonna fix that.
And the reasons you broke up, Little Sloan, the baby, they're not reasons anymore.
- She's with Karev.
- Well, Betty married Mike, - but she never got over Henry.
- What? You don't want 50 years to go by and then realize you let the love of your life get away.
So go, try.
- You gonna try again with Robbins? - [Sighs.]
Why not? Because my reasons are still reasons.
I don't understand.
You told Shepherd to hire Dr.
Evans over Teddy, when I asked you to go to bat for her? You said that you did.
So Meredith said Owen, what's going on between you and Teddy? Nothing.
Nothing is.
You want me to get better, I want me to get better, and I have been working.
I have been working with Dr.
Wyatt - to eliminate my triggers.
- OK, so Teddy's a trigger? Teddy I don't know what Teddy is.
Teddy, she triggers me.
She confuses me.
- I don't know! - You know what, "I don't know," - is not working for me right now.
- "I don't know" is all I've got! - I shouldn't have to explain myself.
- Oh? Cristina I don't know what I feel for Teddy.
I don't know, because she's all wrapped up with everything else, with men being blown apart in front of me, with Beth.
So it's complicated and it is screwing with my head.
That's the truth! I don't know what I feel for her.
But I do know what I feel for you.
So, yes, I told Shepherd to hire the other guy.
I shouldn't have to explain myself so I can get myself better.
I shouldn't have to explain myself to you.
And I damn well do not have to explain myself to Meredith Grey! [Pager beeping.]
It's, uh It's Henry Stamm.
[Machine beeping.]
He was talking to me, and then he couldn't breathe.
Atrial flutter again.
Get her out of here.
- Ma'am, I need to move you.
- I'm not leaving him! Systolic's 80.
We're gonna need to cardiovert.
Charge paddles to 100.
Charging.
You wanna help? Let go of his hand! Hello.
Your heart rhythm was irregular again.
We were able to control it for now, but we're gonna need to insert a pacemaker before you go home.
You're gonna be OK.
I've called a colleague at your hospital at home.
He'll see you once we clear you to travel.
Thank you.
You stayed.
[Betty.]
You can't do that again.
If I'm going to move halfway across the country and shack up with you, - you can't do that again.
- Really? You make me feel like the prettiest girl at the party.
When you look at me, I become a young girl again.
And I never stopped missing you.
And I never stopped wondering.
I did the right thing once.
Now, I'd like to do the wrong thing and see how that goes.
How long do you need me to wait before I propose? - Cristina.
- Don't.
She's starting to wake up.
Remember, we're gonna take it slowly and see how it goes.
There's no guarantee that the surgery worked.
How ya doing, Hayley? I'm good.
I'm good.
I'm good! I'm good! I'm good! [Meredith.]
Ask most people what they want out of life, and the answer's simple: To be happy.
Maybe it's this expectation though, the wanting to be happy, that just keeps us from ever getting there.
- I need to talk to you.
- I get it.
You want to see other people.
So go.
Be free.
Get cheeky with Liz.
Liz is the meanest nurse on the floor.
She makes everybody in my department's life hell.
But she likes me.
She doesn't schedule me for work on Tuesday mornings because she knows that's when I play golf.
She doesn't put me in the OR with Hendricks 'cause she knows I can't stand the way he talks to himself when he operates.
And she does these favors for me because I flirt with her.
Flirting makes my job easier.
And what you saw back there, that middle name stuff, that's bad flirting.
Lazy flirting.
For you, who I actually like, I break out my good flirting, my A game, because I mean it.
Are you hearing me, Miranda? I mean it.
I have a child and a fulltime job and I'm going through a sad, exhausting, stressful, time-consuming divorce.
I don't have time for games.
- You understand that, right? - I do.
I do, and I'm not playing games.
I'm in this for real.
OK? - OK.
- [Elevator dings.]
You were right.
Superior canal dehiscence syndrome.
