There was a mental patient who thought he was a mushroom, so he squatted in the corner and didn't eat or drink every day, just like a real mushroom.
What should we do if we treat him?
We may say, "You are not a mushroom, get up quickly."
We may say it a hundred times and a thousand times, and even pull him up. This patient will still be indifferent and motionless as his own mushroom.
The real psychologist did this: he also held an umbrella and squatted next to the patient.
The patient asked strangely, who are you?
The doctor replied: I am a mushroom!
The patient nodded and went on making his mushroom.
After squatting for a while, the doctor stood up and walked for a while.
The patient asked inexplicably: You are a mushroom. How can you move?
The doctor said: mushrooms can also move.
The patient said: Oh, it turns out that mushrooms can also be moved. So he followed suit.
Then the doctor began to eat.
The patient asked: How can you eat?
The doctor replied: How can mushrooms grow up without eating?
The patient felt right and began to eat.
After a few weeks, the patient can live like a normal person.
This story gives us a revelation:
* * * It's hard to say it's difficult, but it's actually quite easy. It's just that when others are in trouble, they bend down and accompany him to be a mushroom, and he will inevitably have the ability to make his life happy again.