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"How is she?" your father ask a the psychiatrist that has just finished talking to you for a few hours. You were outside in the lobby, on your phone.

"I suggest a regular base appointments and also taking her to a hospital to do a brain scan," she tells your father as she writes something down on a paper while your father is sitting on a chair in front of the Doctor's desk.

"Brain scan?" your father questions.

"My job is to study the mind. To learn and understand why a person thinks the way they do and also react in the way they do. What sort of trauma or experiences they went through to cause them to be who they are right now. What they're scared to admit and face. I study them and give them medications if needed but also give them treatment to help them cope with what they're going through," she tells him.

"Yes, I understand that so what makes you suggest that I need to get my daughter a brain scan? Did she do anything to worry you?" your father ask.

The woman sighs as she sets her pencil down and look at your father, "Your daughter, (Name), she doesn't remember anything that has happened to her. I have taken a look to what she went through on papers. I have also looked at her medical reports but (Name) seems to have replaced all her memories with new one. I have even asked her about the scar on her neck, can you tell me how she got it?" she ask him with this professional tone.

"At the school in California. I few kids started harassing her but she didn't want to get into any serious trouble so she ran. They followed her and caught her. They had her pin against this fence, she tried to fight back multiple times but they took out a pocket knife and place it on her neck. I don't know if they wanted to harm her or just scare her but my daughter is strong. She fought back but to get out of their hold, she had to let herself get hurt. The knife cut her neck but it wasn't deep so she was fine but she had to fight them to get out of there," your father explains.

"(Name) told me she got it in an almost car accident. The seatbelt scratch her neck but it was okay because no one got hurt. Just a driver who didn't know how to drive that almost crashed into her. I then processed to ask her about her being a hero on a forced suicide but she told me that all she did was talk someone out of it. She even mentioned that the person on the roof wasn't her friend but another student," the doctor informs which made your father sighs.

"She wasn't alway like this," your father tells her.

"Precisely. She still has a few memories of fight that she had but when I tried talking to her about them, she either avoided it or asked me to not talk about it in a way of panic. She has her eyes shut and her hands covering the truth which could be a sigh that she doesn't want to see and hear. She remembers but she doesn't want to. I believe she's going through something called dissociation or detachment from reality," she says which made your father angry but nor at her, at himself.

"It's when the brain tries to cope with trauma, correct? The brain can block that memory but I have never heard of replacing it," your father says as he has studied the ruction of the brain in college for extra credits.

"That is correct however I am surprised that your daughter doesn't have any multiple personalities. When I talked to her, her emotions and reaction changes every time. She's confident and then she gets all shy. But she's one person in a one mindset. There is signs of anxious as she remembers her past incident in a way that she has failed everyone but that will go away in a few months if she doesn't get any help because her brain is slowly blocking and creating new memories in her head to protect her. In a few months, maybe even in a year or two, you'll a daughter filled with confidence but that is if she doesn't get any help. However, as nice as this may sound, she can be triggered to have a bad memory restored to her and create a panic attack," she explains.

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