Page 162.
You rock.
I'm gonna drop these off and we're gonna head over to Joe's.
Lex? I'm still in love with you.
I tried not to be, but it didn't work.
And Sloan's gone.
There's no baby.
And I don't want to sleep around.
I want another chance.
I'm in love with you.
Karev is He's Mark, I have a boyfriend.
I know.
I'm saying you could have a husband.
[Meredith.]
Maybe the more we try and will ourselves to states of bliss, the more confused we get.
- You ready? - Yeah.
[Meredith.]
To the point where we don't recognize ourselves.
- Hey.
- Hey.
Arizona [Meredith.]
Instead, we just keep smiling.
Trying like hell to be the happy people we wish we were.
Until eventually it hits us.
It's been there all along.
What do you think of this, putting in the fireplace in the master bedroom? I'm gonna get something to eat.
Well l'm not moving in with Owen.
- See this, right here? - Uh-huh.
This is your room.
You have a room at the new house in the woods.
My own room? - Yeah.
- Thank you.
[Meredith.]
Not in our dreams or hopes, but in the known, the comfortable the familiar.
It's a common belief that positive thinking leads to a happier, healthier life.
Stop fidgeting.
Smile.
I hate ties.
You're the one that's fidgeting.
I'm wearing a thing that sucks in my fat.
You don't have any fat.
I couldn't zip the dress without it.
- I have fat.
- That's just your ass.
I like it fat.
Thank you.
That's disturbing, but kind of awesome.
- Wanna go upstairs and make out? - We're supporting Derek.
Why? His party blows.
This whole wall will be windows, so we can take advantage of the view.
- Nice.
- Broken ground yet? The day I was named chief.
At my parties, we drink beer and dance on tables.
- Are you insulting my party? - It's getting kind of lame out there.
Duty calls.
[Meredith.]
As children we're told to smile and be cheerful and put on a happy face.
As adults we're told to look on the bright side.
To make lemonade and see glasses as half full.
- You're staring again.
- [Callie.]
I am not.
Wanna go to my place and do it in the shower? Teddy's in surgery.
I'm not in the mood for your jokes right now, OK? [Meredith.]
Sometimes reality can get in the way of our ability to act the happy part, though.
- Napkin? - Thank you! I'm getting first dibs on all the finger food before it gets sucked down by the masses.
Thank you! Let's move in together.
Good.
You can't answer.
It's good.
I don't want you to.
I ran it past my shrink.
She thinks it's a good idea.
So think about it.
- Me, you in our own place.
- Yes.
- What? Yes? - Yes.
Yes.
Yes, yes, but I need to warn you that this is my fourth martini, and my judgment is severely impaired.
Also, - I'm a real easy lay right now.
- Works for me.
- I'm going in.
- No, you can't.
It's inappropriate! This is the chief's house, right, Jackson? No.
Go ahead, girl.
Get yours.
[Meredith.]
Your health can fail, boyfriends can cheat.
Friends can disappoint.
Dr.
Sloan, I just wanted to say your work today with Dr.
Shepherd on that acoustic neuroma was amazing.
I was inspired.
You need another drink.
[Meredith.]
It's in these moments when you just want to get real.
To drop the act and be your true, - scared, unhappy self.
- OK OK, look, I just want to tell you that I will not have my personal business all over the hospital like every other little resident ho there.
So therefore, you will not flirt with me at work Listen, listen.
You will not kiss me at work, you will not look at me with the "I have seen you naked" eyes at work.
What we do in the bedroom, stays in the bedroom.
I'm a professional woman with a stellar reputation.
More import importantly, I'm a lady.
And a lady does not show her drawers at the office.
[Stammering.]
Now, woman, I am naked and I look good.
Now, you gonna sit there and lecture me, or you gonna let me take you to my bedroom and have my way with you? [Giggling.]
OK My shoe Mark? Hello? The door's unlocked.
