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Letter From Al.


BETHESDA MENTAL HEALTH CLINIC

CONFIDENTIAL DOCTOR'S NOTES

PATIENT: Albert G.

11/8/00

Patient arrived exhausted, vaguely coherent, showing disturbing signs of paranoia. "I'm a winner," he continually cried. "I won the popular vote," he insisted. "Why is being popular so important to you?" I asked. Choking, he says, "because I've never felt popular before, and now they're trying to take it away." Patient begins role playing role playing,
n in behavioral medicine, learning exercise in which individuals assume characters different from their own. The individual may also be asked to simulate a particularly difficult situation and apply the characteristics that are common to his
, with doctor in the place of "Dad." "Son" tells "Dad" that he's sorry that he lost, and that he'll soon be seeing him in "the bosom bos·om
n.
1. The chest of a human.

2. A woman's breast or breasts.
 of heaven." Doctor takes this as veiled suicide threat, places patient on immediate course of anti- depressants and mood stabilizers.

11/10/00

Patient arrives furious. His confidence is back-as is his aggression. Spends the entire session e-mailing associates, taking phone calls, and using laptop to surf the web. When doctor reminds patient that this is important time to use for health concerns, patient becomes belligerent and threatens to sue doctor.

11/12/00

Patient arrived in full stage makeup. Says nothing for several minutes, refers all questions to his attorney, Mr. David Boies David Boies (born March 11, 1941) is a lawyer and Chairman of Boies, Schiller & Flexner LLP [1]. He has been involved in various high-profile cases in the United States. . Complains about a "sports-related injury." Apparently, during a touch-football game, patient twisted his right ankle. Doctor commends patient for keeping physically active; reminds patient that 30 minutes of daily physical activity brings mental-health benefits.

11/20/00

Patient arrives and immediately surrounds himself with American flags. Euphoric, upbeat. Has recently won an important court case. Patient proclaims doctor on the "short list" to be Surgeon General The U.S. Surgeon General is charged with the protection and advancement of health in the United States. Since the 1960s the surgeon general has become a highly visible federal public health official, speaking out against known health risks such as tobacco use, and promoting disease . Doctor expresses concern that patient isn't quite in the position to make such an appointment, as Palm Beach county has declined to continue its recount. Patient hadn't heard. Patient and doctor spend the rest of the session watching "Hardball hard·ball  
n.
1. Baseball.

2. Informal The use of any means, however ruthless, to attain an objective.


hardball
Noun

US & Canad

1.
" together.

11/27/00

Patient arrived exhausted, vaguely coherent, showing disturbing signs of paranoia. Suggest course of drug treatment, beginning with sedative sedative, any of a variety of drugs that relieve anxiety. Most sedatives act as mild depressants of the nervous system, lessening general nervous activity or reducing the irritability or activity of a specific organ.  (Valium, Darvon), ending with Prolax or Serentol. A mix of drugs may be the only way to keep patient stable.

CAPITOL HEALTH PROVIDERS, INC inc - /ink/ increment, i.e. increase by one. Especially used by assembly programmers, as many assembly languages have an "inc" mnemonic.

Antonym: dec.
., AUSTIN, TEXAS

PHYSICIAN'S NOTES

PATIENT: G. W. Bush

11/8/00

Fella comes in with a big old oozy ooz·y 1  
adj. ooz·i·er, ooz·i·est
Exuding moisture.



oozi·ly adv.
 thing on the side of the head. Big old black oozy thing. I say to him, "Buddy, where you been stickin' your face? Looks like you went bobbin' for apples in a barrel of ticks!" He kind of laughs and says to me, "Doc, just you got some kind of bandage bandage /ban·dage/ (ban´daj)
1. a strip or roll of gauze or other material for wrapping or binding a body part.

2. to cover by wrapping with such material.
 or ornament for this mess here?" And he points to it and kind of picks at it. He's just about to jab a big old fingernail fin·ger·nail
n.
The nail on a finger.
 into that ugly black thing so I have to get into his face. I say to him, "Bud, stop pickin' that! That there's a boil or a scab or some other ugly oozy thing and not some kind of crispy crisp·y  
adj. crisp·i·er, crisp·i·est
1. Firm but easily broken or crumbled; crisp.

2. Having small curls, waves, or ripples.
 cheese, you damn fool." And he says to me, "Don't you just love that crispy hard cheese on the side of a plate of enchiladas?" And I say to him, "Sure do, bud." And we just kind of smile, thinking about how good that cheese can taste, you know?

11/12/00

Fella comes back with the big old black bump taped up with tape and gauzy stuff. "Whatcha got there, amigo?" I ask him. "Same thing, Doc," he says to me. "Still got this thing on the side of my head, only now I got it all taped up." I take a look at the tape. Pretty good job, it seems to me, and I tell him so. "The wife did it yesterday," he says in reply. "You hold onto that wife. She's good with the tape," I say. And he sort of nods and kinda laughs like there's no way he's gonna let her go. We kind of sit there for a moment, enjoying the quiet. I light myself another cigarette. "Hey, bud, how's your dog?" he asks me, and I tell him, and we get to talkin'.

11/22/00

Bud kind of breezes in, snappy-like, in a hurry. Big old black thing on the side of his face is pretty much gone now. Little sticky marks where the tape sticky stuff stayed on. "Looks pretty good," I say to him. "Yeah," he says, "the wife peeled off the tape this morning. Hurt like an SOB." I laugh. I say "Hey, bud, any idea at all what the hell that ugly black oozy thing was?" And he kind of looks at me and shakes his head. "You're the doc," he says to me. And then we both just bust out "Bust Out" is the twenty-third episode of the HBO original series The Sopranos and the tenth of the show's second season. It was written by Frank Renzulli, Robin Green and Mitchell Burgess, directed by John Patterson and originally aired on Sunday March 19 2000.  laughing. Got a few minutes before my next patient, so him and me have a drink-I take a whiskey and he takes a Coke (fella don't drink, I guess)-and we sit there jawin' about this and that.
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Title Annotation:Humor
Publication:National Review
Article Type:Brief Article
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Dec 18, 2000
Words:805
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