The Dark Sire Issue 4 (Summer 2020) | Page 22

makes them fear they have an illness. But when presented with conclusive proof that they don't, their anxiety subsides, at least until they think they have something else. "But in the case of a somatic delusion the patient will not accept reassurance that they're fine. Their sense of reality vis-a-vis their symptomatology is entirely skewed. They may become paranoid, as well and their behaviour increasingly bizarre as their obsession grows. This delusion may be part of a larger mental disease, such as schizophrenia. But I don't believe that's what Alex is suffering from. "Tell me, has Alex been under a lot of stress lately? At work? Or at home?" "Well, his job, as you know, is quite demanding. As a corporate lawyer he's sometimes forced to work long hours. And he just got a promotion before all this started. But--he seemed really pleased about that. Alex passed his fortieth birthday a few months ago. Do you think that might have something to do with it? A mid-life crisis, maybe?" "Perhaps," the doctor replied. "Stress, even when its source is positive, can overwhelm people and cause their normal coping mechanisms to fail. In Alex's case the stress may have culminated in some very bizarre thinking." "That's just the thing," Eleanor said in a worried tone. "Sometimes the things he says sound so...," she struggled for the right word. "Crazy, " she finished with an apologetic shrug. "I don't know whether to humour him or ignore him. If I try to downplay it he gets angry and accuses me of not caring. Or worse." She glanced away briefly then continued in a hesitant manner. "Onceā€¦ he 20