I'm sorry I couldn't meet you earlier, you would not believe my night.
My post-op dissection repair coded.
I had to open him up bedside OK.
Wow! Well this could be fun if we decide to let it.
You and Owen are thinking of moving in together? Not thinking.
Doing.
Mer.
Frickin' speak.
OK.
I think there might be something going on between Owen and Teddy.
Wow.
OK.
There's nothing's going on between Owen and Teddy.
I'm saying I'm pretty sure.
OK, how? How are you sure? I can't say.
And I don't really know, I'm just saying think before you do.
- That's all.
- You know what? That's crap.
- Meredith - I gotta go.
I'm late for rounds.
We're totally not done with this! And when Mark proposed a threesome, she looked at me.
- Like she was thinking about it.
- [Laughs.]
Well, she is cute.
Like a brunette surgical Tinker Bell.
- Who's that? - Nothing.
I walked in on Mark and Reed Adamson last night.
- So he cheated on you.
- No, he didn't cheat on me.
We're dating non-exclusively.
He's not my boyfriend.
[Pager beeping.]
OK, gotta run.
Hear the rest later? Listen, if you want me to say something to him, I can say something.
Owen, I do not need you to defend my honor.
You can stand down now.
Yes, Andrew, I said surgery.
Now Wait, wait.
Would you explain to my son why he doesn't need to worry? Hello? Hi.
Your mom has some broken bones in her forearm, but we're gonna put some small metal plates in, and she'll be discharged tomorrow.
See, dear? Don't jump on a plane.
I'm gonna call you right after surgery.
[Chuckles.]
Well, love you, too, darling.
Bye-bye.
My son, a lawyer.
He's single.
- Very nice.
A little bit older.
- I'm dating someone, kind of What about you, Reed? You go for older guys, right? - Was it something I said? - Oh, no, no.
It's not you.
- What do we have? - [Owen.]
Henry Stamm, 75, fell down a flight of stairs on a cruise ship before it left the dock.
He has a couple of broken ribs and we're waiting for the abdominal CT results.
- Where were you headed, Mr.
Stamm? - Alaska.
It a present from my kids.
Maybe I'll meet a nice lady, my daughter said.
Now, look at me.
I don't think he fell as much as passed out.
- That bad, doc? - You have what's called sick sinus syndrome.
It's an irregular heart rhythm that causes blackouts.
- We're gonna have to do an ablation - Doctor I think you might have to check my head, too.
- Does it still hurt? - No, but I think I'm seeing a ghost.
- Betty? - Yes? It's Henry.
Henry Stamm.
Henry? Henry Stamm? Oh, my God! That's Henry Stamm.
Betty Flynn! [Betty.]
But my last name is Donahue now.
You married Mike Donahue? May he rest in peace.
And you? How How is Irene? She died ten years ago this August.
I'm so sorry.
- Are you OK? - Just a little fall.
- You? - Fender bender.
You look good, Betty.
- I'm an old lady, Henry.
- [Henry.]
You look pretty damn good - for an old lady to me.
- We should keep this area clear - for emergencies.
- We haven't seen each other - in a half a century, miss.
- All the more reason for you to wait - a little longer for your reunion.
- Yang.
She'll be in room 3128.
Betty Flynn! [Laughing.]
Oh, my God! Hello.
[Humming.]
[Singing.]
What song is that? I know that song.
Oh Just a little something stuck in my head.
You know how it is.
Oh! You both have a great day.
- Bailey in a good mood.
- She is.
- Really good.
- Teddy was right for you.
- Appropriate.
- Appropriate is boring.
That sums up your entire problem.
Good morning.
[Humming.]
[Sings same song that Bailey sang.]
Gentlemen.
- Go, Bailey.
- Indeed.
I'm not crazy.
I'm not crazy.
It's OK, Haley.
Honey, the doctors are gonna help you.
- You page Surgery? - Hayley May, 16, diagnosed paranoid schizophrenic.
Tried to claw her eyes out.
I need you to clear her before I can take her up to Psych.
- She tried to claw her eyes out? - We try to keep her safe.
She's on every med in the book.
But she doesn't eat, doesn't sleep.
The slightest thing sets her off.
Talking even.
So we're having her committed.
We explained to her that they were coming to get her, to try and help.
We turned our back for a minute, just for one minute - Hayley - That's lorazepam.
- I swear to God, I'll do it.
- No, baby, please don't! You don't believe me.
Nobody does.
So no.
I swear to God I'll stab myself.
Hayley, I'm Dr.
Karev, Alex.
- I need you to put that down.
- It will kill me, right? If I stuck this in my heart, it would kill me? - You don't want to do that, Hayley.
- There's drugs in here.
I'd die, right? Trust me.
- I can help you.
- I'm not crazy.
I know.
I believe you.
Everyone outside thinks you're crazy, but something's going on inside and none of us understand, so we need to figure out what that is.
The only way we can do that is if you put that down and let me run some tests.
- OK? - You promise? Yes.
Just put it down.
It's gonna be OK.
Good.
That's good.
I'm not crazy.
I'm not crazy.
I'm not crazy.
I'm not crazy.
Page Shepherd.
[Derek.]
I'd like to run some tests on Hayley.
More tests? We've been to doctors, OK? Hayley is schizophrenic.
She was diagnosed months ago.
Ken's father was schizophrenic.
He killed himself when Ken was eight.
Dr.
Shepherd, it's just a few more tests.
She wants them.
Mr.
And Mrs.
May, believe me, I understand your frustration.
But it's possible something was missed.
Honey, please.
- Fine.
- OK.
- OK.
OK.
- Thank you.
I wanna run an EEG, a CAT scan Morning, Amber and Trish.
- Trish and Amber met in the burn unit.
- Best friends ever since.
- Dr.
Grey? - Amber Collier, 28, presents status post MVC.
Amber was in a car when it flipped and she was pinned under it while it burned.
Driving while texting.
We strongly recommend it.
Dr.
Avery, will you please explain how we're gonna use a tissue expander.
We stretch healthy tissue by injecting saline into a balloon placed under the skull.
Today we'll remove that burned area - and cover it with new tissue.
- You promise that afterwards - it won't look like a comb-over, right? - I will do my best.
Dr.
Sloan, Dr.
Bailey.
Amber, how long have your fingers looked like this? I don't know, they always look pretty bad.
- You can still do my surgery, right? - We'll know more after we get some films on the fingers.
You're bummed out about getting a couple of x-rays? You got a twin sister growing out of your head.
That's what you should be bummed about.
She was my wife's roommate, her best friend.
[Richard.]
And you haven't seen one another since then? She was supposed to be in our wedding, my wife's maid of honor, but she disappeared.
I figured that I would write her eventually and try to explain.
But how do you say, "I couldn't stand up in your wedding because I fell in love with your fiancé?" There was a party.
I remember the sky was so clear that night.
I went outside to look at the stars.
And there was Betty.
It just happened.
I felt terrible.
It was wonderful.
He was my first.
She was my first.
Irene and I were waiting for our wedding night.
[Betty.]
For the first time in my life, I felt complete.
Being with Henry, I felt complete.
[Henry.]
I wanted to tell Irene.
I wanted to call off the engagement.
It would have been a terrible scandal.
And it would have ruined my friendship with Irene.
But, of course, the friendship was ruined anyway.
[Henry.]
She just left.
She went to grad school across the country.
And And I I married Irene.
Well, I loved Irene.
But she wasn't She wasn't Betty.
I told myself there'd be plenty of Henrys in my life.
And were there? My husband was a good man.
Kind, funny, smart.
But he was no Henry.
There was never another Henry.
Dr.
Torres, I have an idea.
Nearly 50 years later, and still all those feelings.
It's saying something, isn't it? Is that a good idea? He just had a heart ablation.
- He should be resting.
- A happy patient - is a healthy patient, Yang.
- This scan shows diaphragmatic rupture from the fall.
We have to get him in the OR soon.
He can wait an hour.
Let's let them catch up.
- You're OK with this? - I'm with Webber.
I can't help it.
I'm a romantic.
[Chuckles.]
[Derek.]
You think she's schizophrenic? I think she threatened to stab a syringe into her own heart.
- So I'm leaning toward crazy, yeah.
- The scans are up.
- [Derek.]
Nothing in the frontal lobe.
- [Arizona.]
Or temporo-parietal region.
- Occipital lobe's clean too.
- Crap! - Told you.
Crazy.
- [Derek.]
We tried, Karev.
All the tests are negative.
Let's go inform the parents - and turf her up to Psych.
- This isn't right.
I know crazy.
I grew up with crazy, I dated crazy, and I don't think this girl is crazy.
- Just give me some time.
- Do you have a diagnosis in mind? - No, but - She's suicidal, Alex.
What you did in that ER, you saved her life.
But those parents have been through hell.
You say it's our job to advocate for the patient.
The patient, not the parents.
So, whatever hell they've gone through, hers is worse.
I do say that.
Advocate for the patient.
You've got until my board meeting's over.
Four hours.
Go dig.
Alex - Are we a couple? - What? I need to know what we are.
Because people ask me and I don't know what to say.
I'm over Mark.
I don't know if you're over lzzie, but I am over Mark Sloan.
For real.
And I know that we said this wasn't gonna be a thing, but I like you.
The point is, I want to know what we are.
What this is.
We're a thing.
Yeah, we're together, we're we're a thing.
Whatever.
Dr.
Altman, can I do the mesh repair of the diaphragm? No, I can sew it up with a continuous suture.
[Owen.]
If you do stay sutures on either side of the laceration, - it can be tented down to aid closure.
- I know - Quite a shorthand you two have.
- We worked together a long time.
I get it.
I had that once.
Ellis Grey, and I, from the first day we worked together.
I miss it.
She's got hyperacusis, vertigo, tinnitus, nystagmus.
- This blows.
- So you and Lexie - What? - I'm just saying, you and Lexie, - it's not just a sex thing any more? - I'm acting like a duck.
- What? - I figure if you walk like a duck and quack like a duck, eventually you start to feel like a duck.
Lexie is nice and normal and healthy.
I'm acting like a guy who can stick with nice and normal and healthy.
- You're becoming a duck.
- I am becoming a duck.
- Cristina, seriously? - [Alex.]
What's up with that? She's mad at me because I planted seeds of doubt about her moving in with Owen.
- Don't talk to him about me.
- Why don't you come over here - so I can talk to you about you.
- I'll talk to you when you actually talk.
Are you ready to talk? I need the Lexopedia to diagnose my patient.
- She's not a book you can flip through.
- I kinda am.
Go.
Sixteen year old with hyperacusis, vertigo, tinnitus, nystagmus.
Cholesteatoma.
Or temporal lobe tumor.
For God's sake, will you just come over here? - No.
- Scans were clean.
Uh, it's worse with sounds.
We have to whisper.
Oh, uh Page 162.
The June 2004 issue of a journal with a mint green cover.
It's Sound or pressure induced vertigo.
It's called, um I can't Crap.
I can't see it.
It's like the computer froze.
June '04.
Mint green cover.
It's in the research library.
Got it.
Thanks.
So Mark slept with Reed.
Gross, right? - But you're with Alex.
- I know.
No, I'm just saying it's gross.
That's - [pager beeping.]
- That's all.
I'm just It's gross.
Do you think I'm Thatcher? Is that what you were trying to tell me? - That I'm Thatcher? - What? Owen is Ellis and Teddy's Dr.
Webber and somehow I'm Thatcher in the situation? I don't know.
I don't know.
Forget it.
I don't understand.
You didn't find anything.
I just feel like we're torturing her for no reason.
OK, Hayley, we're gonna start now.
When I say now, I want you to pinch your nose and blow.
Make sure you keep your eyes open, OK? Now.
What's happening to her eyes? What's going on? No No! No No! No! Hayley, honey, it's Mommy.
I'm right here.
What the hell did you do to her? I just diagnosed her.
You don't have a middle name? For real? My parents couldn't agree so they decided not to bother.
Well, we're just gonna have to do something about that.
How about "Cheeky?" - Liz "Cheeky" McKee? - Yeah.
I like it.
- It has spunk.
- [Liz laughing.]
All right.
Take care.
Miranda, that was Miranda You have to cut off three of my fingers? They're infected, Amber.
It also means we have to postpone your hair restoration.
I'm sorry.
Amber, you survived a horrible car wreck.
- You'll survive this, too.
- I know, but Hey, what do we always say? We're both alive.
That's what matters.
Everything else is just bumps and bruises.
You can cry, Amber.
It's fine.
It's a lot to take in all at once.
No, she needs to stay positive.
That's how we get through, we stay positive.
She was excited.
She was hopeful.
She was eager.
And that has been crushed.
She has the right to have some feelings.
She can be positive tomorrow.
You can be positive tomorrow.
Thank you.
[Derek.]
It's called superior canal dehiscence syndrome.
It's a result of a small hole that developed in her inner ear.
It's rare and it's hard to diagnose.
The condition wasn't even written up until 1998.
The noise sensitivity, the sandpaper, it's because Hayley can hear everything going on inside her body and every sound outside was magnified.
It's why she couldn't sleep or eat.
She's not schizophrenic.
Was the sex with Altman, was it lousy? - Did she disappoint you? - What? No! No.
Is one woman never enough for some men? I really want to know.
Because I think I'm a good judge of character.
I am a good judge of character and I think Altman is a good judge of character and then she trusted you.
She trusted you, and then you go I just want to know.
Teddy and I were never exclusive.
[Snorts.]
Were you and your guy exclusive? We're not talking about me.
At the end of the trail, there's there's an overlook.
You can see the entire bay from up there.
Of course, the view would be even nicer if I had someone to share it with.
Come live with me.
- Henry - It's a nice place.
- Warm, quiet.
- We barely know each other.
We know each other.
We missed our chance once, Betty.
I'd hate to make the same mistake again.
Betty, I need to get you up to surgery.
Think about it.
That's all I ask.
I got over you Henry.
I married Mike.
I had four kids.
Now, grandkids that give me such joy.
I got over you.
I'm sorry.
Looks like that's just about it.
You want to have the anesthesiologist start lightening her up? - You could ask me directly.
- Dr.
Sloan? You want to start lightening her up? No, wait.
I want to do the hair restoration.
- What about the chance of infection? - The infection looked pretty isolated.
- You think we can do it? - It seems to me that we are all in need of a little magic today.
Right, Dr.
Bailey? Let's do it.
Do you think your mom ever got over the chief? Do you think she still loved him, after all those years? My mom loved Richard until the day she died.
What were you trying to tell me this morning? About Teddy and Owen.
Is there something I'm not seeing? - Cristina - Meredith, please, just tell me what you know.
Just - Why? - You have to understand.
It's been just me and you for a long time.
And now it's me and Derek, and it's you and me.
And I told you what I said this morning because it's you and me.
But I can't tell you any more because it's me and Derek.
Fine, you know what? I get it.
But I need you to understand that I need there to be a me and Owen.
- Hey.
- Hey.
I hate your job.
- I love you.
- Stop trying to make me happy.
Do you think he loves her? Owen and Teddy? - I mean, do you think that's why - Meredith.
I'm saying, when he threw her under the bus, what read did you get? - Do you think he loves her? - You can't tell Cristina.
I know that.
That's why I hate your job.
- Do you want a hug? - Yeah.
[Callie.]
Wow, impressive technique.
Who taught you that? Mark.
He taught me one-handed ties, mattress stitches, dual onlay bone grafts.
Now, he can teach his techniques to Reed.
- Lexie - It's fine.
I'm fine.
I don't care.
I'm with Alex.
I do not care about Mark andlor who he sleeps with.
That's the same thing I keep telling myself about Arizona, that I don't care.
You know what? Sometimes it works, for the most part.
But then a patient gets asked to move across the country for a man she barely knows and all I can think is how stupid they were to let each other go in the first place.
[Sighs.]
All I want is for her to change her mind and say yes.
I want to believe.
[Derek.]
OK, time to close off the canal.
[Alex.]
You're using fascia and bone wax? Yep, then we'll cover it with the cortical bone graft we harvested and seal it with the fibrin glue.
She'll be good as new.
You cover a hole with a bone graft and this girl gets her whole life back.
Wouldn't it be nice if everything in life were that simple? I hoped it wouldn't leave such a big scar.
It'll look better in a couple of weeks, once it has a chance to heal.
You'll be doing shampoo commercials in no time.
And your hand is just bumps and bruises, right? I lost three fingers today, Trish.
- That's not bump and bruises.
- I know that.
But we're alive.
It's better than the alternative.
I call in sick to work sometimes because I just can't bear to drive.
I sit in my car in my garage, and I'm so angry about what happened to me, that I can't drive my car! For hours, I just sit there! Does that ever happen to you? That you're so angry you can't breathe? Because I do! But I can't tell you that because I'm afraid I'm being weak.
Or ungrateful.
Please.
You are my best friend.
Horrible things have happened to us.
Can we just be real with each other for once? I can't watch romantic comedies anymore because I just want to yell at the women.
"You can't find Mr.
Right? That's your biggest problem? Well, try having most of your face burned off, you stupid bitch! See what a freaking Pretty Woman you are then!" [Both laughing.]
I don't know - Thank you.
- Oh, no! Cristina loves you.
And I want to, but I can't.
Because I want to punch you in the face right now.
I know you tried to have Teddy fired and I believe it's because you love her.
And if you care about Cristina at all, you will tell her.
If you're actually the good guy she thinks you are, you will tell her.
And if you don't, then I'll know and you'll know that you are not that guy.
[Sighs.]
Look, Teddy.
- I wanted to say - I should've knocked.
It's that simple.
And it's that over.
- Talk to her.
- I just did.
She doesn't want to.
I'm not talking about Teddy, I'm talking about Lexie.
You still love Lexie.
Sleeping around isn't gonna fix that.
And the reasons you broke up, Little Sloan, the baby, they're not reasons anymore.
- She's with Karev.
- Well, Betty married Mike, - but she never got over Henry.
- What? You don't want 50 years to go by and then realize you let the love of your life get away.
So go, try.
- You gonna try again with Robbins? - [Sighs.]
Why not? Because my reasons are still reasons.
I don't understand.
You told Shepherd to hire Dr.
Evans over Teddy, when I asked you to go to bat for her? You said that you did.
So Meredith said Owen, what's going on between you and Teddy? Nothing.
Nothing is.
You want me to get better, I want me to get better, and I have been working.
I have been working with Dr.
Wyatt - to eliminate my triggers.
- OK, so Teddy's a trigger? Teddy I don't know what Teddy is.
Teddy, she triggers me.
She confuses me.
- I don't know! - You know what, "I don't know," - is not working for me right now.
- "I don't know" is all I've got! - I shouldn't have to explain myself.
- Oh? Cristina I don't know what I feel for Teddy.
I don't know, because she's all wrapped up with everything else, with men being blown apart in front of me, with Beth.
So it's complicated and it is screwing with my head.
That's the truth! I don't know what I feel for her.
But I do know what I feel for you.
So, yes, I told Shepherd to hire the other guy.
I shouldn't have to explain myself so I can get myself better.
I shouldn't have to explain myself to you.
And I damn well do not have to explain myself to Meredith Grey! [Pager beeping.]
It's, uh It's Henry Stamm.
[Machine beeping.]
He was talking to me, and then he couldn't breathe.
Atrial flutter again.
Get her out of here.
- Ma'am, I need to move you.
- I'm not leaving him! Systolic's 80.
We're gonna need to cardiovert.
Charge paddles to 100.
Charging.
You wanna help? Let go of his hand! Hello.
Your heart rhythm was irregular again.
We were able to control it for now, but we're gonna need to insert a pacemaker before you go home.
You're gonna be OK.
I've called a colleague at your hospital at home.
He'll see you once we clear you to travel.
Thank you.
You stayed.
[Betty.]
You can't do that again.
If I'm going to move halfway across the country and shack up with you, - you can't do that again.
- Really? You make me feel like the prettiest girl at the party.
When you look at me, I become a young girl again.
And I never stopped missing you.
And I never stopped wondering.
I did the right thing once.
Now, I'd like to do the wrong thing and see how that goes.
How long do you need me to wait before I propose? - Cristina.
- Don't.
She's starting to wake up.
Remember, we're gonna take it slowly and see how it goes.
There's no guarantee that the surgery worked.
How ya doing, Hayley? I'm good.
I'm good.
I'm good! I'm good! I'm good! [Meredith.]
Ask most people what they want out of life, and the answer's simple: To be happy.
Maybe it's this expectation though, the wanting to be happy, that just keeps us from ever getting there.
- I need to talk to you.
- I get it.
You want to see other people.
So go.
Be free.
Get cheeky with Liz.
Liz is the meanest nurse on the floor.
She makes everybody in my department's life hell.
But she likes me.
She doesn't schedule me for work on Tuesday mornings because she knows that's when I play golf.
She doesn't put me in the OR with Hendricks 'cause she knows I can't stand the way he talks to himself when he operates.
And she does these favors for me because I flirt with her.
Flirting makes my job easier.
And what you saw back there, that middle name stuff, that's bad flirting.
Lazy flirting.
For you, who I actually like, I break out my good flirting, my A game, because I mean it.
Are you hearing me, Miranda? I mean it.
I have a child and a fulltime job and I'm going through a sad, exhausting, stressful, time-consuming divorce.
I don't have time for games.
- You understand that, right? - I do.
I do, and I'm not playing games.
I'm in this for real.
OK? - OK.
- [Elevator dings.]
You were right.
Superior canal dehiscence syndrome.
Page 162.
You rock.
I'm gonna drop these off and we're gonna head over to Joe's.
Lex? I'm still in love with you.
I tried not to be, but it didn't work.
And Sloan's gone.
There's no baby.
And I don't want to sleep around.
I want another chance.
I'm in love with you.
Karev is He's Mark, I have a boyfriend.
I know.
I'm saying you could have a husband.
[Meredith.]
Maybe the more we try and will ourselves to states of bliss, the more confused we get.
- You ready? - Yeah.
[Meredith.]
To the point where we don't recognize ourselves.
- Hey.
- Hey.
Arizona [Meredith.]
Instead, we just keep smiling.
Trying like hell to be the happy people we wish we were.
Until eventually it hits us.
It's been there all along.
What do you think of this, putting in the fireplace in the master bedroom? I'm gonna get something to eat.
Well l'm not moving in with Owen.
- See this, right here? - Uh-huh.
This is your room.
You have a room at the new house in the woods.
My own room? - Yeah.
- Thank you.
[Meredith.]
Not in our dreams or hopes, but in the known, the comfortable the familiar.